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I want to build my own car pc. Can anyone advise me on how to do this and where I can obtain the components or can I use a desktop pc as a car pc?
First thing you'll want for a car PC whether it be notebook parts or whatever, is a solid state hard drive. Any normal hard drive would be completely messed up within a few minutes of driving on a bumpy road.
Ye, netbook would be the best solution, cheap and small screen suitable for cars
No man,that's not a carputer but a netbook in a car.
The idea of a carputer is to blend it into your car.A 7" touchscreen fits into a 2din and the pc is hidden most likely under your seat or in the boot.It replaces your car stereo/gps.
Most important...
mini-itx mobo with embedded cpu - less heat
decent dc-dc psu fanless - less heat,handle engin sparks
a decent enclosure like the voompc - it acts as a heatsink too
solid state hdd,cf/sd to ide/sata
a nice frontend for your puter like driveline(free)
As far as motherboards go, a black PCB lined with solid-state capacitors and bright orange plastic components is enough to catch the eye. But to home theater enthusiasts it's the full-figured I/O panel that looks sexy enough to make you drool. What I like most about the Zotac IONITX kit is that you can use either a small 90W silent A/C power brick, or rely on your own PSU to supply power.
All-solid capacitors and a thick PCB earn the Zotac IONITX motherboard kit top-shelf construction ratings, but there were a few very small items that I would be careful off. First off, respect the WiFi-N antenna, since the part is made of plastic. Next is the power-supply port, which should be watched for abnormal pressure since the retaining bracket bends easily. Aside from these concerns, my estimation is that the IONITX motherboard kit is flawless in its build quality.
Zotac doesn't go small on the IONITX's motherboard BIOS, and all of the functionality and customization you find in other motherboards is also available here... up to and including overclock tweaks. While Benchmark Reviews didn't spend time covering this aspect, it certainly appeals to enthusiasts wanting to squeeze every last frame out of their performance. For an HTPC builder, it will be the full-service HDMI 1.3a connection that sells this kit, along with wireless-N capability. Even with the low-profile cooling fan installed and spinning, the IONITX kit was silent, as in no noise at all. This was a welcome night-and-day departure from the XBOX360 and PS3, which usually start humming like leaf blowers once they warm up. While each system is different from the next, the Windows 7 test system we built played streaming video content, divx, mp4, and mkv files without a problem.
As of July 2009 the Zotac IONITX-A-U 1.6GHz dual-core Atom N330 WiFi-N DDR2 Mini-ITX DDR2 motherboard kit is listed on NewEgg for $209.99. While you can get around installing a permanent optical drive, you'll need a DDR2 memory kit (the 4GB kits we used cost $42.99 each) and enclosure. Benchmark Reviews used the Antec ISK300-65, which will work really well the but the Zotac IONITX-A-U, but included its own PSU, so the less-expensive ZOTAC IONITX-D-E would have been a better fit.
If you've been looking for a motherboard for building the ultimate HTPC, this is the kit you'll want. The Zotac IONITX-A-U model offers a dual-core 1.6 GHz Atom N330 processor, WiFi-N adapter, silent A/C power supply brick, and operates completely silent. If you're looking at 64-bit editions of Windows 7 (or Windows XP or Vista), only the Atom 330 and 230 processors found in the NVIDIA ION platform support Intel EM64T; all other Atom processors are restricted to 32-bit Operating Systems. In terms of competing with ASUS Eee NetTop PC's, the NVIDIA ION is far superior, in both graphical and computing power. Add to the integrated GeForce 9400m GPU a fully-native HDMI 1.3a connection, and the ION platform serves video to 1080p HDTV's better than most media players. The Wireless-N connectivity keeps the IONITX-A-U kit rubbing elbows with gaming consoles, but when it comes time to browse to Hulu, YouTube, Flickr, or Network Broadcast websites, the ability to turn the ION system into a web-connected HTPC playing online content is priceless.
Pros:+ Completely silent computer system
+ Intel Atom N330 dual-core EM64T processor
+ NVIDIA GeForce 9400m GPU
+ 4GB 800MHz DDR2 support
+ Native HDMI 1.3a A/V interface
+ Optical and digital audio output
+ eSATA and six USB 2.0 ports
+ Wireless-N and Gigabit Ethernet
Cons:
- BIOS limits system memory to 4GB
- Fragile plastic WiFi antenna
- Thin metal WiFi/Power bracket bends easy
- Lacks TosLink cable or bundled software
- Not a gaming PC/console replacement
Ratings:
•Presentation: 8.75
•Appearance: 9.50
•Construction: 9.25
•Functionality: 9.25
•Value: 8.25
Final Score: 9.0 out of 10.
The Zotac motherboard’s most promising destination is in the HTPC space, where its tiny size, equally modest power consumption, and long feature list are almost everything a couch commando could want. From the PureVideo HD acceleration to the support for multi-channel LPCM output, you have almost everything you need for lots of high-def entertainment. As the platform stands right now, we were able to get Dolby Digital and DTS pass-through over HDMI, but were still missing lossless 5.1 LPCM support. We’re most excited about using a box like this with Windows 7 and its integrated Media Center
No man,that's not a carputer but a netbook in a car.
The idea of a carputer is to blend it into your car.A 7" touchscreen fits into a 2din and the pc is hidden most likely under your seat or in the boot.It replaces your car stereo/gps.
Most important...
mini-itx mobo with embedded cpu - less heat
decent dc-dc psu fanless - less heat,handle engin sparks
a decent enclosure like the voompc - it acts as a heatsink too
solid state hdd,cf/sd to ide/sata
a nice frontend for your puter like driveline(free)