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Top 5 List On How To Pick The Right Motherboard
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Hey Chris! This Is Fabiocrow07770 from the chat room. I decided to make a top five list on motherboards because, in building a computer, it’s the hardest component to pick. It’s pretty much the nervous system of the PC, so proper selection is crucial to ensure your new computer performs as well or better than expected. Anyway, on with the top five!
- Make Sure you pick the right size motherboard for the case you have chosen to use. If you have a micro at ATX case then your motherboard cannot be an ATX. Larger cases sometimes allow you to have smaller motherboards. Check the specs on the case before you continue looking for a motherboard.
- Count how many SATA or IDE connections are available. I learned the hard way — I bought a CD drive and a hard drive — both IDE — and I only had one IDE connection and six SATA connections on the board I bought. I had To send the hard drive back and get a SATA.
- Price isn’t everything! a motherboard that costs $80 can just as easily run as well if not better than a motherboard that costs $1000. Check the specs for features you want and also that you don’t need. If you’re not a gamer, chances are you don’t need something like SLI.
- Do your research! Check and see what other people are saying about the motherboard. Again, just because the motherboard is expensive doesn’t necessarily mean it’s a beacon of quality!
- Never buy from a third party like a flea market, a friend, or a guy in a van.

One Comment
Jeff
September 23rd, 2008
at 11:37am
As for your Comment #2…. “Count how many SATA or IDE connections are available. I learned the hard way — I bought a CD drive and a hard drive — both IDE — and I only had one IDE connection and six SATA connections on the board I bought. I had To send the hard drive back and get a SATA. ”
Let me get this right… you had one IDE CD and one IDE Hard Drive… and returned the hard drive because you only had one IDE connection on your motherboard? I guess you never flipped through the manual or built a PC before. Each IDE connector on a motherboard supports TWO IDE devices. Not one for one… That’s why “most” IDE cables have three connectors, one for the MOBO, two for drives. In the event that your MOBO came with a cable that only had one connection, all you had to do was buy a two-drive IDE cable.
Nuf Said.