Jump to content

Make your own motherboard (kit)

Does anyone know of a kit where you can make your own motherboard. Nothing special, I just want to make something where I can solder bunch of things together and get it to work. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Is this even possible? I thought that pretty much all motherboard are printed and not just your average soldering job...

Case: Corsair 460X RGB bby, CPU: I5 8600K, Motherboard: MSI B360M PRO-VDH, RAM: 8GB Hyper X 2400MHz , Graphics Card: GTX1060 6GB, PSU: Corsair RM750x,

Cooler: BEQuiet!  Pure Rock Slim SSD: Kingston 240GB, HDD: 2TB Seagate Barracuda

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

nope, you can't. unless you can figure out a 100 m^2 circuit sheet and have superhero solding skills.

FX8320 4.2Ghz@1.280v& 4.5 Ghz Turbo@1.312v Thermalright HR-02/w TY-147 140MM+Arctic Cooling 120MMVRM cooled by AMD Stock Cooler Fan 70MM 0-7200 RPM PWM controlled via SpeedfanGigabyte GA990XA-UD3Gigabyte HD 7970 SOC@R9 280X120GiBee Kingston HyperX 3K2TB Toshiba DT01ACA2001TB WD GreenZalman Z11+Enermax 140MM TB Apollish RED+2X Deepcool 120MM and stock fans running @5VSingle Channel Patriot 8GB (1333MHZ)+Dual Channel 4GB&2GB Kingston NANO Gaming(1600MHZ CL9)=14GB 1,600 Jigahurtz 10-10-9-29 CR1@1.28VSirtec High Power 500WASUS Xonar DG, Logitech F510Sony MDR-XD200Edifier X220 + Edifier 3200A4Tech XL-747H 3600dpiA4Tech X7-200MPdecent membrane keyboardPhilips 236V3LSB 23" 1080p@71Hz .

               
Sorry for my English....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

I think you mean PCB? In that case your local electronics store will have some that you can etch.

“The value of a college education is not the learning of many facts but the training of the mind to think”

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

You could probably make a custom 8-bit ghetto pc.

 

It's a lot of software and hardware engineering work involved that the only thing they do at the assembling line is solder the caps and sockets and outputs. Things like the pcb are printed and other chips like mosfets are done on a machine, I believe.

Mobo: Z97 MSI Gaming 7 / CPU: i5-4690k@4.5GHz 1.23v / GPU: EVGA GTX 1070 / RAM: 8GB DDR3 1600MHz@CL9 1.5v / PSU: Corsair CX500M / Case: NZXT 410 / Monitor: 1080p IPS Acer R240HY bidx

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

NOOOOOOOOOOOO

i9-9900K || MSI MPG Z390M GAMING EDGE AC || Gigabyte RTX 2080 Super Gaming OC || 16GBCorsair Vengeance LPX 3200Mhz || Samsung EVO 970 Plus Samsung 850 EVO 2TB + Crucial BX100 500GB + 4TB HGST NAS || Factal Design Define Mini C TG || Corsair RM750x || Corsair H100i Pro RGB || Acer Predator XB271HU

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Those days are over. But there are simple circuit boards you can mess around with if you want.

[ Cruel Angel ]:     Exterior  -   BENQ XL2420T   |   SteelSeries MLG Sensei   |   Corsair K70 RED   |   Corsair 900D  |                                                                                                    CPU:    -   4.7Ghz @ 1.425v             |

                             Interior    -   i7 4770k   |    Maximus VI Formula    |   Corsair Vengeance Pro 16GB    |   ASUS GTX 980 Strix SLIx2  |  840 Pro 512Gb    |    WD Black 2TB  |           RAM:   -   2400Mhz OC @ 1.650v    |

                             Cooling   -   XSPC 120mm x7 Total Radiator Space   |   XSPC RayStorm    |    PrimoChill Tubing/Res  |                                                                                             GPU:   -   1000Mhz @ 1.158            |

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Does anyone know of a kit where you can make your own motherboard. Nothing special, I just want to make something where I can solder bunch of things together and get it to work. 

 

Arduino, Begalbone, but the Intel Galileo Development Board... that's the closest you can run x86 and the design is open source... meaning the the schematics is up for grabs, and change as you like...  like linux.

 

... any more than that... good luck 

My Rigs (past and present)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

×