It just came to my attention that Intel has answered these with
a new standard in the meantime; using a 10‑pin Mini‑Fit Jr. variant with three +12V lines (pins 8‑10), three ground (pins 2‑4), a +12VSB (pin 7), the existing on/off (pin 1) and power good (pin 6), and pin 5 unused. The 6‑pin PCIe connector has also been reused for additional main power (here it can be loaded up to the actual connector rating, rather than the PCIe specified 75W). SATA drives are again powered through the board (though without +3.3V since it was removed from SATA specification as of V3.2) using Micro‑Fit style connectors (with 4 pins for 2 drives or 6 pins for 4 drives), while the peripheral connectors are still provided from the PSU but with only +12V and ground (pins 1 and 2).
It may well end up being a mostly-OEM standard (a bit like BTX, though hopefully less of a failure than
that was), though adapter cables (with a converter for the standby) are provided to support transitioning.
In many ways this mess seems to be a matter of bad timing in the industry, with the move to +12V distribution coming too soon after basic ATX to start afresh.
This also goes for SATA; rather than wasting three pins on +3.3V, they could have made +12V only HDDs quite easily.
(By the early 2000s only the head preamplifier used +5V – and a locally-converted −5V – directly; even a linear regulator would do fine for that, surely less wasteful than the linear regulators used until ≈2005 to drop +5V to the +1.5V or thereabouts for the MCU core
.)
Although, this
would conflict with the established +5V only for laptop drives (but they could still drive the same motors using a lower PWM duty cycle; and perhaps even implement adaptive support for either voltage as provided)…
Information is far more fragile than the HDDs it's stored on. Being an afterthought is no excuse for a bad product.
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