BTX (form factor)

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Contents

Computer form factors
Name PCB Size (mm)
WTX 356×425
AT 350×305
Baby-AT 330×216
BTX 325×266
ATX 305×244
LPX 330×229
NLX 254×228
microATX 244×244
DTX 244×203
FlexATX 229×191
Mini-DTX 203×170
EBX 203×146
microATX (Min.) 171×171
Mini-ITX 170×170
EPIC (Express) 165×115
Nano-ITX 120×120
COM Express 125×95
ETX / XTX 114×95
Pico-ITX 100×72
PC/104 (-Plus) 96×90
mobile-ITX 75×45
BTX case
BTX case

BTX (for Balanced Technology Extended) is a form factor for PC motherboards, originally slated to be the replacement for the aging ATX motherboard form factor in late 2004 and early 2005. It has been designed to alleviate some of the issues that arose from using newer technologies (which often demand more power and create more heat) on motherboards compliant with the circa-1996 ATX specification. The ATX and BTX standards were both proposed by Intel. Intel's decision to refocus on low-power CPUs, after suffering scaling and thermal issues with the Pentium 4, has added some doubt to the future of the form factor. The first company to implement BTX was Gateway Inc, followed by Dell. Apple's Mac Pro utilizes the elements of the BTX design system as well but is not BTX compliant. However, future development of BTX retail products by Intel was canceled in September 2006.[1]

Enhancements

  • Low-profile - With the push for ever-smaller systems, a redesigned backplane that shaves inches off height requirements is a benefit to system integrators and enterprises who use rack mounts or blade servers.
  • Thermal design - The BTX layout establishes a straighter path of airflow with fewer obstacles, resulting in better overall cooling capabilities. A distinct feature of BTX is the vertical mounting of the motherboard on the left-hand side. This results in the graphics card heatsink or fan facing upwards, rather than in the direction of the adjacent expansion card.
  • Structural design - The BTX standard specifies different locations for hardware mounting points, thereby reducing latency between devices[citation needed] and also reduces the physical strain imposed on the motherboard by heat sinks, capacitors and other components dealing with electrical and thermal regulation. For example, the Northbridge and Southbridge chips are located near each other and to the hardware they control.

Pico BTX

BTX form factor motherboard inside a Dell Dimension E520.
BTX form factor motherboard inside a Dell Dimension E520.

Pico BTX is a computer motherboard and system form factor. Pico BTX motherboards are relatively small—smaller than current 'micro'-sized motherboards, hence the name 'pico'. They share a common top half with the other sizes in the BTX line, but sport only one or two expansion slots, designed for half-height or riser-card applications.

Intel, as the originator of the form factor, is the primary manufacturer of such boards. As of January 2007, there are very limited numbers of OEM motherboards and cases for Pico BTX. Complete systems are available from Dell, which embraced BTX quickly within its desktop product line, and appears to use Pico BTX boards in its smallest machines, though no claims are made by Dell in their marketing materials.

Compatibility with ATX products

The BTX form factor is largely incompatible with the ATX form factor. The only area where this doesn't fully apply is in power supply support. ATX power supplies can be used with regular or full-sized BTX motherboards. Neither the power connectors nor the direction of airflow from the power supply fan has been changed.

Criticism

The BTX form factor has still not been widely adopted despite the age of the extremely common ATX and related standards. As a result the selection of key BTX parts may be limited or unavailable. The exceptions are select OEMs who are generally able to supply ample replacement parts for such systems albeit at a less competitive cost. Large customers are usually able to secure favorable support contracts which negate such disadvantages but small businesses and home users may find third party support for such systems more expensive raising the cost of ownership.

The market for ATX boards and power supplies is still extremely large and competitive with little signs of changing in the near future. There are few advantages seen to BTX and many issues which hamper adoption. Those who are invested in ATX have the option of using cases and power supplies between platform generations as well as a wide array of OEM and third party support options. The ATX platform generally offers a much wider range of processor and chipset options than the mostly Intel BTX platform. To date AMD has offered few BTX product options and has emerged as major and viable player in the computer industry.

The hobbyist and gaming markets are major consumers of highly profitable bleeding edge hardware and demand a large selection of standardized components and parts from a large variety of manufactures which BTX has yet to offer. In addition they tend to be early adopters of technology products and exert a large influence over industry trends and the eventual mainstream. BTX would likely need to penetrate this market before large scale adoption will occur.

Currently there is a trend toward energy efficient hardware and cooler designs which produce less heat making BTX less advantageous. Intel has also made major shifts in response to heightened competition in recent years and has released smaller and cooler running processors than what may have been anticipated.

External links

Documentation

  1. ^ BTX development cancelled

This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.


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