Motherboard Form Factor Patrick
Motherboard Form Factor Patrick
Motherboard Form Factor Patrick
In the early days of the computer, the AT and baby AT form factors were the most
common motherboard form factors. These two variants differ primarily in width: the older
full AT board is 12" wide. It is an obsolete motherboard form factor only found in older
machines, 386 class or earlier.
One of the major problems with the width of this board (aside from limiting its use in
smaller cases) is that a good percentage of the board "overlaps" with the drive bays.
This makes installation, troubleshooting, and upgrading more difficult.
A Baby AT motherboard is 8.5" wide and 13" long. The reduced width means much less
overlap in most cases with the drive bays, although there usually is still some overlap at
the front of the case.
Baby AT motherboards are distinguished by their shape, and usually by the presence of
a single, full-sized keyboard connector soldered onto the board. The serial and
parallel port connectors are almost always attached using cables (ribbons) that go
between the physical connectors mounted on the case, and pin "headers" located on
the motherboard. Most of the boards use AT power supplies and the system units tend
to be tower casing.
AT Motherboard
AT motherboard. Note: at the top right hand corner of the board, we have the AT
keyboard port
Wikimedia Commons
The ATX, created by Intel in 1995, was developed as an evolution of the Baby AT form
factor and was defined to address four areas of improvement:-
The ATX is basically a Baby AT rotated 90 degrees and providing a new mounting
configuration for the power supply. The processor is relocated away from the expansion
slots, (unlike Baby AT) allowing them to hold full-length add-in cards.
The longer side of the board is used to host more onboard I/O ports. The ATX power
supply, rather than blowing air out of the chassis, as in most Baby AT platforms,
provides air-flow through the chassis and across the processor.
ATX Motherboard
ATX-Motherboard
This form factor was developed as a natural evolution of the ATX form factor to
address new market trends and PC technologies. MicroATX supports:
Flex ATX
The most distinguishing feature is the riser card that is used to hold expansion slots.
The riser card of the LPX motherboard form factor is situated at the center of the
motherboard. Expansion cards plug into the riser card; usually, a maximum of just three.
This means that the expansion cards are parallel to the plane of the motherboard.
This allows the height of the case to be greatly reduced since the height of the
expansion cards is the main reason full-sized desktop cases are as tall as they are. The
problem is that you are limited to only two or three expansion slots!
While the LPX form factor can be used by a manufacturer to save money and space in
the construction of a custom product, these systems suffer from non-standardization,
poor expandability, poor upgradability, poor cooling, and difficulty of use for the do-it-
yourself.
LPX
The need for a modern, small motherboard standard led to the development of the new
NLX form factor. In many ways, NLX is similar to LPX. Also like ATX, the NLX standard
was developed by Intel Corporation in 1998.
NLX still uses the same general design as LPX, with a smaller motherboard and a riser
card for expansion cards. The riser card is pushed to one extreme edge of the
motherboard.