Archived from groups: comp.sys.hp.hardware (
More info?)
The Vectras use boards from different manufacturers than the Pavilions and
Brios. The early Vectras were designed and built in France, which accounts for
the physical design being well outside the mainstream of personal computing, to
be kind about it.
The Intel NX440LX uses the 440LX chipset, whereas your board undoubtedly has an
Intel 440BX chipset. The 440LX is limited to 66MHz front side bus.
Regardless of the stickers on the board, or the absence thereof, Intel-designed
motherboards have a consistent scheme for identifying major system components
including sockets, jumper blocks, and connectors. The easiest way to
familiarize yourself with the scheme is to read an Intel spec and pay attention
to the identification of these parts. For example, a jumper block location is
typically identified in the format "anan", where the a's are alphabetic
characters and the n's numbers. So J6C1 might be a typical one. If your HP
board follows the same scheme, it may well have been made by Intel, who also
made the server motherboards for HP for a long time.
Because the Vectras are more expensive "business" computers, rather than the
Pavilion schlock, HP tended to use parts from better quality manufacturers.
Sorry, Pavilion owners, but that's the way it is. This group is unmoderated and
I don't have any secret police telling me what I can say or do... Ben Myers
On Tue, 11 May 2004 22:49:44 +0100, Marcus Naraidoo
<marcus.naraidoo@definitive.f9.co.uk> wrote:
>You were right.
>
>HP doesn't make life easy. I have taken the following information from
>the various things either stuck to, or printed on, the motherboard.
>
>The board itself has HP5183-8014 etched onto the upper front left hand
>edge. I've searched for this on the web. No joy.
>
>The board has a sticker proclaiming that it's part number is
>D6940-60001, although the HP web site said that it should be part number
>D6940-69001. Confusion starts.
>
>There is a bar code with the following number; S630UTQ0785E 4798 Made in
>Mexico. This is located within a white outlined box etched onto the
>board towards the centre.
>
>I've looked for clues to all of these and the best I have come up with
>is this.
>
>This board is very very similar to an Intel NX440LX item, with the
>exception that the Intel item has a NIC and sound built in and the HP
>item does not. However the CPU, RAM and macro-layout are largely
>identical. (The IO backplane is different though.) Additionally, the
>Intel item appears to have been sold at the same time as my Vectra
>VL6/400 Series 8. Is that a co-incidence?
>
>Is there a chance that Intel manufactured the HP5183-8014 as OEM for HP?
>I can't get more help from the Intel or HP websites and I'm running out
>of routes to solve this problem.
>
>Any pointers?
>
>Best regards, Marcus
>