How Motherboard Works
How Motherboard Works
How Motherboard Works
If you've ever taken the case off of a computer, you've seen the one piece of
equipment that ties everything together -- the motherboard. A motherboard
allows all the parts of your computer to receive power and communicate with
one another.
Motherboards have come a long way in the last twenty years. The first
motherboards held very few actual components. The first IBM PC motherboard
had only a processor and card slots. Users plugged components like floppy
drive controllers and memory into the slots.
Today, motherboards typically boast a wide variety of built-in features, and they
directly affect a computer's capabilities and potential for upgrades.
In this article, we'll look at the general components of a motherboard. Then, we'll
closely examine five points that dramatically affect what a computer can do.
Form Factor
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Form Factor
A modern motherboard.
The shape and layout of a motherboard is called the form factor. The form factor
affects where individual components go and the shape of the computer's case.
There are several specific form factors that most PC motherboards use so that
they can all fit in standard cases. For a comparison of form factors, past and
present, check out Motherboards.org.
The form factor is just one of the many standards that apply to motherboards.
Some of the other standards include:
The socket for the microprocessor determines what kind of Central
Processing Unit (CPU) the motherboard uses.
The chipset is part of the motherboard's logic system and is usually made
of two parts -- the northbridge and the southbridge. These two "bridges"
connect the CPU to other parts of the computer.
The Basic Input/Output System (BIOS) chip controls the most basic
functions of the computer and performs a self-test every time you turn it on.
Some systems feature dual BIOS, which provides a backup in case one fails or in
case of error during updating.
The real time clock chip is a battery-operated chip that maintains basic
settings and the system time.
The slots and ports found on a motherboard include:
The CPU is the first thing that comes to mind when many people think about a
computer's speed and performance. The faster the processor, the faster the
computer can think. In the early days of PC computers, all processors had the
same set of pins that would connect the CPU to the motherboard, called the Pin
Grid Array (PGA). These pins fit into a socket layout called Socket 7. This meant
that any processor would fit into any motherboard.
Today, however, CPU manufacturers Intel and AMD use a variety of PGAs, none of
which fit into Socket 7. As microprocessors advance, they need more and more
pins, both to handle new features and to provide more and more power to the
chip.
Current socket arrangements are often named for the number of pins in the PGA.
Commonly used sockets are:
The newest Intel CPU does not have a PGA. It has an LGA, also known as Socket T.
LGA stands for Land Grid Array. An LGA is different from a PGA in that the pins
are actually part of the socket, not the CPU.
Anyone who already has a specific CPU in mind should select a motherboard
based on that CPU. For example, if you want to use one of the new multi-core
chips made by Intel or AMD, you will need to select a motherboard with the
correct socket for those chips. CPUs simply will not fit into sockets that don't
match their PGA.
The CPU communicates with other elements of the motherboard through a
chipset. We'll look at the chipset in more detail next.
Chipsets
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Chipsets
The chipset is the "glue" that connects the microprocessor to the rest of the
motherboard and therefore to the rest of the computer. On a PC, it consists of
two basic parts -- the northbridge and the southbridge. All of the various
components of the computer communicate with the CPU through the chipset.
The northbridge connects directly to the processor via the front side bus (FSB). A
memory controller is located on the northbridge, which gives the CPU fast access
to the memory. The northbridge also connects to the AGP or PCI Express bus and
to the memory itself.
The southbridge is slower than the northbridge, and information from the CPU
has to go through the northbridge before reaching the southbridge. Other
busses connect the southbridge to the PCI bus, the USB ports and the IDE or
SATA hard disk connections.
Next, we'll look at busses, which, like the chipset, carry information from place to
place.
Bus Speed
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Bus Speed
Bus speed usually refers to the speed of the front side bus (FSB), which connects
the CPU to the northbridge. FSB speeds can range from 66 MHz to over 800 MHz.
Since the CPU reaches the memory controller though the northbridge, FSB speed
can dramatically affect a computer's performance.
The back side bus connects the CPU with the level 2 (L2) cache, also
known as secondary or external cache. The processor determines the speed of
the back side bus.
The memory bus connects the northbridge to the memory.
The IDE or ATA bus connects the southbridge to the disk drives.
The AGP bus connects the video card to the memory and the CPU. The
speed of the AGP bus is usually 66 MHz.
The PCI bus connects PCI slots to the southbridge. On most systems, the
speed of the PCI bus is 33 MHz. Also compatible with PCI is PCI Express, which is
much faster than PCI but is still compatible with current software and operating
systems. PCI Express is likely to replace both PCI and AGP busses.
The faster a computer's bus speed, the faster it will operate -- to a point. A fast
bus speed cannot make up for a slow processor or chipset.
Now let's look at memory and how it affects the motherboard's speed.
Memory and Other Features
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We've established that the speed of the processor itself controls how quickly a
computer thinks. The speed of the chipset and busses controls how quickly it can
communicate with other parts of the computer. The speed of
the RAM connection directly controls how fast the computer can access
instructions and data, and therefore has a big effect on system performance. A
fast processor with slow RAM is going nowhere.
The amount of memory available also controls how much data the computer can
have readily available. RAM makes up the bulk of a computer's memory. The
general rule of thumb is the more RAM the computer has, the better.
Much of the memory available today is dual data rate (DDR) memory. This
means that the memory can transmit data twice per cycle instead of once, which
makes the memory faster. Also, most motherboards have space for multiple
memory chips, and on newer motherboards, they often connect to the
northbridge via a dual bus instead of a single bus. This further reduces the
amount of time it takes for the processor to get information from the memory.
200-pin DDR SODIMM RAM
PHOTO COURTESY HOWSTUFFWORKS SHOPPER
A motherboard's memory slots directly affect what kind and how much memory
is supported. Just like other components, the memory plugs into the slot via a
series of pins. The memory module must have the right number of pins to fit into
the slot on the motherboard.
In the earliest days of motherboards, virtually everything other than the processor
came on a card that plugged into the board. Now, motherboards feature a
variety of onboard accessories such as LAN support, video, sound support and
RAID controllers.
Motherboards with all the bells and whistles are convenient and simple to install.
There are motherboards that have everything you need to create a complete
computer -- all you do is stick the motherboard in a case and add a hard disk,
a CD drive and a power supply. You have a completely operational computer on
a single board.
For many average users, these built-in features provide ample support for video
and sound. For avid gamers and people who do high-intensity graphic or
computer-aided design (CAD) work, however, separate video cards provide much
better performance.
For more information on motherboards and related topics, check out the links on
the following page.