Part 1 MOTHERBOARD
Part 1 MOTHERBOARD
Part 1 MOTHERBOARD
A CMOS battery.
• Motherboards also include a small separate
block of memory made from CMOS RAM
chips which is kept alive by a battery
(known as a CMOS battery) even when the
PC’s power is off. This prevents
reconfiguration when the PC is powered on.
• CMOS devices require very little power to
operate.
The CMOS RAM is used to store basic
Information about the PC’s configuration
for instance:-
•Floppy disk and hard disk drive types
•Information about CPU
•RAM size
•Date and time
•Serial and parallel port information
• Plug and Play information
• Power Saving settings
• Other Important data kept in CMOS memory
is the time and date, which is updated by a
Real Time Clock (RTC).
Cache Memory
PCI slots.
• An expansion bus is an input/output pathway
from the CPU to peripheral devices and it is
typically made up of a series of slots on the
motherboard.
• Expansion boards (cards) plug into the bus.
• PCI is the most common expansion
bus in a PC and other hardware
platforms.
• Buses carry signals such as data, memory
addresses, power, and control signals from
component to component. Other types of
buses include ISA and EISA.
• Expansion buses enhance the PCs capabilities
by allowing users to add missing features in
their computers by slotting adapter cards into
expansion slots.
Chipsets
• A chipset is a group of small circuits that
coordinate the flow of data to and from a PC's
key components.
• These key components include the CPU itself,
the main memory, the secondary cache, and
any devices situated on the buses.
• A chipset also controls data flow to and from
hard disks and other devices connected to the
IDE channels.
A computer has got two main chipsets:
1. The NorthBridge (also called the
memory controller) is in charge of
controlling transfers between the
processor and the RAM, which is why it
is located physically near the processor.
It is sometimes called the GMCH, for
Graphic and Memory Controller Hub.
2. The SouthBridge (also called the
input/output controller or expansion
controller) handles communications
between slower peripheral devices. It is
also called the ICH (I/O Controller Hub). The
term "bridge" is generally used to designate
a component which connects two buses.
Chipset manufacturers include SIS,
VIA, ALI, and OPTI.
CPU Clock
• The CPU clock synchronizes the operation of
all parts of the PC and provides the basic
timing signal for the CPU. Using a quartz
crystal, the CPU clock breathes life into the
microprocessor by feeding it a constant flow
of pulses.
• For example, a 200 MHz CPU receives
200 million pulses per second from the
clock. A 2 GHz CPU gets two billion
pulses per second. Similarly, in any
communications device a clock may be
used to synchronize the data pulses
between sender and receiver.
• A "real-time clock," also called the "system
clock," keeps track of the time of day and
makes this data available to the software. A
"time-sharing clock" interrupts the CPU at
regular intervals and allows the operating
system to divide its time between active users
and/or applications.
Switches and Jumpers
• DIP (Dual In-line Package) switches are small
electronic switches found on the circuit board
that can be turned on or off just like a normal
switch.
• They are very small and so are usually
flipped with a pointed object, such as the
tip of a screwdriver, a bent paper clip, or a
pen top. Take care when cleaning near
DIP switches, as some solvents may
destroy them.
• Dip switches are obsolete and you will
not find them in modern systems.
• Jumper pins are small protruding pins on the
motherboard. A jumper cap or bridge is used
to connect or short a pair of jumper pins.
When the bridge is connected to any two pins,
via a shorting link, it completes the circuit and
a certain configuration has been achieved.
• Jumper caps are metal bridges that close an
electrical circuit. Typically, a jumper consists
of a plastic plug that fits over a pair of
protruding pins. Jumpers are sometimes used
to configure expansion boards. By placing a
jumper plug over a different set of pins, you
can change a board's parameters.
• NOTE: You can check the jumper pins and
jumper cap at the back of an IDE hard disk and
a CD/DVD ROM/Writer.
END