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This motherboard parts introduction explains the main goal of your motherboard in your
computer. The most important parts are explained with only a brief introduction to the
technologies behind them not to bore the newcomer who may be confused.
For those who are seeking more advanced information you will find links throughout the
content and at the bottom as how to install a motherboard.
The main goal is to connect all the hardware together like hard drives, memory modules,
CPU, etc...
A computer mother board is made of several parts, and each one has a hardware that can
be connected to it. On the right, the image is showing a modern motherboard with all its
parts.
If you click on the link under the image, you will find a larger image with the motherboard
parts name.
Learning about your motherboard parts help to understand how upgrade able it is.
The Processor Socket
Sockets are the home for your Central Processor Unit (CPU). Several types of socket exist,
but only 2 of them are really used, and both of them are used by Intel and AMD. The Pin
Grid Array (PGA) and the Land Grid Array (LGA).
CPU Socket
With the type PGA, the CPU will have pins to fit in the socket holes, but with the type LGA,
the CPU will not have such pins and will just sit on the socket.
To know the form of CPU your motherboard can use and the range of powers and FSBs, look
in your motherboard's book. The book that comes with your motherboard has a chart about
it in the socket or CPU chapter. That information will give you an idea to how far you can
upgrade your CPU.
Memory Slots
Memory slots also call memory banks are for Random Access Memory modules (RAM). Each
memory bank can receives a RAM module designed for a specific pc mother board. Ranging
from 2 to 4 banks, you will encounter single and dual-channel technologies.
Memory Banks
With single-channel, you can use 1, 2 or 3 Ram modules, and it should work perfectly. On
the other hand, with dual-channel technology, if you fill only 1 bank, you will lose some
strength from your module.
To get the most of it, you need to fill 2 banks with the same module types, from the same
manufacturer with exactly the same memory amounts.
If you want 1GB of memory, you need to use 2 512MB modules from the same
manufacturer with the same technology type. This way, motherboards use the modules
strength to its full capacity. Otherwise it may not work at all.
Like the socket, to find out the type, the manufacturer and the total MB or GB quantity you
can use, take a look in your motherboard's book. You should be able to find everything you
need.
The main power connector is uses to get the electric energy from the power supply which
the motherboard require to function properly.
There are 2 main power connector types for those motherboard parts. The 20 pins + 4 pins
(2 separate connectors on the same motherboard), and the 24 pins.
Not all power supplies have the 2 types, but it is possible to work around the problem if you
run into an incompatibility situation. Which will be discussed in a future power supply guide
about how to install it and where to plug the connectors.
Many interface standards have been created throughout the years, maybe too many for
discussing about all of them. I will then talk about the ATA and the S-ATA only as the IDE is
the same thing as the ATA, only the name has changed. Also I will be brief because it is
more a hard drive topic than anything else.
Modern computer mother boards have the new interface called Serial Advance Technology
Attachment (S-ATA). It is faster than the ATA and only 1 device can be attached to it. The
wire is thinner than his predecessor and surely help at the cooling process inside the
computer case.
I cover the topic in more details in the What Is SATA Interface guide.
Plug your "3.5" floppy drive there. Not really used now, they are going to disappear
completely very soon.
32 bit slots Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI) are used to install sound cards,
graphic cards, Ethernet cards and modems.
The motherboard parts Accelerated Graphics Port (AGP) and PCI Epress (PCIe) focus on
graphic cards only. AGP standards use x2, x4 or x8 technologies. AGP 8 being the best, it is
highly boosting your graphics and video performances. In Comparison with his old brother
PCI, it is day and night.
PCIe standard is even better than AGP standard, and mostly the only one used right now.
Some like to say, PCIe is a AGP standard at x16 and it is the #1 choice for gaming
machines right now.
More motherboard content will be written on it, especially for graphic cards.
Back Panel Connectors
What Is a CPU
And What Your
Computer CPU Does?
Central Processing Unit, Computer CPU, is the component installed in your motherboard
socket. The CPU executes and interprets programs, and processes data.
AMD Processor
Like a calculator It reads the information you give, interprets it, executes the equation, then
writes back the result. This gives you the big picture.
CPU comes in 2 brands, AMD and Intel. Both build equally good CPUs, with their own
features.
I think, Intel tend to be more stable and AMD faster for games. But it is just my 2 cents;
nothing precise here, only a personnel observation.
Here some CPUs with their features from AMD and Intel:
CPUs come in several forms, and each one has his reason to be that I discuss in more
details in the CPU socket type page. For the introduction's purpose I will only give a general
idea of the 2 most used forms as the LGA and PGA.
The Pin Grid Array (PGA). The PGA CPU has pins on its front to be fixed in the motherboard
socket. As you can imagine, the socket grid has holes to receive the CPU pins.
The Land Grid Array (LGA). The LGA CPU does not have pins like the PGA and it is landed
on a socket grid that contains pins. In some way, it is the opposite of the PGA form.
The CPU speed is the clock rate frequency in hertz ( circles per second) at which the CPU
executes standard operations like doing equations, processing simple data and so on.
In the old days, computers had clock frequencies as low as 4.77 MHz (4,770,000
cycles/second), but nowdays the standard is around 3 GHz (three billion cycles/second).
For now on, CPU's fabricants are working on the CPU core to enhance the speed. As they
are stuck with a frequency cap, building CPUs with a clock rate frequency over 3.6 GHz start
to be a hard task. I guess it is due of circuits overheating too much.
The Front Side Bus (FSB), is the data bus between the CPU and the motherboard's
northbridge chip. The chipset (northbridge and southbridge) allow the communication
among all buses (memory, PCI, AGP, PCIe).
Imagine the FSB as a booster for the CPU for managing programs faster. Before the FSB
architecture, CPUs were just fine. But today's programs demand too much power from the
CPU to be able to execute fast enough. Higher is the FSB, faster the CPU can execute.
Having a low FSB frequency, is like putting your CPU on standby, waiting for the information
to come.
Why overclocking?
Overclocking can be interesting if you feel your computer is a bit slow. It may help the
computer performances with a small overclocking.
In the other hand, overcloking may cause erratic behavior such as, regular errors from the
operating system, premature failures or the CPU that overheats or die sooner than it should.
In some case with a very high overcloking, the CPU may die under a week.
I strongly disapprove the idea of overclocking. Why taking risks if at the origin the CPU has
been build for a certain power and not higher. Unless you plan to buy a new CPU, do not
overclock.
RAM Modules
Unlike disk drives, RAM modules do not need physical reading heads to reach pieces of data,
instead they are transfered from integrated circuits.
For those who are seeking more advanced information you will find links throughout the
content and at the bottom page as how to install computer memory.
The bandwidth is the transfer rate of the chips in conjunction of the system's front side bus.
As example, let say your computer ram memory is from PC-1600 modules, and the front
side bus of your system is at 100 MHz.
The PC-1600 has a memory clock of 100 MHz. In that case x2 as DDR double the clock rate.
If you do the math without using the last 2 digits of the front side bus clock rate, you get a
bandwidth of 200 MHz, 1 x 200. With a front side bus of 300 MHz it would be 600 MHz.
Take a look at the table below, it will help you to familiarize with the module names and
what they are standing for, according to a 100 MHz front side bus.
Your CPU needs a certain amount of memory to function at full capacity. If the memory
does not meet the CPU requirement, your computer will be slowed in comparison to its full
capacity. Depending your needs, you can use these general rules as reference.
• Pentium 4 or AMD for every day use, 512 MB should work just fine
• Pentium 4 or AMD for gaming, 1 GB should be more then enough
• Pentium dual-core 2 or AM2 for every day use, 1 GB is more then enough
• Pentium dual-core 2 or AM2 for gaming, 1 GB as minimum, 2 GB for heavy gaming
Why Not Use More Computer Memory Than The CPU Needs?
Using more memory than needed should up the over all speed of your computer, but it will
not be significant. I think, more memory does not justify the money spent for it.
Hard disk drives are comparable in appearance to the disc jockey's turntables. As a
computer hard drive, there is a reading head and a turning platter containing the data to be
read.
Take a look at the image on the right. Do you see the obvious similarity?
They usually are Attached to the ATA bus or SATA bus on the motherboard unless it is an
external device. Hard drives serve as data storage holding the operating system, softwares
and any other data you may put in.
The data are read by the RAM memory then managed by the hardware accessing these data
like the CPU.
In few words, hard drives can be seen as a gigantic file cabinet reached by the rest of your
computer hardware.
For those who are seeking more advanced information you will find links throughout the
content and at the bottom page as how to install hard drives.
Nowadays, the IDE or EIDE interface are now called ATA and can use hard drives storage
capacity as high as 200 GB and higher.
The Serial ATA is the successor of the ATA interface. It is faster and better suited for today's
needs. With a thinner cable that permits a better cooling process plus the interface
enhancement, it becomes obvious that the Serial ATA is the way to go right now.
Here is the link for computer cables used to mount a computer. You will also find a link to a
detailed page about ATA cables that may help you to better understand the ATA evolution.
The hard drive's Revolutions Per Minute (RPM) determine the platter's rotating speed. The
actual speeds found on hard drives are 5400, 7200 and 10000 RPM. Of course, faster the
hard drive platter rotates, better the performances will be.
Another way hard drives are using to speed up the transfer rate, is what we call the
memory cache. The memory cache is a temporary area where stored data are frequently
accessed. It is faster to use memory cache than redoing the whole process again and again
when a piece of data is frequently used. The actual memory cache found on hard drives go
up to 8 MB for a regular hard drive and up to 16 MB for a SCSI hard drive.
Computer hard drives storage capacity has changed radically. When Pentium I started, hard
drives storage capacity was as low as 100 MB. Today hard drives hit the incredible mark of
1 TB, Terabytes, (1024 GB).
This enormous change in storage capacity is due to the fast evolution of computer
technologies and the greatest change in hard drives storage capacity is due to the platters
number and the platters density on a single drive.
The need for such storage capacity has been created by the more demanding softwares and
operating systems like Windows XP and Windows Vista. Not to forget the most demanding
of all, game softwares and movie files.
It needs so much storage space that a 200 GB hard drive is very common if not the
standard in today's computers.
How Computer Power Supplies
Work?
Computer power supplies installed inside your computer case are the energy source for your
computer hardware. Of course without the power supply your computer is plain dead.
In this guide I will explain to what hardware the connectors are plugged or where on the
motherboard and an easy way for identifying good and bad power supplies.
Does 300 Watt Power Supplies Give Enough Power Or Should You Go With 400
Watt Power Supplies Or Even Higher?
This is the kind of question that comes up all the time. Peoples tend to not understand how
computer power supplies work. To find out, you need to understand how the energy is
distributed throughout the hardware.
The hardware inside your computer case require a certain amount of power. It is ranging
from 4W to around 80W for a single piece. If you have 200W as requirement then a 300
Watt power supply is enough.
Computer Power Supplies are not built to work at full capacity. After a while the power
supply will die caused by an overheating and in the process might damage the hardware.
I recommand to have at least 75W over your computer requirements. That way your power
supply will live older and your hardware will always have enough power.
Main power connectors are plugged to the motherboard. The connector with 20 pins may be
used on ATX motherboards and the connector with 4 pins is used for extra power for CPUs
and graphic cards. Not all motherboards require the use of connector with 4 pins , if it's the
case; do not bother, you do not need to use all connectors anyway.
The fan connector is used for plugging the back/front wall or side panel case fans. As fans
do not require a lot of energy, the connector is small and very fragile, be careful when
working with them.
The Serial ATA connector is used for hard disk drives. Having that connector on your power
supply is a good thing as this technology speed up drives data transfer.
The peripheral connector with 4 pins is used for optic drives as hard drives. It was the only
connector for mass storage devices before the SATA.
The small connector with 4 pins is used for floppy drives. Here too, I recommend caution
when working with small connectors like this.
Fast And Easy Way To Identify The Best Power Supply Unit
A nice little tip you can use to figure out if a power supply is good or not, is to put the unit
in your hand and to feel its weight. Light power supplies mean they have few components
inside, and that is no good. Today's computers require more and more powers. If your
power supply does not have the required components to meet today's computers, your
computer parts may die faster.
Heavier power supplies have more components than lighter one, so better suited for today's
computers. Of course there is more than this to know about good power supplies, but
without any knowledge this is the best tip I can give you.
What Is Your
Graphic Card All About?
The main purpose of your graphic card is to manage the data from images and videos
displayed by your monitor screen.
Every pixels data at your monitor screen are managed by the card, sometimes used as a
display adapter or as a 3D accelerator for video games, 3D animations etc...
In comparison with the integrated graphic controller chip on a motherboard, cards are
installed in accelerated graphic buses like the PCIexpress and Cards commonly come with
much more features than an integrated chip.
Some cards even come with a TV tuner to plug your home TV. Watching TV at your monitor
screen becomes possible with such connectors, even video capture becomes possible with
the right connector.
Should you buy a card or use the integrated controller chip that comes with your
motherboard?
It all depends of your needs. Today's motherboards have an integrated graphic chip
powerful enough to satisfy requirements for an everyday use. But if you are working with
3D graphics or 3D animations or playing games, a card will be better for meeting your
acceleration requirements.
Video Card GPU
Like motherboards, today's cards have their own processor called Graphics Processing Unit
(GPU). 3D graphics rendering need floating point calculations and GPUs are just what it
need for the job.
It is the incorporated microchips with their mathematical operations that render possible
graphics rendering and it is the efficiency of the microchips that will determine the graphic
acceleration.
The core clock on a GPU is around 600 MHz and surely higher on the newest cards.
Video RAM
Video RAM (VRAM) is at the graphic card as RAM is at the motherboard. If cards would not
have such video RAM, the system would use the motherboard RAM to do the dirty works.
The main feature of the video RAM is the capacity of dual-porting. It can simultaneously be
written and read. It gives the advantage of calculating and send screen images to the
monitor and start reading new images at the same time without bumping.
Here the RAM standards used for cards from the oldest to the newest.
The Digital Visual Interface (DVI), is used for digital devices like a projector. As LCD
monitors are digital display units, the new LCD monitors come with the DVI connector. I
suggest using the DVI standard because it is design to enhance digital display.
Separate Video (SVideo), is the round connector used to connect your TV, game console,
DVD player etc.
Modern cards are designed with a ton of features to help accelerate and sharpen 3D
graphics. I am giving only a brief introduction because I want to keep the more
sophisticated details for a future page about this topic.
So here it is for the most important features to give you an idea about what modern cards
are able to do in a 3D environment.
Anti-Aliasing
Anti-aliasing (AA), makes your graphics look smoother. Without the AA graphics look like
they have been made from squares. Try to make a perfect circle with squares. I doubt you
can.
Texture Filtering
Shader Model
Shader is the one I prefer. The shader make 3D effects in such ways that sometime I
almost believe it is real. Imagine a lake with a castle close by, the castle reflection in the
water is the kind of visual effect the shader technology can do. And this is only a tinny part
of what shader can do in a 3D environment.
DVD+-R/RW drive
DVD burner drives can be use to listen your music CDs like a CD player, create your own CD
DVD movies that can be used on your TV CD DVD player, do system backups or transferring
data from one computer to another.
As you can see, computer DVD drives can become very useful for many reasons.
If you wonder if you can still use your CDs, know that DVD drives are backward compatible
with CD media, so no need for a CD drive.
DVD - and + is an optic disc format or media format if you prefer. DVD-R has a storing
capacity of 4.71 GB (4.382 GiB). Dual Layer also exists in this format with a capacity of
8.54 GB. The DL format must be fliped to use the 2 sides of the disc. Being the first one to
hit the market, DVD-R format were a bit cheaper than DVD+R at start. Nowdays they are
sold for the same price.
DVD media
The DVD+R has a better error management giving more accurate burning. Also, less discs
are damaged when doing multi-sessions due to a better buffer under-run.
It was tricky to determine which one was really better. The DVD+R offers better accuracy
but the DVD-R was less expensive.
Until now, if you wanted your CDs or DVDs able to work in your CD player or your TV DVD
player using different formats, you needed to buy 2 burning devices, 1 for the +R format
and 1 for the -R format.
Suggestion:
If you do not have a DVD burner drive yet, then go for the DVD±R. Look around and try to
find the format you will need the most. Look at your friend's computer or TV DVD machines
you know you will share CD/DVD media with. Then buy more CD/DVD format than the
other. This way you have the best of both worlds and you do not spend more money than
necessary.
CD DVD media can be read, write and rewrite by your CD DVD drive, meaning they can be
erased and burned again. I made a table to illustrate drives compatibility among media and
their formats.
Compare drives read and write compatibility with CD and DVD media.
Media---> CD-R CD-RW DVD-R DVD+R DVD-RW DVD+RW DVD±R DL
DVD ROM Read Read Read Read Read Read Read
DVD-R Write Write Write Read Read Read Read
DVD-RW Write Write Write Read Write Read Read
DVD+R Write Write Read Write Read Read Read
DVD+RW Write Write Read Write Read Write Read
DVD±RW Wrtie Write Write Write Write Write Read
DVD±RW DL Write Write Write Write Write Write Write
Monitors are display units displaying images produced by the computer, and there are 2
types of those monitors used for computers, the CRT and LCD one.
Both have different aspects and technologies, especially the LCD over the CRT as you will
see along this page
Computer Monitor Screens, How They Work?
CRT Monitor
The CRT monitor (Cathode Ray Tube) uses an electron gun that interacts with a RGB
fluorescent screen. The gun produces a beam when it hits the screen, excites the
fluorescent screen producing images.
If you look at the image on the right, you can see the screen's pixels are formed by 3
colored phosphors. Regardless the image phosphors will light up when hit by the gun
producing colors. Thus creating the image, pixel by pixel.
LCD Monitor
The LCD monitor (Liquid Crystal Display) uses a crystal liquid matrix between 2 opposite
polarizing filter sheets letting or not the light pass, thus creating the colors. As the CRT,
pixels on LCD are formed using the RGB but made of crystal molecules instead of
phosphors.
Dot Pitch
The dot pitch also called pixel pitch is the distance in millimeters between 2 pixels.
On the image you have an example of how pixels are disposed on a screen. Each RGB triad
forms 1 pixel and the distance between 2 pixels is the dot pitch.
The pitch is what will represent the quality detail of the image on the screen. If you have
100 pixels by inches instead of 50, you will obviously get a sharper image.
The CRT and the LCD monitor case are built differently. On CRT, the case covers a part of
the screen reducing the visible area by 0.9" to 1.2" depending the monitor model or brand.
On LCD, the case does not cover, thus enabling a full view able area.
To determine the monitor size, calculate the diagonal length from the upper right to the
bottom left corner of the screen starting from the inside, not from the case edge. The
diagonal length will be the monitor area size as the image shows above.
The aspect ratio is the ratio of the width to the height of the display screen like regular TVs
being 4:3. On widescreen monitors the aspect ratio would usually be 16:9. From one model
to another the aspect ratio can be 4:3, 16:9, 16:10 or 15:9.
The resolution is the term uses to explain the number of rows and columns a monitor can
display in pixels at the screen. A maximum resolution of 1280x1024 means, the monitor will
display 1280 pixels width by 1024 pixels height. Higher the resolution, sharper the image is
at the screen.
CRT monitors are known for their multisync technology. The monitor can adjust the electron
beam to display lower resolution standards than the maximum resolution possible.
LCD monitors are built with native resolutions, meaning the best quality on screen will come
from a single resolution perfectly fitted for that monitor. Setting the monitor to a lower
resolution cause the visible area to be reduced or extrapolated. When the monitor
extrapolates it tries to blend pixels together to form the image and images made from
extrapolation look fuzzy.
Here a Chart for CRT and LCD monitors standards, size and resolutions capacity. Yes or no
in CRT and LCD column means a monitor model exist or not in that category.
The refresh rate is the number of times per second the monitor scans the entire screen at a
given resolution. If a monitor is listed at 1024x768 with a refreshing rate of 75HZ, it means
it is the best resolution to use to get the highest refreshing rate possible for that monitor.
Something important to understand about refresh rate is the eye fatigue over time in front
of the screen. After a short period of time, eyes get fatigue when a refreshing rate is low. It
is better for the eyes to have at least a refreshing rate of 75HZ+ if you intend to stay long
period of times at the computer. Higher the refresh rate, longer it takes to the eye to get
fatigue.
All computer monitors use traditional analog VGA connector. It is the standard found on
every video card.
LCD monitors may have a DVI connector besides the VGA one. The DVI is a digital interface
that enhances the overall quality of the image by making it look brighter and cleaner.
I strongly suggest using the DVI if your video card and your monitor supports it. It gives a
better experience when watching videos or movies.
I created this review so peoples can have a better idea of all kinds of mice found on the
market. Throughout the page you will find pictures of mice with a general description and
pro and cons if any.
Rollerball Mouse
Rollerball Mouse
The rollerball mouse is defined by its rolling ball stuck inside by the closing ring. It is the
first mouse ever created for desktop computer. It had 2 or 3 buttons. The ball was rolling on
2 to 3 rotating rods by moving the mouse naturally on the desk or a mouse pad. Not very
sophisticated, but it was effective, especially when the mouse wheel has been introduced to
ease scrolling long pages of text.
Pros:The only good aspect of this old mouse was the introduction of the mouse wheel.
Cons: The ball gets easily dirty making the mouse to slide instead of rolling.When the
mouse is moved, the dust on the ball is transfered in part to the rotating rods. When there
is too much accumulation, the ball does not roll anymore being stuck by the dust on the
rods.
A new age began with the introduction of optical mice. The end of the rolling ball stuck by
the dust. As you can see on the image, the ball has been replaced by a LED. Instead of
being rolled, the mouse is slid and can be used on almost any surfaces with great ease.
Mouse pads are no more needed if the surface used is of light color.
The light coming out the eye, bounce on the surface used, then an image is captured of a
small camera inside the mouse and analyzed by a numerical sign. The sign acknowledges
the different images and interprets them by moving the cursor on the screen.
Few years later, the laser mouse came out offering better accuracy. The laser mouse can do
a better image with more details, thus creating greater accuracy.
Pros: Great accuracy making now the joy of every gamers and the end of rollerball mice.
Better accuracy on laser mouse.
Wireless Mouse
Finally, no more wires in the way. That mouse uses radio frequency to communicate from
the transmitter inside the mouse to a receiver installed on the computer.
In general the mouse requires 2 batteries easy to change by removing a small plate, like
the one found on remote controls.
Pros: No more worries about the wire being in the way. The signal passes through objects
making the choice by excellence for laptop and notebook lovers.
Cons: A small lag can be perceived while playing games and it can become frustrating when
you have to change the batteries if you do not have any left.
Trackball Mouse
Trackball Mouse
Interesting idea for overcoming the dust problem. Instead of being under the mouse, the
ball is on the top. Trackball mice are stationary and the cursor is moved by manipulating the
ball with the hand. It takes some times to get used of these mice, but after a while, the
accuracy come with ease.
Usually mice like these have more than 2 buttons creating interesting new possibilities not
seen before.
Pros: Ideal for small desks and interesting possibilities if more than 2 buttons.
Gamer Mouse
G5 Gamer Mouse
Gamer mice are the cream of the creams. Everything has been thought for the best gaming
experience possible.
Buttons are placed everywhere at the most convenient spots to ensure speed in the action.
Click able mouse wheel, Comfortable textures, extremely smooth, perfectly accurate and
with a greatly enhanced laser technology, these mice have every features you ever wished.
Weight adjustability also come in handy to get the perfect feelings while moving the mouse.
Absolutely lag free with the very high reports/sec. offered from the bi-directional USB wire.
With few images, I will explain what a bad or good computer case may look like.
Observe the image on the right. This is an old mini tower ATX. ATX computer cases like this
are very small and the room between the DVD cage on top and the hard drive cage on the
bottom is too small.
The DVD and the hard drive drive their heats on each other. Imagine having a "3.5" floppy
drive in middle of them. I think you got the big picture, are you?
The only good point I can give to this old case, it is the fan fixed to the back. But even with
the fan, the case will likely overheat.
The fan will by no means pass through the heat fast enough to keep the computer case at a
normal temperature. And there is also the processor, motherboard, graphic card, all this
produce some heat too.
The reason why I would buy such a case, it is because I would build an old computer like a
Pentium 2. I would forget about the "3.5" floppy drive for getting a minimum of rooms.
The parts of your computer suffer the most from the heat. Over time if the case is not
adequate, your parts will fall apart.
In the hard drive cage there is enough rooms to mount 3 hard drives and 1 "3.5" floppy
drive. And 3 DVD drives into the other. Of course it's wrong to do so. By loading that much
drives, you are running into problems.
By keeping things in a realistic way like mounting 1 hard drive and 1 optic drive instead of
loading it to its full capacity, you are keeping the computer case in good shape and avoid
the heat problem.
Fans on the back indeed help a lot on the cooling process. Of course 2 fans is a good thing,
but not a requirement. In most cases, 1 good fan should be enough.
If you are not feeling safe with 1 fan, then go for 1 more, but I recommend using desktop
computer cases with an extra fan onto the left panel or onto the back of the case like the
one on the image.
Personally I do not like 2 fans. It is a matter of noises. Of course I am not talking about top
notch tech here and in general, regular computer cases with 2 fans are noisy.
Nowadays, computer cases come with USB connectors. Most likely USB 2 technology. Most
cases have the USB connectors on the back panel, but some have USB connectors on the
front too and this is just lovely.
When you do not have an easy access to your back panel connectors, it comes in handy to
have the connectors on the front. I know it sounds a bit lazy, but after a while, you will be
happy to have it if you use USB devices on a daily basis.
There are more cables used to mount a computer like the power cord of your computer
case, but those cables did not changed throughout the years.
So lets talk about what has been improved and what has changed something.
Floppy Drive, CD DVD Drive and Hard Drive Cables (flat ribbon cable)
There are 3 types of drives cables. The ribbon for hard and optic drives, the inverted ways
ribbon for floppy drives and the Serial ATA cable for hard drives.
The standard drive ribbon has been the first to hit the market along with the floppy drive
ribbon.
The ribbon cables are the only one that received support improvements over the years
improving data storage and data's transfer rates for newer hard drives.
Originally, ribbon cables were called IDE. When manufacturers started to enhance the
technology, they started to call the ribbon EIDE then ATA then PATA. Nowdays, the ribbon is
called ATA or PATA.
The floppy drive ribbon is easily recognized by its inverted ways. Beside its inverted ways, it
has the same configuration as the standard drive ribbon above except that it does not fit in
an ATA bus on the motherboard.
3.5' floppy drives as we know them today, the ribbon cable has never changed, no
improvement at all.
Inverted ways ribbon cable for floppy drives
The new and very improved SATA cable. Mainly for hard drives, the cable is way thinner
than his older friend and supports the high performance offered by the Serial-ATA standard.
This SATA cable marks the end of ribbons. More and more computers are built with the
SATA interface. You can expect a fast disappearance of ribbon cables.
Firewire and USB are both a serial bus interface standard. Firewire being Apple, I will not
talk much about it, because this site is about PC even if Firewire did touch the PC market at
some stages. The Firewire interface is better than the USB at a certain point, but nothing to
be scare of. It is not a big lost for us PC users.
Universal Serial Bus (USB) is the design answer to Apple Firewire. The USB interface fixed a
major problem in PC computers.
In the early days, PC computers were not built with lot of hardware, enabling the use of
serial or parallel peripherals without hardware's addressing problems. But nowadays we use
several peripherals and this cause conflicts addressing among peripherals and other
hardware.
The port adressing was used for the hardware to comunicate with the external devices like
the mouse or the monitor, but without the USB interface, our modern computers would
have lots of conflicts with the port adressing. Thinking about all the devices we are using
nowadays, I cannot imagine a computer without USB.
By reading through the entire page you will learn how they are attached to your drives,
which standard you should use according to your drives and what is supported by cables
made of 40 and 80 wires and more.
Composition
Each ATA ribbon cable has a flexible plastic ribbon that contains the wires where there is 2
or 3 connectors that are fixed to it. 1 connector to each extremity and 1 connector close to
the master connector if it is a cable with 3 connectors.
Note the red line on the image; all ATA cables have a red mark pin 1. This mark is made to
help the user to figure out which side to plug the connector on the drive or the
motherboard.
You should be able to find 18 inches and 36 inches cables in computer stores. The 18 inches
is mostly the only one used and the 36 inches are more used for special reasons.
The cables with 80 wires are made of 40 grounds that are interleaved with the other 40
wires. This way all previous 40 wires are grounded.
To help you understand the differences between the 40 and 80 wires, take a look at the
table below. See the different standards supported by both of them.
Ribbon cables are made of 1 or 2 connectors for drives. With 1 connector, only a drive sets
to master can be attached to the cable. But with 2 connectors, 1 drive must be set to
master and the other set to slave. You can also use a cable with 2 connectors to plug only 1
drive, in that case you have to set the drive to master and use the master connector only,
otherwise it will not work at all.
A question lots of people ask me is what will happen if I use a cable with 40 wires on a drive
with a standard supported only by a cable with 80 wires?
In such case, it will still work, but the cable will not be able to offer the performance
wanted. If your drive supports Ultra-DMA/66, then the cable with 40 wires will use the
highest mode it can support. In that case Ultra-ATA/33 and your drive will run at Ultra-
DMA/33 instead of Ultra-DMA/66.
Serial Advanced Technology Attachment (SATA). The SATA interface is a design for
transferring data among storage devices like hard drives and optic drives.
In comparison with the ATA interface, the SATA offers a faster transfer rate with features
and improvements we will see throughout the guide.
The interesting thing with the SATA is the new cable that uses only 7 wires. With only 7
wires the cable is thin and permits a better airflow inside the computer case. The older
cables used for ATA interface were cutting the airflow with their large ribbons and were
frustrating to manipulate.
With the SATA it is as easy as plug here and plug there. No cable twisting problems like the
ATA.
An other interesting feature from SATA interface is the possibility to hot swapping. It
means, you can plug or unplug hardware without having to reboot the computer. This
feature has been taken from the USB technology that already makes the use of swapping.
The SATA 1 named SATA 150, offers a bandwidth of 1.5 Gbit/s. In comparison with the
ATA/133, it was a slight advantage. The first SATA generation was more used for its
features than its bandwidth.
The SATA 2 called SATA 300 is the new generation working at the rate of 3 Gbit/s. It is
more than twice than the ATA rate. With a frequency like this you can finally feel the
difference between the 2 technologies.
The SATA 3 is on the way and will offer a bandwidth of 6 Gbit/s. The ability of using more
than 1 drives by cables should appear on the 3rd generation.
Compatibility
The ATA and The SATA are not compatible. You cannot plug a SATA drive in the ATA
interface. This says, I heard there are hybrid hard drives supporting both technologies. This
is only a speculation, I did not investigate to see if they exist.
On the other hand, SATA 1 and SATA 2 are backward and forward compatible. If your
motherboard does not support the SATA 300, a PCI extension card for SATA should do the
trick.
Another way for adding more compatibility has been introduced by hard drive's
manufacturers. A jumper on SATA 2 hard drives can be set to force the drive to run under
SATA 1.