Motherboard Unit
What is a motherboard?
A motherboard is the main printed circuit board (PCB) in a computer. The motherboard is a computer's central communications backbone connectivity point, through which all components and external peripherals connect.
Motherboards can be found in virtually all computers, especially desktop and laptop PCs. The components that connect through them include chipsets, central processing units (CPU) and memory. The external peripherals include Wi-Fi, Ethernet and graphics cards with the graphics processing unit, or GPU.
Motherboard manufacturers include Acer, ASRock, Asus, Gigabyte Technology, Intel and Micro-Star International.
How do motherboards work?
The PCB of a large motherboard may include six to 14 layers of fiberglass, copper connecting traces and copper planes for power and signal isolation. Other components get added to a motherboard through expansion slots. These include processor sockets; dual in-line memory modules; Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI), PCI Express (PCIe) and solid-state drive M.2 slots; as well as power supply connections.
A heatsink and fan manage the heat components such as the CPU generate. Typically motherboards offer additional connectivity through a Southbridge chip such as PCI, Serial Advanced Technology Attachment or SATA, Thunderbolt, USB and other interfaces.
The CPU is generally connected to double data rate 3 (DDR3), DDR4, DDR5 or onboard LPDDRx RAM and PCIe. This is done through point-to-point interconnects such as HyperTransport, Intel's QuickPath Interconnect and Ultra Path Interconnect. Choosing a motherboard often determines many features a computer will support.
PCI-e slots on a motherboard.
Motherboard designs in desktop computers typically are the standard ATX motherboard, which is Intel's improved version of IBM's AT design. Other form factor designers include the following:
micro ATX
mini-ITX
nano-ITX
Pico-ITX
Some memory controllers are now built into CPUs; that has eliminated the Northbridge chips that provided memory management from the motherboard. Integrated video has moved from a motherboard slotted peripheral to graphics-enabled CPUs.
AMD's Ryzen has a system-on-a-chip design that also makes the Southbridge chipset optional. This CPU integration has cut motherboard manufacturers' costs. They can offer base systems for workstations and entry-level computers and can design customized implementations for various processors that enable platform upgrades.
Gaming motherboards are made for high-performance computers; they are more powerful and have more features than motherboards for desktop and laptop computers.
A typical motherboard contains the CPU, memory, storage, ROM BIOS, Southbridge and Northbridge chipsets, cooling fans, peripheral connector slots, connectors for peripheral devices, the battery backup and the power connector.
Motherboard components
Each motherboard is designed to support specific components, such as CPUs and memory. They can accommodate most types of hard drives and peripherals.
Motherboards include the following primary components:
CPU with its logic circuitry that processes the instructions from programs, the operating system and other computer components;
memory where instructions and data are temporarily stored and executed;
storage interface for solid-state or hard disk drive for persistent data and application storage;
ROM BIOS providing non-volatile memory that stores firmware, such as the basic input/output system or BIOS;
Northbridge chipset that connects CPU, memory, storage and other components;
Southbridge chipset that connects peripheral elements to the motherboard and connects to the Northbridge;
cooling fans that maintain a suitable internal operating temperature;
peripheral connector slots for plugin peripheral cards, such as graphics and communications adapters;
connectors for peripheral devices such as USB ports and other connectors for external devices;
the backup battery that ensures key system configuration data such as date and time and BIOS settings are maintained when main power is unavailable; and
the power connector, connecting to an external power source.
Many other elements comprise a typical motherboard. Think of a motherboard as a large mosaic of electrical connections linking the various parts of a computer.
Signs of a Failing Motherboard
Common symptoms of motherboard issues are similar to CPU problems: The system does not display anything; an error code appears; one or more beeps occur; the system locks; the system reboots; a Windows BSOD (blue screen of death) appears; or one or more of the ports, expansion slots, or memory modules fails.Â
To help, many computers have some type of error code system. This could be lights on the motherboard, beeps, or something else. While these codes can't always tell you the exact problem they can at least point you in the right direction.
If there are no error codes you can try the following one at a time:
Check all the cables connected to the motherboard.
Check that any components like RAM or GPUs are fully insterted into their slots.
Reset the BIOS
Update your BIOS and UEFI
If these steps fail and you still can't find the problem you may have to swap out your motherboard.
PART 2
After answering the questions add the photo you took to your Google Doc with the other assignments. Locate and label the following parts or your motherboard. Use Google to research more about each one if you need to.
PCIex16 slots (what do the colors mean?)
PCIe M.2 slot (you may or may not have this one)
SATA Ports (label each color - they're different)
CMOS Battery
RAM slots
North and Southbridge chips (because these are older computers you should have these)
AGP slot