The Motherboard Is Considered As The Main Circuit BOARD
The Motherboard Is Considered As The Main Circuit BOARD
The Motherboard Is Considered As The Main Circuit BOARD
additional boards. Typically, the motherboard contains the CPU, BIOS, memory, mass storage interfaces, serial and
parallel ports, expansion slots, and all the controllers required to control standard peripheral devices, such as the
display screen, keyboard, and disk drive. Collectively, all these chips that reside on the motherboard are known as
the motherboard's chipset. You must familiarize the motherboard parts and its function since this is needed to pass
the TESDA NC II Computer Servicing Exam.
A main function of the BIOS is to give instructions for the power-on self test (POST).This self test
ensures that the computer has all of the necessary parts and functionality needed to successfully
start itself, such as use of memory, a keyboard and other parts. If errors are detected during the
test, the BIOS instruct the computer to give a code that reveals the problem. Computer Error
codes are typically a series of beeps heard shortly after startup.
CMOS Battery - Is a button cell battery that gives power to CMOS so that the Bios setting is retain when the PC is
turn off.
Chipset - Refers to a specific pair of chips on the motherboard: the NORTHBRIDGE and the
SOUTHBRIDGE.The northbridge links the CPU to very high-speed devices, especially main memory
and graphics controllers.
The southbridge connects to lower-speed peripheral buses (such as PCI or ISA). In many modern chipsets,
the southbridge actually contains some on-chip integrated peripherals, such as Ethernet, USB, and audio devices. A
chipset is usually designed to work with a specific family of microprocessors. Because it controls communications
between the processor and external devices, the chipset plays a crucial role in determining system performance.
A CPU socket or CPU slot is an electrical component that attaches to a printed circuit board (PCB)
and is designed to house a CPU (also called a microprocessor). CPU socket structure is largely
dependent on the packaging of the CPU it is designed to house. Most CPUs are based on the pin
grid array (PGA) architecture in which short, stiff pins are arranged in a grid on the underside of the
processor are mated with holes in the socket. To minimize the risk of bent pins, zero insertion force
(ZIF) sockets allow the processor to be inserted without any resistance and then lock in place with a
lever or latch mechanism.
SLOT TYPE CPU slot - are single-edged connectors similar to expansion slots, into which a PCB
holding a processor is inserted. Slotted CPU packages offered two advantages: L2 cache memory
size could be packaged with the CPU rather than the motherboard and processor insertion and
removal was often easier. However, they proved to have performance limitations and once it was
possible to place larger cache memory directly on the CPU die the industry reverted back to
sockets.
Land grid array (LGA) - packages have started to supplant PGA with most modern CPU
designs using this scheme. The term LGA "socket" is actually a bit of a misnomer. With
LGA sockets, the socket contains pins that make contact with pads or lands on the
bottom of the processor package.
Memory Socket or Slot - is commonly refers to the slot in a motherboard were the extended memory
modules are installed.
DIMM (Dual-inline-memory modules) slot. SDR (Single Data Rate) DIMM slot. 168 edge contacts.
DDR (Dual/Double Data Rate) DIMM slot. 184 edge contacts (DDR 1)
DDR (Dual/Double Data Rate) DIMM slot. 240 edge contacts (DDR 2 / 3)
SODIMM (SO-DIMM is short for Small Outline DIMM ) Slot A 72-pin and 144-pin configuration. SO-DIMMs
are commonly utilized in laptop computers.
ISA Slot
ISA SLOT - Industry Standard Architecture, is an a 8 bit and 16 bit wide bus, and runs at 4.77 mhz. The
ISA bus was developed by a team lead by Mark Dean at IBM as part of the IBM PC project in 1981. It
was originated as an 8-bit system and was extended in 1983 for the XT system architecture. The newer
16-bit standard, the IBM AT bus, was introduced in 1984.
PCI - Slot
PCI SLOT - Peripheral Component Interconnect is a specification that defines a 32-bit data bus interface.
PCI is a standard widely used by expansion card manufacturers.
AGP - Slot
AGP SLOT - Accelerated Graphics Port, also called Advanced Graphics Port, often shortened to AGP it
is a high-speed point-to-point channel for attaching a graphics card to a computer's motherboard,
primarily to assist in the acceleration of 3D computer graphics. AGP controller is only capable of
controlling a single device.
AMR SLOT - Audio Modem Riser, Is a riser card that supports sound or modem function.
ACR SLOT - Advance Communication Riser, this type of slot is for communication and audio subsystem.
The slot supports modem, audio, LAN, and Home Phoneline Networking Alliance (HPNA) or Home
Networking cards.
CNR SLOT - Communications network riser, this connector supports specially designed network, audio,
or modem riser cards, main processing is done through software and controlled by the motherboard’s
system chipset.
PCI - Express
PCI –E - is a computer expansion card interface format introduced by Intel in 2004. It was designed to
replace the general purpose PCI expansion bus.
PCIe 1.1 (the most common version as of 2007) each lane carries 250 MB/s.
PCIe 2.0 doubles the bus standard's bandwidth from 2.5 Gbit/s to 5 Gbit/s, meaning a x32
connector can transfer data at up to 16 GB/s in each direction.
PCI Express 3.0 will carry a bit rate of 8 giga transfers per second.
IDE - Controller
IDE CONTROLLER - Integrated Drive Electronics, Parallel ATA (PATA) is an interface standard for
the connection of storage devices such as hard disks, solid-state drives, and CD-ROM drives in
computers. It uses the underlying AT Attachment and AT Attachment Packet Interface (ATA/ATAPI)
standards
FDD - Controller
FDD CONTROLLER - Floppy Disk Drive, an onboard floppy drive controller which make your Floppy
Disk Drive operational.
SATA - Controller
SATA CONTROLLER - Serial Advanced Technology Attachment is a computer bus primarily designed
for transfer of data between a computer and storage devices (like hard disk drives or optical drives).
These connectors are for power supply, the power supply plugs are designed to fit these connectors in
only one orientation.
AT / ATX
Auxiliary power
FRONT PANEL CONNECTOR / SYSTEM PANEL CONNECTOR - This connector attaches the
switches and indicators.
I/O Ports are type of interface which a peripheral attaches to or communicates with the system unit so the
peripheral can send data to or receive information from the computer.
Keyboard / mouse
Monitors, projector
Printers, flatbed scanner
External storage devices, external modems
Headsets, microphones, game pads
I/O Ports
PS2 PORT - Personal system 2, are based on IBM Micro Channel Architecture, it is a 6-pin
connector.This type of architecture transfers data through a 16-bit or 32-bit bus.
Keyboard
Mouse
LPT PORT or PARALLEL PORT - Line Printer Port, This is a 25-pin port that connects a parallel
printer, a flatbed scanner and used as a communication link for null modem cables.
SERIAL PORT or COM PORT - is a logical device name used by to designate the computer serial
ports. A 9-pin connector used by pointing devices, modems, and infrared modules can be connected to
COM ports.
USB PORT - Universal Serial Bus, a 4-pin serial cable bus that allows up to 127 plug-n-play computer
peripherals. This allows attaching or detaching of peripherals while the host is in operation. Supports
synchronous and asynchronous transfer types over the same set of wires up to 12Mbit/sec. USB 2.0
provides 40 times the transfer rate compared to USB 1.0 and competes with the 1394 standard.As of
today we now have USB 3.0.
GAME/MIDI PORT - This connector supports a Joystick or a Game Pad for playing games, and MIDI
Devices for playing or editing audio files.