There was never any official LPX specification, but the design usually featured a motherboard with the main I/O ports mounted on the back (something that was later adopted by the
ATX form factor), and a
riser card in the center of the motherboard, on which the
PCI and
ISA slots were mounted. This layout was first used on
IBM's
PS/2 Model 30 personal computer, which Western Digital used as the basis for the creation of LPX. Due to the lack of standardized specification, riser cards were rarely compatible from one motherboard design to another, much less one manufacturer to another. The internal
PSU connector was of the same type used in the
AT form factor. One of the more successful features to come out of the LPX specification was its use of relatively compact
power supplies, which later became widely used on
Baby AT and even full size AT cases. Since LPX form factor power supplies became ubiquitous in most computer cases prior to the ATX standard, it was not unusual for manufacturers to refer to them as "AT" power supplies (or occasionally as "PS/2" power supplies due to its use by the
IBM PS/2), even though the actual AT and Baby AT power supply form factors were larger in size. The LPX form factor power supply eventually formed the basis for the ATX form factor power supply, which is the same width and height. The specification was popular in the early-mid 1990s, and briefly displaced the AT form factor as the most commonly used. However, the release of the
Pentium II in 1997 highlighted the flaws of the format, as a good airflow was important in Pentium II systems, owing to the relatively high heat dispersal requirements of the processor. LPX systems suffered a restricted airflow due to the centrally placed riser cards. The introduction of the
AGP format further complicated matters, as the design not only increased the pin count on riser cards, but it limited most cards to one AGP, one PCI and one ISA slot, which was too restrictive for most users. Some lower-quality LPX boards did not even feature a real AGP slot, but simply used a physical AGP slot and connected it to the PCI bus. This was rarely noticed however, as many "AGP" graphics cards of the time were in fact PCI cards internally, and did not take advantage of the features offered by AGP. LPX was phased out around 1998.
NLX was the intended successor, though many manufacturers chose
MicroATX or proprietary motherboard formats instead. ==References==