Examining BTX cont'd

The D915GMH is essentially a microBTX version of our D915GUX motherboard with a few functional differences on top of the obvious BTX design. When we first laid eyes on the D915GMH the first thing we noticed was the arrangement of the CPU socket, Northbridge, and Southbridge. The CPU socket is placed at the front of the motherboard with the Northbridge behind it slightly to the left and the Southbridge behind the Northbridge directly in line with the CPU socket. Each is positioned on a diagonal which we assume will improve air flow around all three chips. Since these components are three of the hottest running components in a PC it made sense to position them in line from front to back and we expect fans to be placed in that same linear arrangement.

A design that revolves so much around irregularly placed components was slightly unusual for us to see.  Although software dictates the exact routing of all the traces from component to component, its very obvious that some very complicated math went into assuring each bridge and component was placed correctly.  The fact that almost nothing seems to be at a right angle is a little overwhelming at first.

The IDE and Floppy ribbon headers were separated on the board. We found this to be inefficient, especially for the floppy drive, since they are on opposite sides of the system. Though not as important nowadays since SATA drives are moving into mainstream PCs, those who would like to use floppy drives are left with only the option of using a lengthy rounded cable. Since the AOpen/Intel combination we received today looks more like an OEM design than something we would typically buy and assemble from NewEgg, problems with the floppy cable placement shouldn't be a huge issue.  


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There are 4 DDR memory sockets which are placed at the far left edge of the board. Keep in mind our D915GMH runs on DDR2, but other than design layout that is the only major difference between our microATX and microBTX motherboards.


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The PCIe x16 slot is positioned about 3 inches from the rightmost edge of the D915GMH. Since the AOpen B300 is a half height case a riser card is included for the PCIe x16 slot. This allows the VGA card to be mounted towards the center of the motherboard to keep it inline with the CPU and chipset.

Examining BTX BTX Cooling and Airflow
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  • ZobarStyl - Monday, November 15, 2004 - link

    God looking at those small cases makes me tremble and remember my parent's old IBM Pentium I system where you had to remove the PSU and the CD drive to install the RAM. I was so glad when I saw computers moving AWAY from this type of design...forget footprint, I want a case I can actually work in.

    Either way, congrats to Intel on making a new Delleron case, but I'm simply not interested. Great for OEM's but useless for me, just like most of Intel's products...

    As for #3's question, why does Intel need it outside of helping their OEM buddies? Dual core is only going to make Prescott's heat issues stand out further and their x20/30/40's on the roadmap still are clocked in the range where they are going to be high heat output. All that heat has to go somewhere...
  • shabby - Monday, November 15, 2004 - link

    #5 that must be the canadian version, it'll keep us warm during winter by exhausting warm air into our faces.
  • Jeff7181 - Monday, November 15, 2004 - link

    Am I reading this right... warm air from the CPU is exhausted out the FRONT of the case????
  • mcveigh - Monday, November 15, 2004 - link

    I can't get past page 1??????
  • skunkbuster - Monday, November 15, 2004 - link

    will intel even need btx anymore? since they are probably going to be dumping the p4 in favor of the pM(eventually)?
    i thought one of the main reasons why btx was designed was to better handle the hotter p4 processors and to cool them more efficiently?
  • PuravSanghani - Monday, November 15, 2004 - link

    Thanks MAME, problem fixed :)
  • MAME - Monday, November 15, 2004 - link

    thumbnail of this article doesn't load on front page

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