Serving The Planet

Micro ATX

Titel: Micro ATX
Period: Q3 2001
Status: closed
Hosted: locally

Micro ATX!

news: 3rd quarter of 2001 … this article isn’t updated anymore

Ever had desires for a smaller case? Of course you had and perhaps still have
You are into building a nice small server for your gaming, router, etc? Or just want to build a compact PC based DVD/Divx or MP3 player?

Perhaps you are aware that most of computers today are based on ATX specifications and that ATX doesn’t suit your needs? Well there is something out there called Micro ATX. This basically means smaller motherboards, smaller cases with a smaller PSU, etc. There’s a lot you gain, but a lot of sacrifing as well: slots, bays, expandibilty, PSU power, etc.

The reason for writing this article is, that I wanted to build computersystem ‘a la pizzabox’ to hide a lowvalue linuxserver myself. I couldn’t find any satisfying information on the internet that covers it all.

This article should provide you enough resources to explore deeper into the world of Micro ATX. Articletopics:

    • Information about Form Factors (inclusief specification for Micro&Flex ATX and NLX).
    • specs comparison of mATX computercases
    • specs comparison of different mATX mainboards
    • PSU Power problem (how much is enough for a typical configuration?)
    • Links on making your own DivX/DVD station

Update 5-12-2001: It seems there are huge quantities “NLX” and “Flex ATX” (short: fATX) casings, which hold huge potentials as well. I will keep focussed on Micro ATX though. Whenever something nice about NLX or fATX comes up, then I won’t hesitate to mention it.

kind regards,
Ernst Kasteleijn

P.S. this page can grow bigger with your help! and YES I admit this page is still kinda messy, but I’m working on it! Feel free to comment on it though.

Information about Form Factors

This page: http://www.formfactors.org/formfactors/form_factors.htm contains all the information you need on Motherboard Form Factors, Power Supply Form Factors, Riser Form Factors, Add in Cards and others.

 

mATX cases

Feature comparison

mATX cases come in several sizes (just like ATX variants). The table below has been sorted ascended at brand&type(s), type of housing and dimensions.

 

 

brand&type(s)

type of housing

dimensions DxWxH (mm)*

external/internal bays

slots

PSU

certification

other

url to site manufacturer

url to reviews

AOpen H300 series: H300a, H300b, H300c

Desktop

373x322x95

1×5.25, 1×3.5″ / 1×3.5″

4 low**

145W proprietary

UL, CSA, CE, TUV, S, CB, N, FCC, C’tick, Novell ready

H300b and H300c are design cases

AOpen HQ85 / MT85

Minitower

360x180x350

2×5.25″, 2×3.5″ / 1×3.5″

4

145W

UL, CSA, CE, VDE, S, D, N, F1, FCC, DoC, Novell ready

HQ85 has case design colors

AOpen HT85

Minitower

356x180x356

2×5.25″, 2×3.5″ / 1×3.5″

4

145W

UL, CSA, CE, VDE, S, D, N, F1, FCC, DoC, Novell ready

Bend-in edges ensure safe assembly and installation, Slide-in/out side board design,

Enlight 7130 series: 7130, 7131A, 7131B, 7131C, 7131D, 7131E, 7132, 7133

Minitower

330x180x330

1×5.25″, 1×3.5″ / 2×3.5″

4

ATX PS/3 150W

CE, FCC, FI, N, S, D, SA, TUV, RU

0.8mm steel

Enlight 7150 series: 7151A, 7151B, 7151C, 7151D, 7151E, 7152, 7154 Minitower

330x180x375

2×5.25, 1×3.5″ / 2×3.5″

4

ATX PS/3 150W

CE, FCC, FI, N, S, D, SA, TUV, RU

0.8mm steel

Enlight 7180 series: EN-7181 / EN 7182 Desktop

457x377x130

2×5.25″, 1×3.5″ / 2×3.5″

4 low**

SFX P/S, 100W~150W

CE, FCC, FI, N, S, D, SA, TUV, RU

0.8 mm steel

Enlight 7305 series: EN-7108 Minitower

320x355x190

2×5.25″, 2×3.5″ / 0

4

ATX PS/3 145W

CE, FCC, FI, N, S, D, SA, TUV, RU

0.8 mm steel, swing-out HDD bracket/motherboard mounting

Gehaeuse MS706B cdt-001 / cdt-001-145 / cdt-001-251

Desktop

380x430x130

 

1×5.25″, 1×3.5″ / 1×3.5″

6

none / 150W / AT 250W

?

HIFI design (black)

Gehaeuse Flextower cdt-003 / cdt-003-150

Flex ATX

tower

?x?x?

1×5.25″, 2×3.5″ / 0

1

none / 150W

?

FlexATX-Mainboards only!, able to fit a 80mm on top

Inwin D500

Desktop

416x370x130

1×5.25″, 2×3.5″ / 1×3.5″

4

145W

UL, CE, FCC Class B

1.0mm sheet metal, Snap on cage for extra fan

http://www.in-win.com/framecode/ino_d500.html

Inwin T515 Minitower

420x190x420

2×5.25″, 1×3.5″ / 2×3.5″

4

145W

UL, CE, FCC Class B

a V series design case

http://www.in-win.com/framecode/ino_t515pw.html

Inwin V series:V500 / V600 / V700 / V800

Minitower

352x180x373

2×5.25″, 2×3.5″ / 1×3.5″

?

235W

UL, CE, FCC Class B

1.0mm sheet metal, Snap on cage for extra fan

http://www.in-win.com/framecode/minit.html

 

* DxWxH => DEPTH x WIDTH x HEIGTH. If manufacturer gave dimensions in inches only, values have been multiplied by a factor 2.54
** You can’t fit normalsize PCI card in a “low slot”. The cards inserted in these slots have to confirm to the specs of “ATX Riser” or “Low Profile” cards: http://www.formfactors.org/formfactors/low_profile.htm

Update 05-11-2001: Page was getting messy because of all the casepics. I’ve decided to throw them away. Want casepics? Follow the provided links.

 

mATX mainboards

Different chipsets

All mATX mainboard are based on one of the following chipsets:

Chipset CPU type Information / specs: P(r)eviews:
ALI TNT2
Intel 815EP
SIS 620
SIS 630S Socket 370 http://www.tomshardware.com/mainboard/00q4/001009/index.html 
SIS 730S Socket A http://www6.tomshardware.com/mainboard/01q1/010109/
SIS 733 Socket A
SIS 735 Socket A
VIA KLE133

 

Comparison

 

Under heavy construction!

 

 

Brand/Type

CPU socket

chipset

DIMM

sound

NIC

vga

P / I / A / CNR / AMR

ATA Controller

url to site manufacturer

url to reviews

AOpen MX3s

Asus A7S-VM

Socket A SIS 730S

Realtek RTL8100

yes

4/0/0/0/0

Asus CUEP2-M

Socket 370 Intel 815EP 3x ? ?

3/0/1/1/0

1x UDMA66/100, 1x ATAPI? http://www.digit-life.com/articles/asuscuep2m/index.html

Asus CUSL2-M

EliteGroup K7SEM

Socket A

SIS 730S

2/0/1/1/1

1x UDMA66/100, 1x ATAPI?

EliteGroup K7VZM

EliteGroup P6IPM

FC-PGA

Intel 815EP & 82801BA Chipset

2x PC133 SDRAM up to 512MB

AC97 Audio Codec

2/1/1/1/0

2x UDMA 33/66/100

EliteGroup P6SEP Me+

Socket 370

SIS 620

?

?

2/1/0/?/?

U/66

GigaByte GA-7ZMM

Socket A for AMD Athlon™ /Duron™ 200 MHz FSB processors95/100/103*/105*/110*/115*/133* MHz FSB 2x PC133 SDRAM up to 1GB yes yes

3/1/0/0/1

2 x UDMA 100/66/33

MSI MS-6176

Intel 810E

PCchips MB754 LMR+

FC-PGA

Ali TNT2

AC97 Audio Codec

32MB max shared

3/0/0/?/?

PCchips M756LMRT+

Slot1

2/?/?/?/?

PCchips M786MR

PCchips M805LR

Supports AMD Duron/Athlon 500M~1GHz CPUs with frequency at 266MHz FSB in Socket A for http://www.pcchips.com.tw/M805LR.html

PCchips M810LMR

Supports AMD Duron/Athlon 500M~1.2GHz CPUs with frequency at 200/266MHz Socket A

SIS 730S

AC97 Audio Codec

64MB max shared

2/0/1/0/1

http://www.pcchips.com.tw/M810LMR.html

 

Update 06-01-2001: Page was getting messy because of all the mobopics. I’ve decided to throw them away. Want mobopics? Follow the provided links.

 

 

“The PSU problem”

 

Is a system with 145W able to supply all the power needed for a motherboard, CD-Rom/DVD drive, 3.5″ diskdrive? That’s a question that hasn’t been answered yet!

Some helpfull links:

    • Processor Electrical Specifications: http://users.erols.com/chare/elec.htm

Succesful configs

    • Some guy at GOT named “Killah” uses a 150W PSU, with the following hardware: PCchips M810MLR, 1.1GHz TB, 512MB ECC SDRAM, SCSI RAID Controller, 2 10.000rpm 9GB disks. This in a 19″ 2U rackmount. Purpose: Counterstrike server.
    • The guy at http://www.flipchip.net/accy_reviews/enermax_eg365pve.htm is disassembling a HP system: “Let me get back to the HP 8674d. Sure enough, it came with a 75-watt power supply (…) a Pentium 3 667 FC-PGA with 256 Megs of PC-133 / CD-RW / DVD and a GeForce MX.” 
      75W!?!? PSU … oh wow

Links on MP3/DVD stations

    • Complete guide on building your “Standalone HIFI Player” which will be upgradeable to any future file formats

Credits

I would like to thank Victoria Chan (vkchan@kendryl.net) for her excellent review on the PCchips M810MLR. Her review actually made me to consider the complete Micro ATX platform more seriously. So in a way, she contributed to this article in lots of ways Thank you!

Second I would like to thank all the Dutch tweakers at “Gathering Of Tweakers” (GOT) computerforum. It’s one of the best Dutch computerforums, allthough the knowledge of computers and related subjects vary a lot between users.

About Earnie Rhyker

tech pioneer | intellectual BadAss | ethical lifehacker | WordPress Developer & Polyglot | information activist | blogger | added value services provider | multimedia enthusiast | senior linux server administrator | geek | bitcoin investor | laptop entrepreneur | open source contributor | hackintosh fanatic | charity donator | accredited top MLM networker & internet marketer 2014-2016 @ BFH | digital expat

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