CHASIS
A chassis (pronounced TCHA-see or
CHA-see) is the physical frame or
structure of an automobile, an
airplane, a desktop computer, or
other multi-component device. Case
is very similar in meaning, but
tends to connote the protective
aspect of the frame rather than its
structure. People tend to choose one
term or the other.
The rest of this definition uses
chassis but applies as well to the
term case. Both terms (and casing)
are derived from the Vulgate Latin
for box. The plural form is also
chassis.
In a computer, the chassis houses
the main electronic components,
including the motherboard (with
places to insert or replace
microchips for the main and possibly
specialized processors and random
access memory (RAM) and places for
adding optional adapters (for
example, for audio or video
capabilities). Typically, room is
provided for a hard disk drive and a
CD-ROM drive.
The IBM PC chassis for its XT
computers set an early de facto
standard for a chassis configuration
(sometimes referred to as the form
factor).
The desktop computer has since
evolved through the AT model, the
mini-AT, and the small-footprint PC.
A later development was the vertical
or tower chassis configuration,
designed to be placed under a desk.
The outer dimensions of a chassis
are said to form its footprint.
The term is not usually applied to
mobile and notebook computers
perhaps because the hardware
components have to be more tightly
integrated. Some communications
devices such as terminal servers
have a chassis especially designed
to handle many combinations of
hardware add-ons. Such a chassis is
described as modular.
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