• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

What is MCP & SPP?

Joined
May 7, 2007
Messages
457 (0.07/day)
Location
Irvine, CA
System Name My3yrOldBaby
Processor Intel C2Q Q6600 G0 2.4GHz (3.6 Ghz @ 1.400V)
Motherboard eVGA 790 FTW (Analogue) 132-YW-E179-A1
Cooling Thermalright Ultra-120 eXtreme (Push+Pull: Silverstone 120mm)
Memory 8GB G.Skill DDR3 2x4GB 1866 (running 1600) + 2GB Crucial Ballistix DDR3 1x2GB 1333 (running 1600)
Video Card(s) eVGA 8800GTX 768MB
Storage (2) WD Raptor 150GB SATA [RAID 0], (4) Seagate Barracuda 320GB SATA [RAID 0+1]
Display(s) Acer 20" - AL2017, Acer 22"W - AL2216WBD
Case Thermaltake Armor w/ 25cm Fan & Extra Front iCage
Audio Device(s) OnBoard
Power Supply Silverstone 1000W - ST1000
Software Windows XP Pro x64
I've seen some people use these acronyms for controllers on their boards.
Am I right that MCP=Southbridge & SPP=Northbridge? Just on nVidia systems?

Btw, we should get a computer acronyms thread started, including all the technical terms like PCB, CPU, MOSFET, SB, NB, etc... If anyone else thinks this is a good idea I'll start one right away.
 
mch is the northbridge. idk about southbridge. but mcp is i believe multicore processor, its for the chipset, you need an mcp chipset to run dual/quad core cpu's, imma take a wild guess at spp, single ? processor
 
Ok, I've done some research, and this diagram says it all:
680iarch.JPG


This is the architecture for a 680i system.
northbridge is primary, through which everything else goes, correlating to the SPP
southbridge is secondary, feeding into northbridge, correlating to MCP.

So, I was initially correct, NB=SPP, SB=MCP.
 
m = master

s = slave
 
so his southbridge is the master???
i'm doing some googling, and the first thing that came up was this exact thread lmao.

mcp could stand for multichip package...

ran into something interesting... http://www.sixsigmaservices.com/default.asp they have a pic of an intel chip on there, which means they have something to do with em, and they work with multichip packages... could that be an intel mcp chip??

six sigma is one of those companies that manufacture all kinds of stuff that you use and you dont even realize it, they build all kinds of cpu type things sorta cause when i googled six sigma intel loads of weird things came up..
 
Last edited:
no...no...no MCP is media communications processor & SPP means System Platform Processor...so basically one controls usb,hard drives,and other "media"..and one controls the busses on the motherboard
 
Back
Top