A daughterboard or daughtercard is a circuit board meant to be an extension or "daughter" of a motherboard (or 'mainboard'), or occasionally another card. In particular, daughterboards often have plugs, sockets, pins, connectors, or other attachments for other boards, which is what differentiates them from a standard expansion board such as for PCI or ISA. In addition, daughterboards usually have only internal connections within a computer or other electronicdevice rather than any external ones, and usually access the motherboard directly rather than through a computer bus.
Daughterboards are sometimes used in computers in order to allow for expansion cards to fit on their side (or upright), parallel to the motherboard, usually to maintain a small or slim form factor. They are also sometimes used to expand the basic functionality of an electronic device, such as when a certain model has features added to it and is released as a new or separate model. Rather than redesign the first model completely, a daughterboard may be added to a special port or connector on the motherboard or mainboard. These usually fit on top of and parallel to the board, separated by spacers or standoffs, and are therefore sometimes called mezzanine cards due to being stacked like the mezzanine of a theatre. Wavetable cards are often mounted on sound cards in this manner.
Use of the names daughter card and daughter board, and even mezzanine board are also acceptable.
The layout of a daughtercard is specified such that a card may reside within a PC chassis when attached to a PCI motherboard, though the interface is not restricted to PCI platforms.
Signals are brought to the daughtercard through two 80-pin headers, with one header primarily for peripheral signals and the other primarily for the external memory interface.
Daughtercards designed with knowledge of the possible different interfaces available can be guaranteed to work on any C6000™ or C5000™ system designed to this specification.