See main article: Motherboard form factor.
ATX (Advanced Technology Extended) is a motherboard and power supply configuration specification, patented by David Dent in 1995 at Intel,[1] to improve on previous de facto standards like the AT design. It was the first major change in desktop computer enclosure, motherboard and power supply design in many years, improving standardization and interchangeability of parts. The specification defines the dimensions; the mounting points; the I/O panel; and the power and connector interfaces among a computer case, a motherboard, and a power supply.
ATX is the most common motherboard design.[2] Other standards for smaller boards (including microATX, FlexATX, nano-ITX, and mini-ITX) usually keep the basic rear layout but reduce the size of the board and the number of expansion slots. Dimensions of a full-size ATX board are 12xx, which allows many ATX chassis to accept microATX boards. The ATX specifications were released by Intel in 1995 and have been revised numerous times since. The most recent ATX motherboard specification is version 2.2.[3] The most recent ATX12V power supply unit specification is ATX 3.0 released in February 2022.[4]
EATX (Extended ATX) is a bigger version of the ATX motherboard with 12xx dimensions. While some dual CPU socket motherboards have been implemented in ATX, the extra size of EATX makes it the typical form factor for dual socket systems, and with sockets that support four or eight memory channels, for single socket systems with a large number of memory slots.
In 2004, Intel announced the BTX (Balanced Technology eXtended) standard, intended as a replacement for ATX. While some manufacturers adopted the new standard, Intel discontinued any future development of BTX in 2006., the ATX design still remains the de facto standard for personal computers.
On the back of the computer case, some major changes were made to the AT standard. Originally AT style cases had only a keyboard connector and expansion slots for add-on card backplates. Any other onboard interfaces (such as serial and parallel ports) had to be connected via flying leads to connectors which were mounted either on spaces provided by the case or brackets placed in unused expansion slot positions.[5]
ATX allowed each motherboard manufacturer to put these ports in a rectangular area on the back of the system with an arrangement they could define themselves, though a number of general patterns depending on what ports the motherboard offers have been followed by most manufacturers. Cases are usually fitted with a snap-out panel, also known as an I/O plate or I/O shield, in one of the common arrangements. I/O plates are usually included with retail motherboards to allow installation in any suitable case. The computer will operate correctly without a plate fitted, although there will be open gaps in the case which may compromise the EMI/RFI screening and allow ingress of dirt and random foreign bodies. Panels were made that allowed fitting an AT motherboard in an ATX case. Some ATX motherboards come with an integrated I/O plate.
ATX also made the PS/2-style mini-DIN keyboard and mouse connectors ubiquitous. AT systems used a 5-pin DIN connector for the keyboard and were generally used with serial port mice (although PS/2 mouse ports were also found on some systems). Many modern motherboards are phasing out the PS/2-style keyboard and mouse connectors in favor of the more modern Universal Serial Bus. Other legacy connectors that are slowly being phased out of modern ATX motherboards include 25-pin parallel ports and 9-pin RS-232 serial ports. In their place are onboard peripheral ports such as Ethernet, FireWire, eSATA, audio ports (both analog and S/PDIF), video (analog D-sub, DVI, HDMI, or DisplayPort), extra USB ports, and Wi-Fi.
A notable issue with the ATX specification was that it was last revised when power supplies were normally placed at the top of many old computer cases rather than at the bottom, as with many modern computer cases. This has led to some problematic standard locations for ports, in particular the 4/8 pin CPU power, which is normally located along the top edge of the board, convenient for top-mounted power supplies. This makes it very difficult for cables from bottom-mounted power supplies to reach, and commonly requires a special cutout in the back plane for the cable to come in from behind and bend around the board, making insertion and wire management very difficult. Many power supply cables barely or fail to reach, or are too stiff to make the bend, and extensions are sometimes required due to this placement. Modern power supplies often have longer cables to alleviate this issue.
Several ATX-derived designs have been specified that use the same power supply, mountings and basic back panel arrangement, but set different standards for the size of the board and number of expansion slots. Standard ATX provides seven slots at 0.80NaN0 spacing; the popular microATX size removes 2.4inches and three slots, leaving four. Here width refers to the distance along the external connector edge, while depth is from front to rear. Note each larger size inherits all previous (smaller) colors area.
AOpen has conflated the term Mini ATX with a more recent 15xx design. Since references to Mini ATX have been removed from ATX specifications since the adoption of microATX, the AOpen definition is the more contemporary term and the one listed above is apparently only of historical significance. This sounds contradictory to the now common Mini-ITX standard (17xx), which is a potential source of confusion. A number of manufacturers have added one to three additional expansion slots (at the standard 0.8 inch spacing) to the standard 12-inch ATX motherboard width.
Form factors considered obsolete in 1999 included Baby-AT, full size AT, and the semi-proprietary LPX for low-profile cases. Proprietary motherboard designs such as those by Compaq, Packard-Bell, Hewlett Packard and others existed, and were not interchangeable with multi-manufacturer boards and cases. Portable and notebook computers and some 19-inch rackmount servers have custom motherboards unique to their particular products.[6]
Form factor | Originated | Date | Max. size depth × width | Slots | Notes (typical usage, market adoption, etc.) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ATX | Intel | 1995 | 12 × 9.6 in (305 × 244 mm) | 7 | Original, successor to AT motherboard | |
Proprietary, specific to crypto-mining specific motherboards | 2011 | 12 × 8 in (305 × 203 mm) | 3 | 3 double-slot add-in cards with 1 slots of free space in between | ||
SSI CEB | SSI | 12 × 10.5 in (305 × 267 mm) | 7 | Compact Electronics Bay | ||
SSI MEB | SSI | 2011 | 16.2 × 13 in (411 × 330 mm) | 12 | Midrange Electronics Bay | |
SSI EEB | SSI | 12 × 13 in (305 × 330 mm) | 7 | Enterprise Electronics Bay | ||
SSI TEB | SSI | 12 × 10.5 in (305 × 267 mm) | 7 | Thin Electronics Bay, for rack-mount, has board component height specification | ||
microATX | Intel | 1997 | 9.6 × 9.6 in (244 × 244 mm) | 4 | Fits in ATX, and EATX cases. | |
FlexATX | Intel | 1997 | 9 × 7.5 in (229 × 191 mm) | 3 | ||
Extended ATX (standard) | Supermicro / Asus | 12 × 13 in (305 × 330 mm) | 7 | Screw holes not completely compatible with some ATX cases. Designed for dual CPUs, and quad double slot video cards. | ||
Extended ATX (commonly) | 12 × 10.1 in (305 × 257 mm) 12 × 10.4 in (305 × 264 mm) 12 × 10.5 in (305 × 267 mm) 12 × 10.7 in (305 × 272 mm) | 7 | ATX pattern screw holes | |||
EE-ATX | Supermicro | 13.68 × 13 in (347 × 330 mm) | 7 | Enhanced Extended ATX | ||
Ultra ATX | Foxconn | 2008 | 14.4 × 9.6 in (366 × 244 mm) | 10 | Intended for multiple double-slot video cards, and dual CPUs. | |
XL-ATX | 2009 | 13.5 × 10.3 in (343 × 262 mm) | 9 | |||
XL-ATX | Gigabyte | 2010 | 13.58 x 10.31 in (345 x 262 mm) | 7 | ||
XL-ATX | 2010 | 13.6 × 10.4 in (345 × 264 mm) | 7 | |||
WTX | Intel | 1998 | 14 × 16.75 in (356 × 425 mm). | 9 | Discontinued 2008 | |
Mini-ITX | VIA | 2001 | 6.7 x 6.7in (170 × 170 mm). | 1 | Originally designed for home theatre or other fanless applications | |
Mini-DTX | AMD | 2007 | 8 × 6.7 in (203 × 170 mm) | 2 | Derived from Mini-ITX and DTX | |
BTX | Intel | 2004 | 12.8 × 10.5 in (325 × 267 mm) | 7 | Canceled 2006. Also micro, nano, and pico variants. Not generally compatible with ATX mounting. | |
HPTX | EVGA | 2010 | 13.6 × 15 in (345 × 381 mm) | 6 | Dual processors, 12 RAM slots | |
SWTX | Supermicro | 2006 | 16.48 × 13 in (419 × 330 mm) and others | 5 | Quad processors, not compatible with ATX mounting | |
YTX | Asus, MSI & Maxsun | 2023 | 6.89 × 9.65 in (175 × 245 mm) | 1 | New form factor supporting the DIY-APE initiative |
Although true E-ATX is 12xx most motherboard manufacturers also refer to motherboards with measurements 12xx, 12xx, 12xx and 12xx as E-ATX. While E-ATX and SSI EEB (Server System Infrastructure (SSI) Forum's Enterprise Electronics Bay (EEB)) share the same dimensions, the screw holes of the two standards do not all align; rendering them incompatible.
In 2008, Foxconn unveiled a Foxconn F1 motherboard prototype, which has the same width as a standard ATX motherboard, but an extended 14.4" length to accommodate 10 slots.[7] The firm called the new 14.4xx design of this motherboard "Ultra ATX"[8] in its CES 2008 showing. Also unveiled during the January 2008 CES was the Lian Li Armorsuit PC-P80 case with 10 slots designed for the motherboard.[9]
The name "XL-ATX" has been used by at least three companies in different ways:
In 2010, EVGA Corporation released a new motherboard, the "Super Record 2", or SR-2, whose size surpasses that of the "EVGA X58 Classified 4-Way SLI". The new board is designed to accommodate two Dual QPI LGA1366 socket CPUs (e.g. Intel Xeon), similar to that of the Intel Skulltrail motherboard that could accommodate two Intel Core 2 Quad processors and has a total of seven PCI-E slots and 12 DDR3 RAM slots. The new design is dubbed "HPTX" and is 13.6xx.[11]
See also: Power supply unit (computer).
The ATX specification requires the power supply to produce three main outputs, +3.3 V, +5 V and +12 V. Low-power −12 V and +5 VSB (standby) supplies are also required. The −12 V supply is primarily used to provide the negative supply voltage for RS-232 ports and is also used by one pin on conventional PCI slots primarily to provide a reference voltage for some models of sound cards. The 5 VSB supply is used to produce trickle power to provide the soft-power feature of ATX when a PC is turned off, as well as powering the real-time clock to conserve the charge of the CMOS battery. A −5 V output was originally required because it was supplied on the ISA bus; it was removed in later versions of the ATX standard, as it became obsolete with the removal of the ISA bus expansion slots (the ISA bus itself is still found in any computer which is compatible with the old IBM PC specification; e.g., not found in the PlayStation 4).[12]
Originally, the motherboard was powered by one 20-pin connector. An ATX power supply provides a number of peripheral power connectors and (in modern systems) two connectors for the motherboard: an 8-pin (or 4+4-pin) auxiliary connector providing additional power to the CPU and a main 24-pin power supply connector, an extension of the original 20-pin version. 20-pin Molex 39-29-9202 at the motherboard. 20-pin Molex 39-01-2200 at the cable. The connector pin pitch is 4.20 mm[13] (about one sixth of an inch).
Orange | +3.3 V | 1 | 13 | +3.3 V | Orange | |
+3.3 V sense | Brown | |||||
Orange | +3.3 V | 2 | 14 | −12 V | Blue | |
Black | Ground | 3 | 15 | Ground | Black | |
Red | +5 V | 4 | 16 | Power on | Green | |
Black | Ground | 5 | 17 | Ground | Black | |
Red | +5 V | 6 | 18 | Ground | Black | |
Black | Ground | 7 | 19 | Ground | Black | |
Grey | Power good | 8 | 20 | Reserved | ||
Purple | +5 V standby | 9 | 21 | +5 V | Red | |
Yellow | +12 V | 10 | 22 | +5 V | Red | |
Yellow | +12 V | 11 | 23 | +5 V | Red | |
Orange | +3.3 V | 12 | 24 | Ground | Black | |
4-pin | 39-01-2040 | 39-28-1043 | 39-01-2046 | |
20-pin | 39-01-2200 | 39-28-1203 | 39-01-2206 | |
24-pin | 39-01-2240 | 39-28-1243 | 39-01-2246 |
Four wires have special functions:
Generally, supply voltages must be within ±5% of their nominal values at all times. The little-used negative supply voltages, however, have a ±10% tolerance. There is a specification for ripple in a 10 Hz–20 MHz bandwidth:
Supply (V) | Tolerance | Range, min. to max. (V) | Ripple, p. to p., max. (mV) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
+5 | ±5% (±0.25 V) | +4.75 V to +5.25 | 50 | |
−5 | ±10% (±0.50 V) | −4.50 V to −5.50 | 50 | |
+12 | ±5% (±0.60 V) | +11.40 V to +12.60 | 120 | |
−12 | ±10% (±1.20 V) | −10.80 V to −13.20 | 120 | |
+3.3 | ±5% (±0.165 V) | +3.135 V to +3.465 | 50 | |
+5 standby | ±5% (±0.25 V) | +4.75 V to +5.25 | 50 |
The 20–24-pin Molex Mini-Fit Jr. has a power rating of, 9 amperes maximum per pin).[16] As large server motherboards and 3D graphics cards have required progressively more and more power to operate, it has been necessary to revise and extend the standard beyond the original 20-pin connector, to allow more current using multiple additional pins in parallel. The low circuit voltage is the restriction on power flow through each connector pin; at the maximum rated voltage, a single Mini-Fit Jr pin would be capable of 4800 watts.
ATX power supplies generally have the dimensions of 150xx, with the width and height being the same as the preceding LPX (Low Profile eXtension) form factor (which are often incorrectly referred to as "AT" power supplies due to their ubiquitous use in later AT and Baby AT systems, even though the actual AT and Baby AT power supply form factors were physically larger) and share a common mounting layout of four screws arranged on the back side of the unit. That last dimension, the 140 mm depth, is frequently varied, with depths of 160, 180, 200 and 230 mm used to accommodate higher power, larger fan and/or modular connectors.
Original AT cases (flat case style) have an integrated power switch that protruded from the power supply andsits flush with a hole in the AT chassis. It utilizes a paddle-style DPST switch and is similar to the PC and PC-XT style power supplies.
Later AT (so-called "Baby AT") and LPX style computer cases have a power button that is directly connected to the system computer power supply (PSU). The general configuration is a double-pole latching mains voltage switch with the four pins connected to wires from a four-core cable. The wires are either soldered to the power button (making it difficult to replace the power supply if it failed) or blade receptacles were used.
An ATX power supply is typically controlled by an electronic switch connected to the power button on the computer case and allows the computer to be turned off by the operating system. In addition, many ATX power supplies have a manual switch on the back that also ensures no power is being sent to the components. When the switch on the power supply is turned off, the computer cannot be turned on with the front power button.
The power supply's connection to the motherboard was changed from the older AT and LPX standards; AT and LPX had two similar connectors that could be accidentally interchanged by forcing the different keyed connectors into place, usually causing short-circuits and irreversible damage to the motherboard (the rule of thumb for safe operation was to connect the side-by-side connectors with the black wires together). ATX uses one large, keyed connector which can not be connected incorrectly. The new connector also provides a 3.3 volt source, removing the need for motherboards to derive this voltage from the 5 V rail. Some motherboards, particularly those manufactured after the introduction of ATX but whilst LPX equipment was still in use, support both LPX and ATX PSUs.[17]
If using an ATX PSU for purposes other than powering an ATX motherboard, power can be fully turned on (it is always partly on to operate "wake-up" devices) by shorting the "power-on" pin on the ATX connector (pin 16, green wire) to a black wire (ground), which is what the power button on an ATX system does. A minimum load on one or more voltages may be required (varies by model and vendor); the standard does not specify operation without a minimum load and a conforming PSU may shut down, output incorrect voltages, or otherwise malfunction, but will not be hazardous or damaged.[18] An ATX power supply is not a replacement for a current-limited bench laboratory DC power supply; instead it is better described as a bulk DC power supply.[19]
The original ATX specification called for a power supply to be located near to the CPU with the power supply fan drawing in cooling air from outside the chassis and directing it onto the processor. It was thought that in this configuration, cooling of the processor would be achievable without the need of an active heatsink.[20] This recommendation was removed from later specifications; modern ATX power supplies usually exhaust air from the case.
ATX, introduced in late 1995, defined three types of power connectors:
The power distribution specification defined that most of the PSU's power should be provided on 5 V and 3.3 V rails, because most of the electronic components (CPU, RAM, chipset, PCI, AGP and ISA cards) used 5 V or 3.3 V for power supply. The 12 V rail was only used by computer fans and motors of peripheral devices (HDD, FDD, CD-ROM, etc.)
While designing the Pentium 4 platform in 1999/2000, the standard 20-pin ATX power connector was found insufficient to meet increasing power-line requirements; the standard was significantly revised into ATX12V 1.0 (ATX12V 1.x is sometimes inaccurately called ATX-P4). ATX12V 1.x was also adopted by AMD Athlon XP and Athlon 64 systems. However, some early model Athlon XP and MP boards (including some server boards) and later model lower-end motherboards do not have the 4-pin connector as described below.
Numbering of the ATX revisions may be a little confusing: ATX refers to the design, and goes up to version 2.2 in 2004 (with the 24 pins of ATX12V 2.0), while ATX12V describes only the PSU.For instance, ATX 2.03 is quite commonly seen on PSUs from 2000 and 2001 and often includes the P4 12V connector, even if the norm itself did not define it yet.[3]
The main changes and additions in ATX12V 1.0 (released in February 2000) were:
Formally called the +12 V Power Connector, this is commonly referred to as the P4 connector because this was first needed to support the Pentium 4 processor.
Before the Pentium 4, processors were generally powered from the 5 V rail. Later processors operate at much lower voltages, typically around 1 V and some draw over 100 A. It is infeasible to provide power at such low voltages and high currents from a standard system power supply, so the Pentium 4 established the practice of generating it with a DC-to-DC converter on the motherboard next to the processor, powered by the 4-pin 12 V connector.
This is a minor revision from August 2000. The power on the 3.3 V rail was slightly increased and other smaller changes were made.
A relatively minor revision from January 2002. The only significant change was that the −5 V rail was no longer required (it became optional). This voltage was required by the ISA bus, which is no longer present on almost all modern computers.
Introduced in April 2003 (a month after 2.0). This standard introduced some changes, mostly minor. Some of them are:
ATX12V 2.x brought a significant design change regarding power distribution. By analyzing the power demands of then-current PCs, it was determined that it would be much cheaper and more practical to power most PC components from 12 V rails, instead of from 3.3 V and 5 V rails.
In particular, PCI Express expansion cards take much of their power from the 12 V rail (up to 5.5 A), while the older AGP graphics cards took only up to 1 A on 12 V and up to 6 A on 3.3 V. The CPU is also driven by a 12 V rail, while it was done by a 5 V rail on older PCs (before the Pentium 4).
The power demands of PCI Express were incorporated in ATX12V 2.0 (introduced in February 2003), which defined quite different power distribution from ATX12V 1.x:
This is a minor revision from June 2004. An errant reference for the −5 V rail was removed. Other minor changes were introduced.[25]
This is a minor revision from March 2005. The power was slightly increased on all rails. Efficiency requirements changed: minimum 65% at light load, 72% at typical load, and 70% at full load. Introduced recommended minimum values of 75% at light load, 80% at typical load, and 77% at full load.
Also released in March 2005 it includes corrections and specifies High Current Series wire terminals for 24-pin ATX motherboard and 4-pin +12 V power connectors.
Effective March 2007. Recommended efficiency was increased to 80% (with at least 70% required) and the 12 V minimum load requirement was lowered. Higher efficiency generally results in less power consumption (and less waste heat) and the 80% recommendation brings supplies in line with new Energy Star 4.0 mandates.[26] The reduced load requirement allows compatibility with processors that draw very little power during startup.[27] The absolute over-current limit of 240 VA per rail was removed, allowing 12 V lines to provide more than 20 A per rail.
This revision became effective in February 2008. It added a maximum allowed ripple/noise specification of 400 millivolts to the PWR_ON and PWR_OK signals, requires that the DC power must hold for more than 1 millisecond after the PWR_OK signal drops, clarified country-specific input line harmonic content and electromagnetic compatibility requirements, added a section about Climate Savers, updated recommended power supply configuration charts, and updated the cross-regulation graphs.
This is the unofficial name given to the later revisions of the v2.31 specifications, published in May 2020[28]
The ATX12V 2.4 specifications were published in August 2021. It is specified in Revision 1.31 of the 'Design Guide for Desktop Platform Form Factors', which names this as ATX12V version 2.4.[29]
The specifications for ATXV12 2.51 were released in September 2021 and introduced support for Alternative Low Power Mode (ALPM) which supersedes the traditional S3 power state. Windows 10 implements this functionality as Modern Standby.[30]
The specifications for ATXV12 2.52 were released in October 2021 introduces minor changes to the standard, most notably it requires power supply manufacturers to ensure power supplies with Alternative Low Power Mode (ALPM) support are able to withstand power cycles every 180 seconds (480 times per day or 175,200 per year). Power supply fans are also recommended to turn on with at least a two second delay for an improved user experience.[31]
The specifications for ATXV12 2.53 were released in December 2021 and constitute another minor update to the ATX standard. ATXV12 2.53 makes further recommendations on efficiency and references the Energy Star Computers Specification Version 8.0 which was finalized in April 2020.[32]
The specifications for ATX 3.0 were released in February 2022. It includes the new 16-Pin 12VHPWR connector that can deliver up to 600 W for H+ and up to 675 W in H++ to graphics cards. These incorporate data lines for components to negotiate power capabilities with the PSU so they do not draw more power than the PSU is capable of delivering. The specification also has more strict requirements for handling spikes, two times the nominal output for 100 microseconds.
ATX 3.1 replaces the 12VHPWR power connector with the 12V-2x6 power connector.
Standing for ATX 12-volt-only, this is a new specification published by Intel in 2019, aimed at pre-built systems in the first run, and stricter power efficiency requirements by the California Energy Commission going into effect in 2021.[33] Several OEMs were already using a similar design with proprietary connectors and this effectively standardizes those.[34]
Under this standard, power supplies provide only a 12 V output. ATX12VO introduces a new 10-pin connector to supply the motherboard, replacing the 24-pin ATX12V connector. This greatly simplifies power supplies, but moves DC-to-DC conversion and some connectors to the motherboard instead. Notably, SATA power connectors, which include 3.3 V and 5 V pins, need to move to the motherboard instead of being connected directly to the power supply.
a. Connector pinout per Intel ATX12VO (12V Only) Desktop Power Supply Design Guide.[35]
Pin | Signal | Colour | Pin | Signal | Colour | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
5 | I_PSU% | Blue | 10 | 12 V [12V Sensing Pin] | Yellow | |
4 | GND | Black | 9 | 12 V | Yellow | |
3 | GND | Black | 8 | 12 V | Yellow | |
2 | GND | Black | 7 | 12 V SB | Purple | |
1 | PS_ON# | Green | 6 | PWR_OK | Gray |
SFX (Small Form-Factor eXtended)[36] is merely a design for a small form factor (SFF) power supply casing (such as those using microATX, FlexATX, nano-ITX, mini-ITX, and NLX), with the power specifications almost identical to ATX. Thus, an SFX power supply is mostly pin-compatible with the ATX power supply as the main difference is its reduced dimensions; the only electrical difference is that the SFX specifications do not require the −5 V rail. Since −5 V is required only by some ISA-bus expansion cards, this is not an issue with modern hardware and decreases productions costs. As a result, ATX pin 20, which carried −5 V, is absent in current power supplies; it was optional in ATX and ATX12V version 1.2 and deleted as of ATX version 1.3.
SFX has dimensions of 125 × 63.5 × 100 mm (width × height × depth), with a 60 mm fan, compared with the standard ATX dimensions of 150 × 86 × 140 mm. Optional 80 or 40 mm fan replacement increases or decreases the height of an SFX unit.[37]
Some manufacturers and retailers incorrectly market SFX power supplies as μATX or MicroATX power supplies.[38]
Some manufacturers make SFX-L dimensions of 125 × 63.5 × 130 mm to accommodate a 120 mm fan.[39]
Thin Form Factor is another small power supply design with standard ATX specification connectors. Its dimensions are generally (W × H × D): 85 × 64 × 175 mm (3.34 × 2.52 × 6.89 in).[40] [41]
WTX power supplies provide a WTX style motherboard connector which is incompatible with the standard ATX motherboard connector.
This is an ATX12V power supply derivative made by AMD to power its Athlon MP (dual processor) platform. It was used only on high-end Athlon MP motherboards. It has a special 8-pin supplemental connector for motherboard, so an AMD GES PSU is required for such motherboards (those motherboards will not work with ATX(12 V) PSUs).
a. ATX12V-GES 24-pin P1 motherboard connector. The pinout on the motherboard connector is as follows when viewing the motherboard from above:
Pin | Signal | Colour | Pin | Signal | Colour | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
12 | 12 V | Yellow | 24 | 12 V | Yellow | |
11 | 12 V | Yellow | 23 | GND | Black | |
10 | GND | Black | 22 | GND | Black | |
9 | GND | Black | 21 | 3.3 V | Orange | |
8 | 3.3 V | Orange | 20 | 3.3 V | Orange | |
7 | 3.3 V | Orange | 19 | 3.3 V | Orange | |
6 | GND | Black | 18 | GND | Black | |
5 | PS_ON_N | Green | 17 | −12 V | Blue | |
4 | GND | Black | 16 | 5 V SB | Purple | |
3 | GND | Black | 15 | GND | Black | |
2 | 5 V | Red | 14 | 5 V | Red | |
1 | 5 V | Red | 13 | 5 V | Red |
b. ATX12V-GES 8-pin P2 motherboard connector. This pinout on the motherboard connector is as follows when viewing the motherboard from above:
Pin | Signal | Colour | Pin | Signal | Colour | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4 | GND | Black | 8 | 12 V | Yellow striped black | |
3 | GND | Black | 7 | 12 V | Yellow striped black | |
2 | PWR_OK | Gray | 6 | 12 V | Yellow striped black | |
1 | 5 V | Red | 5 | GND | Black |
EPS12V is defined in Server System Infrastructure (SSI) and used primarily by SMP/multi-core systems such as Core 2, Core i7, Opteron and Xeon. It has a 24-pin ATX motherboard connector (same as ATX12V v2.x), an 8-pin secondary connector and an optional 4-pin tertiary connector. Rather than include the extra cable, many power supply makers implement the 8-pin connector as two combinable 4-pin connectors to ensure backwards compatibility with ATX12V motherboards.
High-performance video card power demands dramatically increased during the 2000s and some high-end graphics cards have power demands that exceed AGP or PCIe slot capabilities. For these cards, supplementary power was delivered through a standard 4-pin peripheral or floppy power connector. Midrange and high-end PCIe graphics cards manufactured after 2004 typically use a standard 6- or 8-pin PCIe power connector directly from the PSU.
Although the ATX power supply specifications are mostly vertically compatible in both ways (both electrically and physically), there are potential issues with mixing old motherboards/systems with new PSUs and vice versa. The main issues to consider are the following:
This is a practical guidance what to mix and what not to mix:
Some proprietary brand-name systems require a matching proprietary power supply, but some of them may also support standard and interchangeable power supplies.
See also: Green computing and 80 Plus.
Efficiency in power supplies means the extent to which power is not wasted in converting electricity from a household supply to regulated DC. Computer power supplies vary from around 70% to over 90% efficiency.
Various initiatives exist to improve the efficiency of computer power supplies. Climate Savers Computing Initiative promotes energy saving and reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by encouraging development and use of more efficient power supplies. 80 PLUS certifies a variety of efficiency levels for power supplies and encourages their use via financial incentives. Efficient power supplies also save money by wasting less power; as a result they use less electricity to power the same computer, and they emit less waste heat which results in significant energy savings on central air conditioning in the summer. The gains of using an efficient power supply are more substantial in computers that use a lot of power.
Although a power supply with a larger than needed power rating will have an extra margin of safety against overloading, such a unit is often less efficient and wastes more electricity at lower loads than a more appropriately sized unit. For example, a 900-watt power supply with the 80 Plus Silver efficiency rating (which means that such a power supply is designed to be at least 85 percent efficient for loads above 180 W) may only be 73% efficient when the load is lower than 100 W, which is a typical idle power for a desktop computer. Thus, for a 100 W load, losses for this supply would be 27 W; if the same power supply was put under a 450 W load, for which the supply's efficiency peaks at 89%, the loss would be only 56 W despite supplying 4.5 times the useful power.[43] [44] For a comparison, a 500-watt power supply carrying the 80 Plus Bronze efficiency rating (which means that such a power supply is designed to be at least 82-percent efficient for loads above 100 W) may provide an 84 percent efficiency for a 100 W load, wasting only 19 W.[45]