Monday, February 20th 2012

Intel 7-Series Desktop Board Executive Motherboards Pictured

Two models from Intel's Desktop Board Executive series of motherboards for office PCs got pictured and detailed by VR-Zone. These socket LGA1155 motherboards are mostly based on Intel 7-series Q77 and B75 chipsets, that provide some manageability, and data security features over the feature-set of H77. Intel has three Executive series models planned, the DQ77MK, the DQ77KB, and DB75EN. Of these, the DQ77MK and DB75EN are built in the micro-ATX form-factor, while the DQ77KB is mini-ITX.

The two micro-ATX parts use a similar PCB layout, with some features differing between the two. The DQ77MK is pictured below, it has all the features a small-business PC will ever need. Expansion slots include one each of PCI-Express x16, PCI-Express x4 (open-ended), PCI-Express x1, and legacy PCI. Storage connectivity includes six SATA (one of which is mSATA, for SSD caching). The PCH gives out four USB 3.0 ports, which are wired two each on the rear-panel and via a header to the front-panel. It uses a simple 5-phase VRM that should be enough to run LGA1155 processors. The socket is wired to four DDR3 DIMM slots supporting dual-channel memory. It has a variety of external connectivity.
Moving on, we see the DQ77KB, designed for ultra-compact business PCs. It retains the feature-rich Q77 chipset. It creates room on the board by replacing UDIMM slots with SO-DIMM, and makes productive use of it. Expansion slots (yes, plural) include one open-ended PCIe x4, and one mini-PCIe x1 designed for half-height PCBs such as WiFi cards. Storage connectivity includes two SATA 6 Gb/s, three SATA 3 Gb/s, and one mSATA 3 Gb/s for SSD caching. Display outputs surprisingly exclude conventional DVI and D-Sub, but replace them with LVDS, HDMI 1.4, and DisplayPort. The board replaces 24-pin + 4-pin ATX power input with 2-pin external DC input.
Source: VR-Zone
Add your own comment

4 Comments on Intel 7-Series Desktop Board Executive Motherboards Pictured

#1
Completely Bonkers
Picture 2 looks like ITX not mATX. RAMs slot tabs on picture 1 are awfully close to PCIex16 slot. It means having to remove the GPU to change the RAM. In such cramped conditions, why don't they move the PCIex16 to slot #2 rather than #1, and use #1 for the x4?
Posted on Reply
#2
Yo_Wattup
Completely BonkersPicture 2 looks like ITX not mATX. RAMs slot tabs on picture 1 are awfully close to PCIex16 slot. It means having to remove the GPU to change the RAM. In such cramped conditions, why don't they move the PCIex16 to slot #2 rather than #1, and use #1 for the x4?
Yes pic 2 is ITX but with pic 1 you shouldnt have to remove the vid card coz vid cards dont hang over that side. If you can understand that. :)
Posted on Reply
#3
Completely Bonkers
Yo_WattupYes pic 2 is ITX but with pic 1 you shouldnt have to remove the vid card coz vid cards dont hang over that side. If you can understand that. :)
If you can understand that you need to OPEN the RAM slot tabs before you can insert or remove RAM sticks. But those tabs are covered by the back end of the card. I know that's a difficult concept for people whose PCs are upside down 24/7...
Posted on Reply
#4
Yo_Wattup
Completely BonkersIf you can understand that you need to OPEN the RAM slot tabs before you can insert or remove RAM sticks. But those tabs are covered by the back end of the card. I know that's a difficult concept for people whose PCs are upside down 24/7...
www.smallbusinessbrief.com/forum/images/smilies/bonk.gif
I suspect it'll be a tight squeeze but possible. Most ram sticks can come out with only one of the tabs released.
Posted on Reply
Nov 24th, 2024 22:26 EST change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts