860 likes | 1.13k Views
Chapter 1. First Look at Computer Parts and Tools. Objectives. Learn about the various parts inside a computer case and how they connect together and are compatible Learn how to protect yourself and the equipment against the dangers of electricity when working inside a computer case
E N D
Chapter 1 First Look at Computer Parts and Tools
Objectives • Learn about the various parts inside a computer case and how they connect together and are compatible • Learn how to protect yourself and the equipment against the dangers of electricity when working inside a computer case • Learn about tools you will need as a PC hardware technician and safety precautions when working around computer equipment
Form Factors Used by Computer Cases, Power Supplies, and Motherboards • Form factors - standards that describe the size, shape, screw hole positions, and major features of computer cases, power supplies, and motherboards • Two form factors used by most desktop and tower computer cases, motherboards and power supplies: • ATX • Mini-ATX
Form Factors Used by Computer Cases, Power Supplies, and Motherboards • ATX (Advanced Technology Extended) • Most commonly used form factor today • Originally developed by Intel in 1995 • It is an open, nonproprietary industry specification • Mini-ATX form factor • Major variation of ATX • Reduces total cost of a system by: • Reducing number of expansion slots on motherboard • Reducing power supplied to the board • Allowing for a smaller case size
Form Factors Used by Computer Cases, Power Supplies, and Motherboards • The microATX (MATX) form factor • A major variation of ATX form factor • MicroATX reduces the total cost of a system by • reducing the number of expansion slots on the motherboard, • reducing the power supplied to the board • allowing for a smaller case size
Types of Computer Cases • Tower case – sits upright and can hold several drives • Desktop case – lies flat and sometimes holds monitor • Laptop case – mobile • All-in-one case – used with all-in-one computer
The Importance of the Computer Case • Most computer parts are installed in the case, the case is far more than just a box. • The case affect the type and number of components that can be installed • The layout and design of the case can • determine the cooling performance of the entire system • easy of installation of components.
Types of Tower Cases • Full • Mid • Mini • Micro
Other Case Considerations • Number of drive bays • Number of expansion slots • Cooling • Front panel
What’s Inside the Case • Computer Case(Sometimes called “chassis”) • Hold • Motherboard (chapter 3) • Processor CPU (chapter 4) • expansion cards (chapter 3) • memory modules (chapter 4) • Ports • hard drive (chapter 5) • optical drive (chapter 6) • Power supply
Inside the Case Optical Drive Hard Drive Power Supply Mother Board
What’s Inside the Case (Motherboard) Memory Slots Expansion Slots Ports CPU & Fan
What’s Inside the Case (Motherboard) • Sometimes called system board • Largest and most important circuit board which contains; • Processor – central processing unit (CPU) • Processes most of the data and instructions for the entire system • CPUs generate heat and require a heat sink and fan (together called the processor cooler)
What’s Inside the Case (Motherboard) • Largest and most important circuit board which contains; • Expansion slots containing expansion cards - also called adapter cards • A circuit board that provides more ports than those provided by the motherboard. • Can also add additional capabilities to the computer. • Are fitted into expansion slots. • Memory slots containing memory modules – random access memory (RAM) • Temporary storage for data and instructions as they are being processed by the CPU
What’s Inside the Case (Motherboard) • Largest and most important circuit board which contains; • Ports • An interface on a computer to which you can connect a device. • Personal computers have various types of ports. • Internally, there are several ports for connecting disk drives,. • Externally, personal computers have ports for connecting display screens, keyboards, modems, printers, mice, and other peripheral devices.
What’s Inside the Case Ports (a first look) • The A+ 220-801 exam expects you to know how to identify the ports found in hardware systems. • Consider this your introduction to ports so that you can recognize them when you see them. • Later in the book, you learn more about the details of each port
VGA (Video Graphics Array) Port, also called a DB-15 Port • a 15-pin female port that transmits analog video. • Analog means a continuous signal with infinite variations • All older monitors use VGA ports.
S-Video Port • A 4-pin or 7-pin round video port sometimes used to connect to a television. • The 4-pin port is missing the extra pins in the middle and is the more common type. • The 7-pin port
DVI (Digital Video Interface) Port • The DVI port transmits digital or analog video. • Three types of DVI ports exist, which you will learn about in Chapter 6.
HDMI (High-Definition Multimedia Interface) Port • Transmits digital video and audio (not analog transmissions) and is often used to connect to home theater equipment. • Three Types • standard • mini • micro
Display Port (apple) • Transmits digital video and audio • Slowly replacing VGA and DVI ports on personal computers.
Thunderbolt Port (apple) • Port transmits both video and data on the same port and cable. • The port is shaped the same as the Display Portand is compatible with Display Port devices.
Network Port • Also called an Ethernet port or an RJ-45 port • Used by a network cable to connect to the wired network. Fast Ethernet ports run at 100 Mbps (megabits per second), and Gigabit • Ethernet runs at 1,000 Mbps or 1 Gbps (gigabit per second). • A megabit is one million bits and a gigabit is one billion bits. • A bit is a binary value of one or zero.
Audio Ports and S/PDIF Sony-Philips Digital Interface sound port connects to an external home theater audio system, providing digital audio output and the best signal quality.
USB (Universal Serial Bus) port • A multi-purpose I/O port used by many different devices • Some USB ports are faster than others. • USB • USB 2.0 • USB 3.0
FireWire Port • Also called an IEEE1394 port • pronounced “I-triple-E 1394 port • used for high-speed multimedia devices such as digital camcorders.
External SATA (eSATA) • Used by an external hard drive using the eSATA interface. • eSATA is faster than FireWire.
PS/2 Port • Also called a mini-DIN port • Round 6-pin port used by a keyboard or mouse. • The ports look alike but are not interchangeable. • Newer computers use USB ports for the keyboard and mouse rather than the older PS/2 ports.
Serial Port • Called a DB9 port • 9-pin male port used on older computers. • It has been mostly replaced by USB ports.
Parallel Port • A 25-pin female port used by older printers. • This older port has been replaced by USB ports.
Modem Port • Called an RJ-11 port, is used to connect dial-up phone lines to computers. • A modem port looks like a network port, but is not as wide.
What’s Inside the Case Drives • Hard drives may also be called hard disk drive (HDD) • Permanent storage used to hold data and programs • Other drives include: optical drive and tape drive
What’s Inside the Case Drives • Two standard hard drive types: • Serial ATA standard (SATA) • Used by most drives today • Data connection using a serial ATA cable • Parallel ATA (PATA) – slower than SATA • Also called IDE interface • Data connection using an IDE cable
What’s Inside the Case Drives • Floppy drive • 3.5-inch disk holding 1.44 MB of data • Uses a 34 pin cable • Obsolete
What’s Inside the Case ATX Power Supplies • Power supply – also called power supply unit (PSU) • Receives and converts house current so that components inside the case can use it • Most come with a dual-voltage selector switch • Allows switching input voltage from 115V to 220V • Following are ATX power connectors.
20 Pin P1 • 20-pin P1 connect is the main motherboard power connector used in the early ATX systems • This 20-pin power connector was sufficient for powering expansion cards installed in PCI (Peripheral Component Interconnect) expansion slots on the motherboard
24 Pin • Also called the 20+4 pin connector • Main motherboard power connector used today
ATX 4 Pin, 8 Pin Auxiliary Connectors • When processors began to require more power, the ATX Version 2.1 specifications added a 4-pin motherboard auxiliary connector near the processor socket to provide an additional 12 V of power • A power supply that provides this 4-pin 12-volt power cord is called an ATX12V power supply. • Later boards replaced the 4-pin 12-volt power connector with an 8-pin motherboard auxiliary connector that provided more amps for the processor
ATX Molex • 4-pin Molex connector is used for IDE (PATA) drives
ATX 15-pin SATA • used to connect SATA drives
ATX 4 Pin Berg • Used to connect floppy disk drive (FDD)
ATX 6 Pin PCIe • Provides an extra +12 V for high-end video cards using PCI Express, Version 1 standard
ATX 8 Pin PCIe • Provides an extra +12 V for high-end video cards using PCI Express, Version 2
ATX 6-pin plus 2-pin +12 V PCIe • Used by high-end video cards using PCIe ×16 slots to provide extra voltage to the card. • To get the 8-pin connector, combine both the 6-pin and 2-pin connectors