Yes. The brass bolt holes will line up perfectly. If it is a used chassis be sure to move the brass bolt to only where the holes are. You don't want one to be under the board touching somewhere it shouldnt
Yes, but only to the part of the motherboard that is made to be grounded such as the screw holes. Every ground point should be connected to ground, the frame. Because on the motherboard a chip may be only connected to one ground point instead of all of them.
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No. The PCI slots on the motherboard will not line up properly with the chassis and most chassis that are made for ATX have screw holes to accomodate atx and mini atx
The mother board, power supply, and chassis
plugged into motherboard
Another name that computer chassis's go by is a CPU or motherboard which is the internal part that runs the computer itself just like how a car chassis is the engine.
Riser
a cars chassis is underneath and keeps the body, suspension and wheels all attached together. if the chassis wasn't there the car would flop about and eventually either crash or fall apart. Daniel from tda a car chassis is a frame on which the car is built wheels suspension cab and body are all attached to the chassis some vehicles have what is called a sub frame or sub chassis the this means from the firewall forward there is some chassis attached to the body of the vehicle the strength in these vehicle is built into the body itself this makes the vehicle lighter and cheaper to build but not as stout as a full chassis in thhe event of a wreck
Yes motherboard is a hardware. And all other components that are attached on motherboard are hardware.
No, the sound card is attached to the motherboard of the computer.
a shackle that is attached to the chassis of a vehicle directly to allow drive power or brake force to be transmitted, also locates the spring to the chassis.
For sure, it is the Motherboard, the Power supply, and the Chassis that determines the form factor of a computer.
Short answer is no. The VIN number is usually on a small plate attached to main chassis, often on the side of the bike. The Chassis number is usually found stamped/etched into the chassis on or around the steering pipe (the forward most point of the actual chassis frame). This can be hard to see but it should be there. The Engine number is often found stamped/etched into the top of the bottom end of the engine, Sometimes near the oil cap.
a daughter board is a smaller board usually attached to the main or motherboard