You have a missing screw on the motherboard.
You have a missing screw on the motherboard.
Just keep it together unless you really need to take it apart.
Well, this situation was different from others because there was a metal piece sticking out. I thought it would help anchor the motherboard first, then place it properly on the rest of the standoffs. But I struggled to secure it because of the heavy CPU cooler, and I was nervous about damaging the board if I took too long or misaligned it. This was my first build ever.
This change seems ironic because it was meant to simplify the build process. Properly aligning the motherboard used to be a hassle before. Your concern about damaging the board is totally valid—I’ve scratched it before, but I haven’t caused any serious harm. Just one instance where I bent the CPU socket pins while trying to apply thermal paste during a CPU swap.
but you push it in, toward the module and the case (the backplate doesn't matter since it's behind the case metal). I was just emphasizing that motherboards are really adaptable, which is helpful when you need to force something in or take it out. Experience with SMD has taught me this—motherboards or PCBs are designed to be flexible, and it's a safety feature. Just avoid putting anything on power while handling it, then everything should work fine!
Refers to the metal case, not the confusion. After the machine was fully assembled, the forces were mainly gravity and leverage. With everything put together correctly, the mobo wouldn't bend enough to short the case. (Note: With the really large GPUs now, this could change.)