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1600 Series with P4 Industrial PC Computer System User Manual

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1. ooococcccnnnccocccocnconananrnaccnnncnonnns 56 unpacking the system oooocccconoccccnonancnnnonanonnnancnnnanos 6 USB PINOUIS urinaria 29 VGA CONN CIOS ee eeeeeeeeteteeeeeeteeeeeaeeteneeteeetenees 30 Vide dois tt oe 61 143158 E 143158 E Xycom Automation LLC Canada Sales 905 607 3400 Pro face 734 429 4971 Northern Europe Sales 44 1604 790 767 Xoo M Fax 734 429 1010 Southern Europe Sales 39 011 770 53 11 http www profaceamerica com
2. Note This procedure assumes that the computer hard disk drive has been completely corrupted or replaced 59 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 5 Troubleshooting Warning This procedure will destroy data that may exist on the hard disk drive Windows XP Reinstallation If you need to reinstall the Windows XP operating system refer to the Pro face Xycom Workstation Software Installation Instructions For Microsoft Windows XP shipped with systems preinstalled with Windows XP This document is devoted to the reinstallation of your Windows XP operating system and drivers utilizing the XP CD provided with your Pro face Xycom industrial computer If you want to install a new operating system or reinstall a current operating system refer to the Windows XP Professional CD ROM shipped with systems preinstalled with Windows XP Professional Note This procedure assumes that the computer hard disk drive has been completely corrupted or replaced Warning This procedure will destroy data that may exist on the hard disk drive Installing Drivers This section describes how to install the drivers associated with the 1600 Information about installing drivers for your computer is included in the Documentation and Support Library CD shipped with your computer or on the web at www profaceamerica com Note For further assistance call Pro face technical support at 734 429 4971 ext 595 or 1 800 289
3. User Defined Allows you to set each mode individually When not disabled each time range is from 1 min to 1 hr except for HDD power down which ranges from 1 min to 15 min Video Off Method This determines the manner in which the monitor goes blank V H SYNC Blank This selection will cause the system to turn off the vertical and horizontal synchronization ports and write blanks to the video buffer DPMS Display power management system Blank Screen This option only writes blanks to the video buffer Video Off In Suspend After the selected period of system inactivity the chipset enters hardware suspend mode stopping the CPU clock and possibly causing other system devices to enter power management modes In this case the video hardware can be selected to shut off after a period of system inactivity This selection determines the manner in which the monitor goes blank The choices Yes and No Suspend Type This item lets you select two types of suspend Stop Grant Halts CPU s instruction stream stop clock at ACPI C2 state PwrOn Suspend CPU sleeps at ACPI S1 state The choices Stop Grant and PwrOn Suspend Modem Use IRQ Choose the interrupt request IRQ line assigned to the modem if any on your system Activity of the selected IRQ always awakens the system The choices NA 3 4 5 7 9 10 and 11 44 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp B
4. 1600 manual a Drivers Zip drive lomegaware software if applicable Note There may be a newer revision than the software that is pre configured with the 1600 The software may be updated by following the installation instructions found on the Iomegaware CD Pro face Xycom Recovery Media and documentation for Windows NT Windows 2000 whichever applies Installation disk for Windows XP if applicable e 18 Ultra ATA IDE cable for systems pre configured with only 2 IDE devices 7 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 1 Introduction Quick Start up This section gives you the steps to get the 1600 up and running without explaining the capabilities and options of the system Warning Turn off the power to the unit and disconnect the power cord before adjusting the inside or the outside of the computer To prepare the system for use perform the following steps 1 Attach a keyboard to the keyboard port 2 Attach a monitor to the VGA connector 3 Attach other optional equipment by following the instructions on page 9 4 Attach the power cord from the power receptacle to a properly grounded 115 230 VAC 50 60 Hz outlet Turn on the power to the unit on The system will boot up to the C prompt or to the Windows desktop Install application software that you will use onto your system via the floppy drive CD ROM drive or network 8 143158 E Chapter 2 Installation Thi
5. 1 STROBE 2 AUTOFEED 3 PDO 4 PERROR 5 PD1 6 INIT 7 PD2 8 SELIN 9 PD3 10 GND 11 PD4 12 GND 13 PD5 14 GND 15 PD6 16 GND 17 PD7 18 GND 19 PACK 20 GND 21 PBUSY 22 GND 23 PE 24 GND 25 SELECT 26 N C ATX PWMA4P Power Connector CN2 The following table lists the signal definitions for the DB 4 power connector Table 3 3 Power Pinout Pin Signal 1 Ground 2 Ground 3 12 Volt 4 12 Volt Serial Port Connector COM1 and COM2 The COM1 and COM2 serial ports support RS 232 mode which allows you to connect to a serial device This port is located on the I O side of the unit The following table lists the signal definitions for the internal DB 10 connectors Table 3 4 COMI amp COM2 Serial Port InternalPinout Signal Pin Signal DCD 2 RXD TXA 4 DTR GND 6 DSR RTS 8 CTS RI 10 N C 26 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup COM1 amp COM2 External Serial Port Connector COM1 amp COM2 are located on the I O side of the unit The following table lists the signal definitions for the external DB 9 connectors Table 3 5 COM1 amp COM2 External Serial Port Pinout Pin RS 232 DCD RXD TXD DTR GND DSR RTS CTS RI O ODINIDO AJAJ OINI 27 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Boar
6. 1600 Series with Pentium 4 BIOS Error Messages Use Table 5 2 when the BIOS detects a problem during the Power On Self Test POST After the problem is detected a BIOS error message will display before the Windows Message Keyboard error Real time clock error Operating system not found Failure fixed disk Incorrect Drive A type Run SETUP Floppy disk controller error or no controller present Press F2 on keyboard for setup System CMOS checksum bad Run SETUP of kbytes K System RAM failed at offset of kbytes K System RAM passed System BIOS shadowed Video BIOS shadowed Previous boot incomplete Default configuration used Diskette drive A or B error operating system starts Chapter 5 Troubleshooting Table 5 2 Troubleshooting BIOS Error Messages Possible Cause A key was held during Power On Self Test POST Action Reboot with no keys pressed Keyboard malfunction Real time clock information lost Replace keyboard Reset time and date in Setup Menu and reboot Hardware error in real time clock A non system floppy disk is present in the floppy disk drive Replace CPU board Remove disk and reboot CMOS setup data is incorrect Verify CMOS setup data correct if necessary and reboot Hard disk has lost operating system data Partition and reformat hard disk If problem persists the hard disk may need to be replaced Hard d
7. 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Advanced BIOS Features Setup Enter the Advanced BIOS Features Setup by choosing the Advanced option from the top menu The following screen will be displayed Table 3 16 describes the menu fields Phoenix Award BIOS CMOS Setup Utility Advanced BIOS Features CPU Feature Press Enter Hard Disk Boot Priority Press Enter Item Help CPU L1 amp L2 Cache Enabled Virus Warning Disabled Hyper Threading Technology Enabled P4 M Support Enabled Menu Level gt Quick Power On Self Test Enabled First Boot Device Floppy Second Boot Device HDD Select Hard Disk Boot Device Third Boot Device CDROM Priority Boot Other Device Enabled Swap Floppy Drive Enabled Boot Up Floppy Seek Enabled Boot Up NumLock Status On Gate A20 Option Fast Typematic Rate Setting Disabled xTypematic Rate Chars Sec 6 xTypematic Delay msec 250 Security Option Setup APIC Mode Enabled MPS Version Control For OS 1 41 OS Select For DRAM gt 64MB Non OS2 Small Logo EPA Show Disabled tl lt Move Enter Select PU PD Value F10 Save ESC Exit F1 General Help F5 Previous Values F7 Optimized Defaults F9 Menu Figure 3 3 Advanced BIOS Features Menu Note The Setup parameters shown in italics above after the down arrow position are actually only seen when scrolled down to for this CMOS setup screen Note Hyper Threading
8. APIC Mode Advanced programmable interrupt controller APIC mode can be used for either a uni processor or multi processor The choices Enabled and Disabled Silent POST This feature allows you to enable the system to show the company s logo when the power is on The choices Enabled and Disabled Advanced Chipset Features Setup By choosing the Advanced Chipset Features Setup option from the Advanced menu the following screen is displayed Table 3 17 describes the Advanced Chipset menu fields Phoenix Award BIOS CMOS Setup Utility Advanced Chipset Features DRAM Timing Selectable By SPD Item Help x CAS Latency Time 2 x Active to Precharge Delay 8 x DRAM RAS to CAS Delay 4 x DRAM RAS Precharge 4 Menu Level gt Memory Frequency For Auto System BIOS Cacheable Enabled Video BIOS Cacheable Disabled Memory Hole At 15M 16M Disabled AGP Aperture Size MB 128 Init Display First PCI Slot On Chip VGA Setting On Chip VGA Enabled On Chip Frame Buffer Size 8MB Boot Display Auto 1 gt Move Enter Select PU PD Value F10 Save ESC Exit F1 General Help F5 Previous Values F7 Optimized Defaults F9 Menu Figure 3 4 Advanced Chipset Features Menu 37 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Table 3 17 Advanced Chipset Features Menu Options Menu Field Description DRAM Timing S
9. beginning preventive maintenance procedures Product Repair Program Pro face s Product Repair amp Customization Department PR amp C restores equipment to normal operating condition and implements engineering changes that enhance operating specifications Pro face tests products returned to Pro face with the standard Pro face Xycom test diagnostics 51 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 4 Maintenance Follow the steps below to prepare the unit for shipment 1 Obtain a Return Merchandise Authorization RMA number for your unit by calling your nearest Pro face Repair Department or Pro face at 734 429 4971 or 1 800 289 9266 2 Please have the following information Company name shipping and billing address Type of service desired product repair or product exchange Product model number part number quantity serial number s and watranty status Failure mode and failure systems Purchase order number or repair order number Make sure the front panel assembly is properly attached to the unit Attach failure information to the unit to speed processing Place the unit securely in its original packaging or an equivalent heavy duty box Mark the RMA number on your purchase order and on the outside of the box elt CO O Send the unit to the address given when you receive your RMA number 52 143158 E Chapter 5 Troubleshooting Troubleshooting Tables Included in this section are two
10. Pentium4 M CPU 24 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Connector Pinouts Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup The following sections describe the pinouts for the floppy drive connector COM1 COM2 power connector primary and secondary hard drive connectors VGA and parallel port connectors Refer to Figure 3 1 on the previous page for a mechanical drawing showing all jumpers and connectors Floppy Drive Connector FDD1 The following table lists the signal definitions for the DB 34 floppy drive connectors Table 3 1 Floppy Drive Pinout Pin Signal Pin Signal 1 Ground 2 DENSEL 3 Ground 4 N C 5 Ground 6 N C 7 Ground 8 INDEX 9 Ground 10 MTRA 11 Ground 12 DRVB 13 Ground 14 DRVA 15 Ground 16 MTRB 17 Ground 18 DIR 19 Ground 20 STEP 21 Ground 22 WDATA 23 Ground 24 WGATE 25 Ground 26 TRKO 27 Ground 28 WPT 29 N C 30 RDATA 31 Ground 32 HDSEL 33 N C 34 DSKCHG 25 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Parallel Port Connector LPT1 The parallel port connector is located on the CPU board The following table shows the signal definitions for the DB 26 LPT1 connector Table 3 2 Parallel Port Pinout Pin Signal Pin Signal
11. by the manufacturer Dispose of used batteries according to the manufacturer s instructions CPU REMOVAL AND REPLACEMENT CAUTION Use caution when removing the CPU from its board After removing the DRAM carefully slide the CPU from its position without bumping or bending components behind or around the CPU ii 143158 E TABLE OF CONTENTS 1600 SERIES WITH P4 sucia l CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION cuiiccscdiscehecssclscctaseleccsnsasacetedenctecenssacenedecstececnsaceiedepetecasesecusesecsiesasosaceieiesciasesetacusezesses 1 PRODUCT OVERVIEW e a a a N a E E E a E E ria NE 1 STANDARD FEATURES sciso tac cecenedeackanads a Ta a a a a a a die a dia aana I 1 Front Viewwith Door Closed op E E a E idii 2 Front View With Door OD N serres iaoea ieaiai dd 3 Back Vie W syek anerus an a aa A ee A ae aae aaar e raias 5 laitaa EAA EEEE E E E O E E EE A tag va E ET 6 UNPACKING THE SYSTEM ied A A A ened 6 QUICK START UP aa E ii il id al a 8 CHAPTER 2 INSTALLATION ocio 9 INSTALLATION OVERVIEW m na A n A AA acc 9 MOUNTING DIMENSIONS Dc E E E E AE A E E EEA ENA E EE AAE A OE A 10 1600 Front and Rear DIMENSIONS 1 cccccccccececceeeeeeccececcneeseseccenecunneseccessacenseessesessaeeuanesecsessaseeaaeseesesssaaesseseseas 10 1612 DIMENSIONS eiid orp ea EE EE NEEE ADA A AAA ELA E aaa 11 OLI DIMENSIONS EOE EATE E AREE AE TE P EE OTE PEE OE 12 1014 DIMENSIONS irtetekoa ha a o e apa a AD A tii 13 MOUNTING INSTRUCTIONS E A E AATE AET A ATE 14 Rack Mounting e ele
12. codes that provide data such as the size and types of conductors color codes and connections necessary for safe grounding of electrical components The code specifies that a grounding path must be permanent no solder continuous and able to safely conduct the ground fault current in the system with minimal impedance minimum wire required is 18 AWG 1 mm Observe the following practices e Separate ground wires P E or Protective Earth from power wires at the point of entry to the enclosure To minimize the ground wire length within the enclosure locate the ground reference point near the point of entry for the plant power supply e All electrical racks or chassis and machine elements should be Earth Grounded in installations where high levels of electrical noise are expected Ground the chassis with a ground rod or attach to a nearby Earth structure such as a steel support beam Each different apparatus should be connected to a single Earth Ground point in a star configuration with low impedance cable Scrape away paint and other nonconductive material from the area where a chassis makes contact with the enclosure In addition to the ground connection made through the mounting bolt or stud use a one inch metal braid or size 8 AWG wire to connect between each chassis and the enclosure at the mounting bolt or stud Excessive Heat The 1600 withstands operating temperatures from 0 to 50 C 32 to 122 F To keep the tempe
13. floppy drive select Disabled in this field The choices Enabled and Disabled Onboard Serial Port 1 2 Normally the board s I O chips will occupy a certain portion of memory space For each l O device the computer provides an l O address The more devices that are attached the more address needed to organize the memory storage areas Without access to multiple addresses the system could not handle all of the I O devices Also you will need to select the corresponding interrupt when setting this function The choices Disabled Auto 2E8 IRQ3 3E8 IRQ4 2F8 IRQ3 and 3F8 IRQ4 UART Mode Select If you don t Disable the Onboard Serial Port 2 you will have to select an operating mode for the second serial port Normal RS 232C serial port IrDA IrDA compliant serial infrared port ASKIR Amplitude shift keyed infrared port SCR Smart Card Reader The choices Normal IrDA ASKIR and SCR UR2 Duplex Mode Select the value required by the IR device connected to the IR port Full duplex mode permits simultaneous two direction transmission Half duplex mode permits transmission in one direction at a time only The choices Half and Full Onboard Parallel Port Select a logical LPT port address and corresponding interrupt for the physical parallel port The choices Disabled 378 IRQ7 278 IRQ5 and 3BC IRQ7 Parallel Port Mode There are two bi directional parallel ports which supports ECP EPP ECP EPP SPP You must choose
14. generating voltage and current spikes which may require external suppression 50 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 4 Maintenance Fan Filter Replacement There are two air filters in your 1600 unit which are located in the front door To change the fan filters open the front door of the unit See Figure 1 1 to locate the filters Remove the 6 32 lock nuts from around the filter covers and lift the covers off Replace the filters and then put the filter covers back on Reattach the 6 32 nuts and close the door Fuse Replacement The 1600 has no accessible fuse Return the unit to Pro face for fuse replacement Recommended Hard Drive Preventive Maintenance Pro face has recognized that hard drive failures may begin to increase an average of four to five years into the life of most computers used in industrial applications Therefore it is our recommendation as a preventive maintenance measure that all hard drives used in these types of applications be replaced before the four to five year time period to avoid any down time related to hard drive failure Pro face believes it is important to keep our customers informed to offer alternative solutions and to provide all of our customers with the excellent service they deserve Any questions regarding this issue may be directed to our support center at support profaceamerica com Note Pro face recommends frequent backups of your hard drive especially before
15. nn conocen rra 26 COM1 amp COM2 External Serial Port CONNECTOT cccccccccccccccnicicinonnnonnnnnnnnnnnnnonononnnnnnnnnnonononnnnnonononononononenecinininess 27 Primary IDE1 Hard Drive Connector IDET cicoomoniiicinaiai ata A a aaa 28 Secondary IDE Hard Drive Connector IDE2 cccccccesceceseeteneeeeneeteneeteaeeseneeseaeeseneeseaeeseneeseaeeseeeseneesseeseneenenes 29 Internal USB 2 0 Dual port connectors USB1 USBA4 00 ieccceecceeeesteeeeeeeeneeeseneeeeeeseaeesaaeesaeeseeeseaesenateseaeeeaaees 29 VGA Connector VGA i ecu sccssides a iia 30 LAN RJ45 Connector LAN1 and LAN2 ccccccccccceeeseeteneeeeneeteneeteaeeseneeseaeeseaeeseaeeseaeeseaeeseaeeseaeeseeeseaeeseneeeenserenes 30 Audio Input Output CONNCCION cmo a e ti aria 31 PS 2 Combined Keyboard and Mouse Connectof coociococicicicccononicancncnonccnnnncnon cnn conocen cancer 31 Internal Keyboard Connector CNB oooococcconccoconccconinnoninnnnannononcnnn crono rra 31 AWARD BIOS CMOS SETUP 2 acidez 32 STANDARD GMOS SETUP iii tentar raaa En 33 ADVANCED BIOS FEATURES SETUP occinnncicicnnininininininn 1 1 E EtEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE 35 AADVANCED GHIPSET FEATURES SETUP cacas 37 i 143158 E INTEGRATED PERIPHERALS risian annaa aea dedicas dt dilatada avandia cables aie atada cis 39 POWER MANAGEMENT SETUP aid 43 PNP PGI CONFIGURATIONS cui ai 46 PC HEALTH STATUS Lada tr tdt alba ia 48 FREQUENCY VOLTAGE CONTROL a ida 48 lEOAD OPTIMIZ
16. shock and vibration specifications of the CD ROM drive 63 143158 E Appendix B Programming the Rocky 4786EVG Watchdog Timer The Watchdog Timer is provided to ensure that standalone systems can recover from catastrophic conditions that cause the CPU to crash This condition may have occurred by external EMI or a software bug When the CPU stops working correctly hardware on the board will either perform a hardware reset cold boot or a Non Maskable Interrupt NMI to bring the system back to a known state A BIOS function call INT 15 is used to control the Watchdog Timer INT 15H AH 6FH Sub function AL 2 Set the Watchdog Timer s period BL Time out value Its unit time is dependent on the item Watchdog Timer unit select in CMOS setup You have to call sub fuction 2 to set the time out period of the Watchdog Timer first IF the time out value is not zero the Watchdog Timer will start counting down When the timer value reaches zero the system will reset To ensure that this reset condition does not occur the Watchdog Timer must be periodically refreshed by calling sub function 2 However the Watchdog timer will be disabled if you set the timer out value to be zero Note Adequate tolerance must be maintained to allow system functions like disk I O to work properly in between timeouts When exiting your application that uses the Watchdog Timer remember to always disable the Watchdog Time
17. signals This is useful only when two display cards use the same palette address and are plugged into the PCI bus at the same time such as MPEG or Video capture card In such case PCI VGA is silent while the MPEG Video capture card is set to function normally The Choices Enabled and Disabled 47 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup PC Health Status Choosing the PC Health option from the top menu provides access to the following statuses Phoenix Award BIOS CMOS Setup Utility PC Health Status Auto Detect DIMM PCI Clk Enabled Item Help CPU Temperature xx C Vcore From VID X XXV CPU Vcore x xxV AEV N Menu Level 3 3V x xxV 5 V X XXV 12V x xxV 12V x xxV Fan1 Speed xxxRPM Fan2 Speed xxxRPM 1 gt Move Enter Select PU PD Value F10 Save ESC Exit F1 General Help F5 Previous Values F7 Optimized Defaults F9 Menu Figure 3 8 PC Health Status Configurations Menu Frequency Voltage Control Choosing the Frequency Voltage Control option from the top menu provides the following menu Table 3 21 describes the fields Phoenix Award BIOS CMOS Setup Utility Frequency Voltage Control Auto Detect Dimm PCI Clk Enabled Item Help Spread Spectrum Disabled Menu Level gt tl lt Move Enter Select PU PD Value F10 Save ESC Exit F1 General Help F5 Previous Values F7 Optimized Defaults F9 Men
18. the 478 pin package with system bus frequencies of 400 533MHz e System Memory 184 pin DDR SDRAM DIMM x 2 maximum 2 GB supports DDR 400 e Chipset Intel 82865 GV Intel 82801 EB ICH5 e 1 0 Chipset Winbond 83627HF e USB Two USB 2 0 ports e BIOS Award 4Mb FLASH BIOS e Ethernet Two ports one10 100Base w Tx RJ 45 connector and one 100 1000Base w Tx RJ 45 connector e IDE Support Two IDE connectors which accept up to 4 devices supporting Ultra DMA 100 e Watchdog timer Can generate a system reset Software selectable time out interval e Display Memory size Shared memory up to 8MB with Dynamic Video Memory Technology up to 1600 x 1200 24bpp colors for CRT e Audio Intel 82801EB ICH5 with ALC202 AC 97 CODEC see Appendix B for more information on the watchdog timer 22 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Mechanical Drawing tIio ee E J SS lt e YH 30 5 MI Figure 3 1 ROCKY 4786EVG Motherboard 23 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Jumper Settings Following are diagrams of the jumper settings Refer to Figure 3 1 for a mechanical drawing showing all of the jumpers e JP2 Clear CMOS DESCRIPTION 1 2 or open Keep CMOS Setup Normal Operation e JPi Compact Flash Master Slave Function Setting JP1 1 2 e JP4 CPU selection
19. track 5 Slide the ISA or PCI expansion board into the desired slot Caution Do not force the boards or apply uneven pressure 6 Push the board into the backplane connectors Hold Down Bracket Expansion Card Figure 2 16 Installing ISA or PCI Boards 7 Reinstall the hold down bracket foam side down with two screws 20 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 2 Installation 8 Secure the board by installing the screw through the hole in the board s metal retaining bracket and into the top of the track 9 Replace the top cover Custom Logo You have the option to place a custom label on your unit Refer to Figure 2 17 for the dimensions and recommended requirements for a customized label Once a customized label is procured place the new label over the Pro face Xycom label 0 12 3 05 R Pro face X COM 2 17 55 12 Figure 2 17 Customized Label Dimensions 21 143158 E Chapter 3 Rocky 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Rocky 4786EVG P4 Motherboard This section outlines the features of the Rocky 4786EVG P4 motherboard includes a mechanical drawing illustrates the jumper settings and connector pinouts and explains the BIOS CMOS setups For more information about the watchdog timer see Appendix B Programming the Rocky 4786EVG Watchdog Timer Features The Rocky 4786EVG P4 Motherboard offers the following features e Processor 3 GHz Pentium 4 Processor in
20. 1 General Help F5 Previous Values F7 Optimized Defaults Figure 3 2 Standard CMOS Setup Menu 33 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Table 3 15 Standard CMOS Setup Menu Options Menu Field Description Date and Time Configuration The BIOS determines the day of the week from the other date information This field is for information only Press the left or right arrow key to move to the desired field date month year Press the PgUp or PgDn key to change the setting or simply type the desired value into the field The time format is based on the 24 hour military time clock For example 1 p m is 13 00 00 hours Press the left or right arrow key to move to the desired field Press the PgUp or PgDn key to change the setting or simply type the desired value into the field IDE Primary Secondary Master Slave IDE HDD Auto Detection IDE Primary Secondary Master Slave Drive A Drive B This section does not show information about other IDE devices such as a CD ROM drive or other hard drive types such as SCSI drives NOTE We recommend that you select type AUTO for all drives The BIOS can automatically detect the specifications and optimal operating mode of almost all IDE hard drives When you select AUTO for a hard drive the BIOS will detect its specifications If you do not want to select AUTO other methods of selecting the dri
21. 13 18 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 2 Installation Figure 2 13 Removing the Top Cover Unscrew and remove the hold down bar from the unit see Figure 2 16 Remove the device and power cables if they are connected to existing devices Remove the screws securing the 5 25 or 3 5 drive bay to the front panel DN a e a Slide the 5 25 or 3 5 drive bay approximately 1 inch towards the back of the chassis 7 Lift the drive bay up and remove it from the unit See Figure 2 14 and 2 15 Figure 2 14 Installing a 5 25 Device Figure 2 15 Installing a 3 5 Device 8 Add or replace the 5 25 or 3 5 device to the drive bay and secure with the screws 9 Make the appropriate power and IDE or floppy data cable connections 10 Replace the hold down bar and then close the unit ISA PCI Expansion The following instructions describe the installation of ISA or PCI expansion boards 19 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 2 Installation Warning The maximum power available for ISA and or PCI boards is 150W 1 Turn off power to the unit and unplug the power cord on the rear of the 1600 2 Open the 1600 unit by removing the three screws from the top cover see Figure 2 13 Removing the Top Cover 3 Remove the two screws from the hold down bracket and remove the hold down bracket see Figure 2 16 4 Remove the screw and the retaining bracket from the desired
22. 1600 Series with P4 AAA AAA U _ _ _ E Industrial PC Computer System User Manual for the 1612 1613 8 1614 models O 2007 XYCOM AUTOMATION L L C Printed in the United States of America 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Revision Record Revision Description Date A Manual Released 10 03 B Added SBC 860 Watchdog Timer Appendix 4 04 C RAID Enabled Appendix added 10 04 D Updated for ROCKY 4786EVG 1 10 07 E Name change correct where applicable with document 4 07 Part Number 143158 E Trademark Information Xycom and Xycom Automation are trademarks of Xycom Automation L L C Xycom Automation L L C now is referred to as Pro face through a D B A The Pro face name and logo will replace the Xycom name and logo on all documents where possible Pro face is a trademark of Digital Electronics Corporation Brand or product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners Intel and Pentium are registered trademarks and Celeron is a trademark of Intel Corporation Windows Windows NT and Windows XP are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the U S and in other countries Copyright Information This document is copyrighted by Xycom Automation L L C Xycom and shall not be reproduced or copied without expressed written authorization from Xycom Automation L L C The information contained within this document is subject to change without notice Pro face does not guarantee the accuracy o
23. 3158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 2 Installation Rack Mounting with Slide Rails 1 Place the unit on a solid work surface and disconnect all cables and cords from the unit Attach the provided Pro face slide rails to the unit see Figure 2 11 Install the unit securely in the rack with standard rack mounting hardware so that the drive access door faces outward Torque the rail mounting screws to 35 in lbs Reconnect all cables and cords Figure 2 11 Installing Optional Slide Rails The slide rails are ordered separately Use Pro face order number 1600 RMS 15 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 2 Installation Power Management The following paragraphs explain the system power the power supply and the effects of excessive heat electrical noise and line voltage variation of the 1600 unit System Power It is always a good idea to use isolation transformers on the incoming AC power line to the 1600 An isolation transformer is especially desirable in cases where heavy equipment is likely to introduce noise onto the AC line The isolation transformer can also serve as a step down transformer to reduce the incoming line voltage to a desired level The transformer should have a sufficient power rating units of volt amperes to supply the load adequately Proper grounding is essential to all safe electrical installations Refer to the relevant Federal State Provincial and local electric
24. 45 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup PnP PCI Configuration By choosing the PnP PCI Configuration option from the top menu the following screen is displayed Table 3 20 describes the menu fields Phoenix Award BIOS CMOS Setup Utility PnP PCI Configurations PnP OS Installed No Item Help Reset Configuration Data Disabled Resources Controlled By Auto ESCD Menu Level gt X IRQ Resources X DMA Resources PCI VGA Pallette Snoop Disabled eb an Play capable operating system Select No if you need the BIOS to configure non boot devices 1 gt Move Enter Select PU PD Value F10 Save ESC Exit F1 General Help F5 Previous Values F7 Optimized Defaults F9 Menu Figure 3 7 PnP PCI Configurations Menu 46 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Table 3 20 PnP PCI Configurations Menu Options Menu Field Description PnP OS Installed Select Yes if the operating system is Plug and Play aware for example Windows 9x Windows 2000 or Windows XP Hardware resources will be allocated by the OS Select No if you need the BIOS to configure non boot devices The choices Yes and No Reset Configuration Data Normally you leave this field disabled Select enabled to reset Extended System Configuration Data ESCD when serious conflict is caused by an add on device or sys
25. 9266 Ethernet Drivers If you install Windows on your system Pro face provides the appropriate Ethernet drivers They can be found on the Documentation and Support Library CD or on the web at www profaceamerica com 60 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 5 Troubleshooting Note If you install Windows NT 4 0 be aware that the Ethernet driver included in that operating system may not work with the Ethernet controller in the 1600 You must use the drivers provided by Pro face These drivers can be found on the Documentation Support Library CD that ships with your system or on the web at www profaceamerica com Video Drivers Video drivers for each operating system are on the diskettes included with the documentation kit Drivers are also included on the Documentation and Support Library CD or on the web at www profaceamerica com To install a video driver refer to the INSTALL TXT file on the diskette for your operating system CDRW DVDRW Drivers A driver CD comes with the CDRW or DVDRW option as well as the preinstalled copy of the driver on the HD for the operating system you have selected Other drivers are also included on the Documentation and Support Library CD or on the web at www profaceamerica com If you change operating systems and need help loading the required driver contact Pro face technical support at 1 800 289 9266 ext 595 Miscellaneous Drivers For 3 party equipment a
26. ED DEFAULTS A A A RG T 49 SECURITY SETUP cooococonononononononononononononnnonornnororornnn nono nono ron nro nn ron ono nn nono nono nono nono nono nono nono nor nro rn ron nro nono rn AEAEE EEEE rnroronononnnnns 49 EXIT OE AS 49 CHAPTER 4 MAINTENANCE snisecscscacndsccscsntssscscsanecsccnanascacnanccsscncnatosseatecssceasacesteasecssenabateseeatecsscsasauesteabecstescvdlerenaie 50 GENERAL PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE cooooocononononononononononononononoronononoronononoronororororonoronororororo nono nono no nono rn nono nono rornrorororonnnnos 50 Fan Filter R placement aatar e ti ey 51 FUSE Replace data 51 RECOMMENDED HARD DRIVE PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE 22scccccceccesesseeeeceeccessesececeeeceeanscececeteneuanscececetsneeaaecesseetenenans 51 PRODUCT REPAIR PROGRAM ii e dedico 51 CHAPTER 5 TROUBLESHOOTING cucinionincicionnainioninnidnananais canilla daria 53 TROUBLESHOOTING TABLES as orita e id add ta ads its ia 53 General Operational Problems ico A Dai 54 BIOS Error Messages iieaeoe eae A A dad 55 DIAGNOSTIC TESTING aviei tee dida ita cdi ida tt tidad l ie ts tie ca 56 Preparing Tor the TOSS aiii A da 56 S t BIOS TO Defaults a EEA e 56 Prepare the Sy aa 57 RunnmgAhE TES SA Recta evi Rites eve A eA enn ae ees Raabe at 58 REINSTALLING OPERATING SYSTEMS ccccccccccccccccccecececccceucucecceceucucucccceseacucucceacaccaseaaueacuaucucacueuaucaceeeceeuauauaususueusuauauauags 59 Windows 2000 ReINStAIATION 0ccccccccccneveeeecccecccsun
27. Enabled to reduce the amount of time required to run the Power On Self Test POST while system is booting The choices Enabled and Disabled First Second Third Boot Device The BIOS attempts to load the operating system and the devices in the sequence selected in these items The choices Floppy LS120 HDD SCSI CDROM ZIPIOO USB FDD USB ZIP USB CDROM USB HDD LAN ISA FDD and Disabled Boot Other Device If your boot device such as SCSI RAID is not included in the following choices you may set First Second Third Boot devices to Disabled and enable the BOOT Other Device function The system will automatically boot the other device The choices are Floppy LS120 HDD SCSI CDROM Z1P100 USB FDD USB ZIP USB CDROM USB HDD LAN ISA FDD The choices Enabled and Disabled Swap Floppy Drive This field is effective only in systems with two floppy drives Selecting Enabled assigns physical drive B to logical drive A and vice versa The choices Enabled and Disabled Boot Up Floppy Seek When Enabled the BIOS tests seeks floppy drives to determine whether they have 40 or 80 tracks Only 360 KB floppy drives have 40 tracks drives with 720 KB 1 2 MB and 1 44 MB capacity all have 80 tracks Because very few modem PCs have 40 track floppy drives we recommend you to choose Disabled to save time during boot up The choices Enabled and Disabled Boot Up NumLock Status Toggle between On or Off to control the st
28. IOS Setup Table 3 19 Power Management Setup Menu Options Menu Field Description Suspend Mode Disable this function or select 1 min 2 min 4 min 8 min 12 min 20min 30 min 40 min 1 hour Please refer to the Power Management section for more information ODD Power Down Disable this function or select from 1 to 15 minutes Please refer to Power Management section for more information Soft Off by PWR BTTN If you select Instant Off pushing the on off button will instantly shut down the system If you select Delay 4 sec you have to push the on off button for 4 seconds to shut down the system In this mode one touch on the on off button won t shut down the system but place it in a very low power usage state with only enough circuitry receiving power to detect power button activity or Resume by Ring activity The choices Instant Off Delay 4 Sec Wake Up by PCI Card The choices Enabled and Disabled USB KB Wake Up From S3 The choices Enabled and Disabled Resume by Alarm Enable this item to set up the power up timer The choices Enabled and Disabled Date of Month Alarm Time hh mm ss Alarm Reload Global Timer Events When this item is enabled an event occurring on each listed device resets the global timer to prevent the system from entering Suspend mode These devices include Primary Secondary IDE 1 0 FDD COM LPT Port and PCI PIRQ A D The choices Enabled Disabled
29. MOUSE riiin 31 Serial ports External cccsccecssseeeesesteeeeees 27 Serial ports Internal cccsccecssseeeesesteeeeeees 26 USB 2 0 eee a E 29 VGA CONNECTOR aria aea ei e iaiia 30 Ports TaN o a E ene A ee 31 HDIDE ei e a a ae 28 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 HD IDE 2 etosecervs hee vies ceeds Heese ae 29 LAN1 amp LAN Docus 30 Parallel LP TA coocoononncnccnnconcnnncnrcnonncnrncnrncnnno 26 PS 2 Kbd MOUSE oocccccccncccccccncocnnnconononinininininonos 31 Serial ports ExterMal ooooonococonoccccnoooccnconnncononnnos 27 Serial Ports Internal oooononononanananananonanonononoos 26 USB2 030 0 a sd ie 29 VGA that SS eat le pena dot a Sta at 30 Power ATP Mia rta ld rada 26 Proper installation help n e 16 Preventive maintenance hard diye wii Sah See ee eh 51 product OVEIVISW ocooooccccnoncnccononcnonanoncnc nono nonnnncnnnnnors 1 product repair Service ooooccccononcccnnnoannnnonanonnnancnnnnns 51 PS 2 Internal Kbdiuaisiasdiata ati 31 Kb MOUSE iia ira 31 RJ45 68 Appendix C The RAID Enabled PC LANAS LAN 2 cocinas 30 RS232 CONE AAA 27 Safety agency approval coooocccononccccononcnonanncnonanonons 17 Serial ports a ici A 26 Serial Ports Ext rnal iii 27 Spare DS iii ins ds SS 50 Standard features coomoccconnnoconnnocnnnnnscnncnrnnccnnnnn nenas 1 Sartre a Sen ees ees 8 SYSTOM POWE boeier conocio ncncncn coco conoce necaconecenenanes 16 testing diagnostic
30. NN 2 83 0 9 22 86 71 1 A a f 14 61 17 88 371 1 454 03 17 75 19 25 450 85 488 95 Figure 2 4 Top View Dimensions Figure 2 5 Side View Dimensions 11 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 2 Installation 1613 Dimensions NOTE All dimensions are in inches mm 16 86 428 24 19 88 504 21 25 539 8 Figure 2 6 Top View Dimensions Figure 2 7 Side View Dimensions 12 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 2 Installation 1614 Dimensions NOTE All dimensions are in inches mm 0 9 22 86 14 338 22 88 390 1 581 0 22 75 24 25 577 9 615 95 Figure 2 8 Top View Dimensions Figure 2 9 Side View Dimensions 13 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 2 Installation Mounting Instructions Rack Mounting 1 Select and prepare an appropriate mounting location according to the section Installation Overview 2 Install the unit in the rack with drive access facing outward using the standard rack mounting hardware 3 Attach one end of the power cord to the power receptacle and the other end to a properly grounded 115 230 VAC 50 60 Hz outlet 4 Turn on the power The system will boot up to the installed operating system 5 Install application software via a floppy disk or CD ROM disk Figure 2 10 Installing Rack Mounting Hardware Torque screws to 35 in lbs 3 95 Nm 14 14
31. PCI slot to initialize as the primary display before initializing any other display device on the system The choices Onboard AGP and PCI Slot IDE HDD Block Mode Block mode is also called block transfer multiple commands or multiple sector read write If your IDE hard drive supports block mode most new drives do please select Enabled for automatic detection of the optimal number of block read writes per sector the drive can support The choices Enabled and Disabled Power on Function Including the power on switch all the devices listed below could be defined as power on methods Choose any of the following that you care to The choices Any key Button only Keyboard 98 Password Hot key Mouse move and Mouse click KB Power on Password If you select Password in the power on function settings you have to press Enter here to set the password you will use to power on the system Hot key power on If you select Hot key as the power on method you have to define the Hot key in this section The choices Ctrl F1 thru Ctrl F12 41 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Table 3 18 Integrated Peripherals Menu Options Menu Field Description Onboard FDC Controller Select Enabled if your system has a floppy disk controller FDC installed on the system board and you wish to use it If you install an add in FDC or the system has no
32. Seca ei ential sie eee ee ee 14 Rack Mounting with Slide RallS ooonoonniiinnnninninnnnnnnjnnaonnnnonn nece 15 POWER MANAGEMENT cotas ici a e A eE Ta 16 System POWE A A bos 16 EXCESSIVE ICAA A es O AE HEIDE AAAI A AE AELE EA AEE 16 Heem ea N O E a AI att 17 Eine Voltage Variatio ainda ai aa aaia aaia ceara 17 Safety Agency Approval issiran itirir tiin A A os von a DAA 17 PS 2 KEYBOARD AND MOUSE GONNECTOR 0 iia 18 INSTALLING OPTIONS cies cata cots bec cts a e dt iaa tdo 18 Additional DDR SDRAM Dual In Line Memory Modules DIMMS oooocociiccninicicccoconccnncccnonccnncncnonccnnn no noncnnnnnno 18 Adding 5 25 and 3 5 Device S iii A daa 18 ISA PCLEXDANSION void di A a A Sie di etn 19 CUSTOM ODO ia O ADO an 21 CHAPTER 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 BOARD amp BIOS SETUP cs sccccceesssssssceceeeeessssesceeeeeeessnessceeeeeeeesnsesaaaes 22 Rocky 4786EVG P4 MOTHERBOARD a aca 22 FeatUrES Dita a tl lidad dla 22 Mechanical Draw oi teta DAA ACA A A 23 JUMPER SETTINOS i a A ia A AA E A A ai a ae 24 CONNECTOR PINOUTS metopa diodo lied Mecasas edd ted Secale eat AT des Rea todas Adaa a Ata danas cdo pene 25 Floppy Drive Connector FD D1 cocina deh senda alain 25 Parallel Port Connector ALP TT coco a idiota 26 ATX PWM4P Power Connector CN2 ccsccssccscscsececsscssscnsressssessssssesessanesscsesessasessssaresesearesestaneseseanssneesessens 26 Serial Port Connector COM1 and COM2 iccoocicccicnicicccococccnncccnonccnncnononcn
33. Technology is only supported by Intel processors that are designed to interface with that technology If your Intel processor does not support this technology the Hyper Threading Technology option will not appear in this BIOS screen 35 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Table 3 16 Advanced BIOS Features Menu Options Menu Field Description Virus Warning When enabling this item you receive a warning message if a program specifically a virus attempts to write to the boot sector or the partition table of the hard disk drive If you receive a warning message you should run an anti virus program However this feature protects only the boot sector not the entire hard drive NOTE Many disk diagnostic programs that access the boot sector table can trigger the virus warning message If you plan to run such a program we recommend that you first disable the virus warning Before installing Microsoft Windows please disable this function The choices Enabled and Disabled Hyper Threading Technology If your Pentium 4 processor supports this function you can select Enabled for Windows XP and Linux 2 4x as optimized for Hyper Threading Technology Select Disabled for other OSs which do not optimize for Hyper Threading Technology If your processor can t support this function this item will be hidden The choices Enabled and Disabled Quick Power On Self Test Select
34. The 478EVG has a built in AC 97 AUDIO CODEC Connectors are wired from MIC IN amp CD IN 8 LINE IN to the external audio jacks Table 3 11 Audio Connector pinout Pin LINE IN CD IN MIC IN Mza LEFT MIC IN 2 GND GND GND 3 GND GND GND 4 RIGHT RIGHT N C PS 2 Combined Keyboard and Mouse Connector The following table lists the signal definitions for the PS 2 DB 6 connector Table 3 12 PS 2 Keyboard and Mouse Pinout Pin Signal Pin Signal 1 Mouse Clock 2 Keyboard Clock 3 Vcc 4 GND 5 Keyboard Data 6 Mouse Data Internal Keyboard Connector CN5 The following table lists the signal definitions for the internal keyboard DB 5 connector Table 3 13 Front keyboard connector Pin Signal 1 Keyboard clock 2 Keyboard data 3 N C 4 Ground 5 Vcc 31 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Award BIOS CMOS Setup Award s BIOS ROM has a built in Setup program that allows users to modify the basic system configuration This type of information is stored in battery backed CMOS memory so that it retains the Setup information when the power is turned off Some items in the BIOS are programmed to auto detect your system The presence or the values of these items vary with the corresponding hardware specification of your system Table 3 14 describes different Setup me
35. ables must include shielded cables Braid foil type shields are recommended Communication cable connectors must be metal ideally zinc die cast backshell types and provide 360 degree protection about the interface wires The cable shield braid must be terminated directly to the metal connector shell ground drain wires alone are not adequate Protective measures for power and interface cables as described within this manual must be applied Do not leave cables connected to unused interfaces or disconnected at one end Changes or modifications to this device not expressly approved by the manufacturer could void the user s authority to operate the equipment EMC compliance is in part a function of PCB design Third party add on AT XT peripheral PCB assemblies installed within this apparatus may void EMC compliance FCC CE compliant PCB assemblies should always be used where possible Pro face can accept no responsibility for the EMC performance of this apparatus after system integrator or user installation of PCB assemblies not manufactured and or expressly tested and approved for compliance by Pro face It is the responsibility of the system user to ensure that installation and operation of such devices does not void EMC compliance i 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Revision Record BATTERY REPLACEMENT CAUTION There is a danger of explosion if the battery is incorrectly replaced Replace only with the same or equivalent type recommended
36. ancnononanononnnrn nn nnn noo 61 VIdGO aa lia 61 electrical NOISE iira a a 17 environmental specifications 63 Ethernet LAN1 amp LAN2 pinouts aseene 30 Fan coe Gs eins pei Sigh ee dee eee SE 50 filter replacement oooconoccc noncccnononcnonanaccnonancnnnnns 51 A cei eae en ee 4 features standard Sresi tote ee ks ae eta 1 fuse replacing cairai a eaae 51 Hard Drives Primary DEl ein NR 28 Secondary IDE2 0 0 eee eeeeeeeeeseeeesetesseeeenetes 29 67 Appendix C The RAID Enabled PC hardware Specifications ooooccccnnnnccnnnnccnconornnnnnn 62 heat exceso it ds a 16 IDE HDIDE docto eo atlas IM od LD ctas 28 HDIDE2 cito 29 installation DRAM ited Sitios teeta SR eae 18 drivers il Beit a E 60 Installation Operating SYSteMS oooocccononcccnnnoncnonancnonanancnnnnoss 59 Jacks O A A Gessugtasdajhssarcutesdazassi ties 31 LEDS cui da 4 line voltage variation ooooncccnnoncccnnnoncnonanancnnnannnnnnns 17 EPT PO alas 26 MAINTENANCE cnica ae 50 Maintenance A ties Dacha ate 51 MOUNTING A loves sctastadaticestoeccanesascecast 9 14 Operating systems installation 59 parallel port LPFI Janines en 26 Pinouts A e ead ae a et te 26 AUGIO 2 33 Dad eh a 31 PIOPP Yeats tey tati ies 25 A O See satil teste TEETE 28 LBS roe seers ene E EE eee T ee 29 Internal PS 2 KOd eeeeeseeeeeeeeteeseeeeeseeeteeeeeaees 31 LAN amp LAN2 cocino id 30 Parallel port LPT1 oo eeeseeeeseneeeeeesteeereneeees 26 PS 2 Kbd
37. and external components on the 1600 unit to help you locate features relevant to installation Front View with Door Closed Air Filter Case Handles g UUU JUUUUUUUU JUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU UU UU ik ea eel Logo Area Figure 1 1 Front View with Door Closed Access Latch Air Filter Table 1 1 Features on the Front Panel Door Feature Description Logo Area The front panel incorporates a logo panel that can be customized Label dimensions and recommended requirements for a customized label are depicted in Figure 2 17 Case Handles These handles can be used to carry the 1600 and to maneuver it into position when mounting Air Filters Two air filters are mounted in each side of the front door These filters separate particulate contaminants from the cooling air drawn into the 1600 See page 50 for instructions on cleaning air filters Access Latch The front panel door latches and locks The knob does not have to be locked in order for the door to stay closed 2 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 1 Introduction Front View with Door Open Power ON OFF Switch Reset Switch _ Power LED HDD1 LED PS Alarm LED PS1 LED PS21ED _ _ PS Reset Switch 35 drive 5 25 Drive bays Bays Removable Drive Lock PS 2 Mouse PS 2 Connector Keyboard Connector Note Model shown with redundant power supply option Figure 1 2 Fron
38. andard UL 60950 Information Technology Equipment UL Listed File E181675 17 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 2 Installation PS 2 Keyboard and Mouse Connector Both a keyboard and a mouse can be connected to the PS 2 compatible port through the Y adapter cable included with your unit Connect a mouse to the cable that has the mouse icon on it and a keyboard into the cable that has a keyboard icon on it If connecting only a keyboard you can connect directly to the PS 2 compatible connector on the rear of the unit If connecting only a mouse the mouse must be connected using the Y adapter cable port Either the mouse or the keyboard can be used alone and connected using the Y cable E Figure 2 12 Y Cable Installing Options Warning This should be done by qualified service personnel only Caution Turn off the unit before installing internal hardware Additional DDR SDRAM Dual In Line Memory Modules DIMMs The 1600 CPU can be ordered with 184 pin DDR SDRAM options up to 2 GB This configuration supports the DDR 400 To reconfigure the SDRAM capacity change the SDRAM DIMMs on the motherboard with Pro face approved DIMMs or equivalent parts Adding 5 25 and 3 5 Devices 1 Turn off power to the unit and unplug the power cord on the rear of the 1600 2 Open the 1600 unit by removing the three screws from the top cover see Figure 2
39. ata Striping RAID 0 is used to read and write to many disks at once to increase hard drive performance while mirroring RAID 1 allows the same data to be available on two or more drives There are two methods to implement a RAID solution via software or dedicated hardware Pro face has chosen a hardware solution because software solutions are more limited and require a Windows 2000 or 2003 Server Pro face s hardware RAID solution utilizes the Adaptec ATA RAID 1200A a PCI IDE RAID controller card This controller card is installed in the PC and the array drives are connected to it instead of to an IDE controller Most PCs use an IDE controller to interface between the system and the hard disks The RAID controller occupies a single PCI slot so you need to verify the available expansion in your Industrial PC for the application RAID 1 with two hard drives was chosen as the optimal solution for creating a more robust fault tolerant system in the Pro face Xycom 1507 3700 Series and 1600 Series of Heavy Duty Industrial PCs Pro face has chosen to support Windows 2000 and Windows XP for these RAID enabled assemblies for optimal and reliable performance Note When installed the RAID controller bypasses the disk controller on the AIM3 board that runs the disk activity light Therefore the disk activity light on the 3700 Series units will not function for the HDDs once the RAID controller is installed However the disk activ
40. ate of the NumLock key when the system boots When toggled On the numeric keypad generates numbers instead of controlling cursor operations The choices On and Off Gate A20 Option Gate A20 refers to the way the system addresses memory above 1 MB i e extended memory When set to Fast the system chipset controls Gate A20 When set to Normal a pin in the keyboard controller controls Gate A20 Setting Gate A20 to fast improves system speed particularly with OS 2 and Windows The choices Fast and Normal 36 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Table 3 16 Advanced BIOS Features Menu Options Menu Field Description Typematic Rate Setting Keystrokes repeat at a rate determined by the keyboard controller When enabled the typematic rate and typematic delay can be selected The choices Enabled and Disabled Typematic Rate When the typematic rate setting is Enabled you can select the rate at which character repeats when you hold down a key The choices 6 8 10 12 15 20 24 and 30 Typematic Delay When the typematic rate setting is Enabled you can select the delay before keystrokes begin to repeat The choices 250 500 750 and 1000 msec Security Option If you have set a password select whether the password is required every time the System boots or only when you enter Setup The choices Setup and System
41. c testing is provided as a tool to verify the operation of the system hardware functions If any of these tests fail either the default setting is incorrect or there is a general failure Check the default settings and run the tests again If another failure occurs contact Pro face s Product Repair amp Customization Department see Product Repair Program for more information Caution Remove any device drivers or memory resident programs TSRs installed on the system before running Pro face diagnostic tests If you do not unexpected failures may occur Note You must hook up a monitor before running any tests Preparing for the Tests To test your system you need the following equipment e Floppy disk drive e IBM PC or PS 2 compatible keyboard e Diagnostic Disk shipped on DOC CD with your computer e Centronics compatible printer cable e Parallel printer Centronics style interface e Two serial loopback test connectors refer to Figure 5 1 for pinouts e Formatted 3 5 inch DS HD 1 44 MB disk Set BIOS to Defaults Make sure the BIOS setup menu is configured to the factory set defaults To enter the Setup Menu 1 Press POWER on the 1600 unit and immediately press lt DEL gt 2 Make the necessary changes by following directions on the screen 3 Press ESC 4 Press ENTER twice to save the Setup and exit 56 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 5 Troubleshooting Prepare the System Before starting t
42. card cage mass storage options and power supply options in a truly industrial standard 19 EIA form factor with rack mount 4U height The open architecture design accepts ISA and PCI cards and allows easy access to the boards switches power supply and drives Standard Features The 1600 offers the following standard features Rack mount 4U height and 3 sizes for various length expansion capabilities Intel Socket 478 2 0 GHz Pentium 4 512 KB cache 400 MHz system bus 14 slot passive backplane with 10 available expansion slots 4X AGP video controller with 8 MB base and 64 MB system RAM usage From 512MB to 2GB DDR SDRAM External connection ports Two serial ports RS 232 only One parallel port Two PS 2 keyboard and mouse ports one behind the front door and one on the back of unit you will need to use a Y cable adapter there Audio In Audio Out and Audio Mic Two USB 2 0 ports Dual Ethernet ports one 10 100 Base T and one 100 1000 Base T 300 Watt AC power supply and optional dual redundant power supply Lockable front door panel Three 5 25 front accessible drive bays 80 GB internal hard drive minimum Power on switch and reset switch with HDD LED indicator 82 CFM cooling fan 1 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 1 Introduction e Hold down clamp which protects add on cards from vibration e Preloaded with 2000 or XP The figures and tables on the next several pages illustrate the internal
43. commended that the high voltage and low voltage cabling be separated and dressed apart In particular the AC cables and switch wiring should not be in the same conduit with all communication cables Line Voltage Variation The unit s power supply is built to operate with input voltage ranges of 100 240 VAC with an AC power supply and still allow the system to function within its operating margin As long as the incoming voltage is adequate the power supply provides all the logic voltages necessary to support the processor memory and T O In cases in which the installation is subject to unusual AC line variations use a constant voltage transformer to prevent the system from shutting down too often However a first step toward the solution of the line variations is to correct any possible feed problem in the distribution system If this correction does not solve the problem use a constant voltage transformer The constant voltage transformer stabilizes the input voltage to the 1600 by compensating for voltage changes at the primary in order to maintain a steady voltage at the secondary When using a constant voltage transformer check that the power rating is sufficient to supply the 1600 Safety Agency Approval The Pro face Xycom 1600 is UL approved to meet the following standards e Canadian Standards Association Specification C22 2 No 950 Information Technology Equipment cUL Listed File E181675 e Underwriters Laboratories St
44. d amp BIOS Setup Primary IDE1 Hard Drive Connector IDE1 The following table lists the signal definitions for the IDE DB 40 connectors Table 3 6 Primary IDE Connector Pin Signal Pin Signal 1 PRI_IDERST 2 Ground 3 PDD7 4 PDD8 5 PDD6 6 PDD9 7 PDD5 8 PDD10 9 PDD4 10 PDD11 11 PDD3 12 PDD12 13 PDD2 14 PDD13 15 PDD1 16 PDD14 17 PDDO 18 PDD15 19 Ground 20 N C 21 PDREQ 22 Ground 23 PDIOW 24 Ground 25 PDIOR 26 Ground 27 DIORDY 28 Ground 29 PDDACK 30 Ground 31 IRQ14 32 N C 33 PDAI 34 P66DET 35 PDAO 36 PDA2 37 PDCS 1 38 PDCS 3 39 IDACTP 40 Ground 28 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Secondary IDE Hard Drive Connector IDE2 The following table lists the signal definitions for the secondary IDE DB 40 connector Table 3 7 Pin Signal Pin Signal 1 SEC_IDERST 2 Ground 3 SDD7 4 SDD8 3 SDD6 6 SDD9 7 SDD5 8 SDD10 9 SDD4 10 SDD11 11 SDD3 12 SDD12 13 SDD2 14 SDD13 15 SDD1 16 SDD14 17 SDDO 18 SDD15 19 Ground 20 N C 21 SDREQ 22 Ground 23 SDIOW 24 Ground 25 SDIOR 26 Ground 27 SIORDY 28 Ground 29 SDDACK 30 Ground 31 IRQ15 32 N C 33 SDAI 34 S66DET 35 SDAO 36 SDA2 37 SDCS 1 38 SDCS 3 39 IDEACTS 40 Ground Internal USB 2 0 Dual port conn
45. dded to your PC refer to your operating system and peripheral manuals for information on installing drivers related to these items Note For further assistance call Pro face Technical Support at 734 429 4971 ext 595 or 1 800 289 9266 61 143158 E Hardware Specifications Appendix A Technical Specifications Table A 1 lists the hardware specifications for the 1612 1613 and 1614 CPU Table A 1 1600 Hardware Specifications Characteristic Mechanical Height Width Depth Power Supply Input Rating Passive Backplane Agency Approvals Regulatory Compliance Specification 1612 7 00 177 8mm 1613 7 00 177 8mm 19 00 482 6mm 19 00 482 6mm 17 88 454 0mm 19 88 504 8mm 300 W AC or 2x 300 W AC redundant 115 230 V AC auto ranging 50 60 Hz 7 A maximum 115V 3 A maximum 230V Ten available expansion slots 1612 1613 Three full length ISA Three full length ISA One full length PCI One full length PCI Two length PCI Six length PCI Four Ye length PCI UL 508 Listed Industrial Control Equipment 1614 7 00 177 8mm 19 00 482 6mm 22 88 581 0mm 1614 Three full length ISA Four full length PCI Three length PCI cUL CSA C22 2 No 142 Process Control Equipment FCC 47 CFR Part 15 Class A CE EMI EN55022 Class A IMMUNITY EN61000 6 2 HARMONICS EN61000 3 2 Class A FLICKER EN61000 3 3 SAFETY EN60950 CB Report ISO 9001 The manufactu
46. ectors USB1 USB4 The following table lists the signal definitions for the internal USB connectors and how they cable to the external USB ports Standard units only have USB1 cabled to the two external USB ports A and B Table 3 8 USB 2 0 Dual Port Pinout Pin External Signal Pin External Signal Pin Pin 1 1 VCC 2 4 USB GND 3 2 USBDO 4 3 USBD1 5 3 USBDO 6 2 USBD1 7 4 USB GND 8 1 VCC 29 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup VGA Connector VGA1 The VGA connector is located on the CPU board The following table lists the signal definitions for the VGA DB 15 connector Table 3 9 VGA Pinout Y 5 CRT_RED Signal CRT_GREEN CRT_BLUE N C VGA GND VGA GND VGA GND Hal ia VGA GND Pin Signal 9 5 Volt 10 VGA GND 11 N C 12 DDC_DAT 13 CRT_HSYNC 14 CRT_VSYNC 15 DDC_CLK LAN RJ45 Connector LAN1 and LAN2 The following table lists the signal definitions for the LAN RJ45 DB 8 connector Table 3 10 LAN RJ45 Pinout Pin Description 10 100 100 1000 1 TX TXA 2 TX TXA 3 RX TXB 4 N C TXC 5 N C TXC 6 RX TXB 7 N C TXD 8 N C TXD 30 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Audio Input Output Connector
47. electable This function stores information about Memory Module setting Therefore it can automatically detect the best frequency at which the memory module should use The Choices By SPD and Manual CAS Latency Time When synchronous DRAM is installed the number of clock cycles of CAS latency depends on the DRAM timing Do not reset this field from the default value specified by the system designer The values of the choice may very with different RAM types The choices 1 5 2 2 5 and 3 Active to Pre charge Delay This function identifies the minimum time from active to pre charge The choices 5 6 and 7 DRAM RAS to CAS Delay This function controls the number of clocks that are inserted between a row activate command and a read or write command to that row The choices 2 and 3 DRAM RAS Precharge This function controls the number of clocks that are inserted between a row precharge command and an active command to the same row The choices 2 and 3 Memory Frequency For This item allows you to select the memory frequency The choices Auto DDR200 and DDR266 System BIOS Cacheable Selecting Enabled allows caching of the system BIOS ROM at fO000h FFFFFh resulting in better system performance The choices Enabled and Disabled Video BIOS Cacheable Selecting Enabled allows caching of the video BIOS ROM at C0000 C8000 resulting in better video performance The ch
48. eseecececceusnesecesesaneusnesecsenssnsnesseeesesssuanessecessaeeuaneseceessaeananesss 59 Windows NT RelnstallatiOn iciiiii devs cacuseedeedsdassivenguescseicieacveuveei sedi deoveveassrsdeeiesuvsvexsevidedadssvexeraveseevas 59 Windows XP Renstialation iaa 60 INSTALLING DRIVERS oros contada atari battle add E idad Toute 60 ElNOmet DAVE tus lo ii ica 60 VIGEO DIV OTS iii ii A A Aia ie 61 CORWIDVDR MW Divers lt lt aa 61 MISGEHANCOUS FIVES mper A A ES ave Ad ate ELE Aa 61 APPENDIX A TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS ooooooocococononononononononononononononnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn cnn nan nn cnn nana nn nana nnnnnnnnnnns 62 HARDWARE SPEGIFICATIONS A ee E 62 ENVIRONMENTAL SPECIFICATIONS cnica nda dc dani aD dia ad eaaa 63 APPENDIX B PROGRAMMING THE ROCKY 4786EVG WATCHDOG TIMER 0 0 0ssssssssssesssssssesssesssseeeees 64 APPENDIX C THE RAID ENABLED IPC OPTION 0 s0ssssssssssesssssessssesssesssssssnssssesssssssssssssssssssessssssssseesees 65 iv 143158 E Chapter 1 Introduction Product Overview The Pro face Xycom 1600 Industrial Rack Mount PCs put the power and versatility of a PC compatible computer in an industry standard package It is ideal for the factory floor and other industrial applications The 1600 industrial rack mount PC meets the requirements of a wide variety of applications where both a powerful PC and a durable industrial enclosure are required The system integrates the computer
49. f the information United States FCC Part 15 Subpart B Class A EMI Compliance Statement NOTE This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is operated in a commercial environment This equipment generates uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and if not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual may cause harmful interference to radio communications Operation of this equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful interference in which case the user will be required to correct the interference at his or her own expense For European Users WARNING This is a Class A product In a domestic environment this product may cause radio interference in which case the user may be required to take adequate measures INSTALLATION Electromagnetic Compatibility WARNING The connection of non shielded equipment interface cables to this equipment will invalidate FCC EMI and European Union EMC compliance and may result in electromagnetic interference and or susceptibility levels which are in violation of regulations which apply to the legal operation of this device It is the responsibility of the system integrator and or user to apply the following directions which relate to installation and configuration All interface c
50. he system tests perform the following steps 1 Set the CPU board jumpers and switches to the factory set positions Refer to your CPU manual for these settings 2 Plug the female end of the AC power cable into the rear of the unit and the male end into a properly grounded outlet 3 Connect the serial loopback connector s and the printer cable to the appropriate connectors and connect a PC AT or PS 2 keyboard Figure 5 1 illustrates the wiring necessary for the loopback connection 4 Default the CMOS setup to the factory settings 6 2 7 3 8 i 9 50 Com 1 Serial Loopback Connections Figure 5 1 Serial Loopback Connection 57 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 5 Troubleshooting Running the Tests To run the test create a bootable DOS disk without any config sys or autoexec bat file Copy the xydiag exe routine to it disk then create a simple autoexec bat file that calls xydiag exe Next insert the diagnostics disk into drive A on the unit to test Turn on the computer and the diagnostics program will boot up The following figure shows the Main Menu Copyright xxxx lt Company Name gt All rights reserved Diagnostic Tests Sequence Selection Menu Rel xx 1 WILL pause on error 5 Auto select tests 2 SINGLE PASS test mode 6 Deselect all tests 3 Save setup to file 7 Quit and exit to DOS 4 Extract setup from a 8 Return to previous screen file A RAM Test K Video Interface Tes
51. his 25 pin connector See page 25 for parallel port pinouts PS 2 Keyboard and Mouse Connector A keyboard and a mouse can be connected to this PS 2 compatible port through the Y adapter cable included with the unit If connecting only a keyboard connect directly to the PS 2 compatible connector on the back of the unit If connecting only mouse the mouse must be connected using the Y adapter cable port with the mouse icon on it See page 30 for keyboard mouse connector pinouts COM1 Serial Connector RS 232 COM1 is RS 232 only See page 24 for jumper settings COM2 Serial Connector RS 232 COM2 can be configured as either RS 232 Ethernet Ports These RJ45 connectors provide 10 BaseT and 100 BaseTX autosensing Ethernet connections Video Connector This 15 pin high density female connector is used to connect a monitor to the unit s video output See page 29 for video connector pinouts Fan Outlet Grille Unobstructed airflow is essential to proper ventilation and cooling of the unit Do not block this outlet 5 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 1 Introduction Internal View ISA PCI Expansion Slots Backplane CPU Board Power Supply 5 25 Drive Bavs 3 5 Drive Bays Figure 1 4 Internal View Table 1 4 Internal Features and Descriptions Feature Description Backplane 14 slot passive backplane with 10 available expansion slots ISA PCI Expa
52. imized Defaults Use this menu to load the BIOS default values that are factory settings for optimal performance system operations While AWARD has designated the custom BIOS to maximize performance the factory has the right to change these defaults to meet their needs Set Password Use this menu to set Supervisor User Passwords Save and Exit Setup Save CMOS value changes to CMOS and exit setup Exit Without Saving Abandon all CMOS value changes and exit setup 32 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Standard CMOS Setup Select Main from the top menu to access the Standard CMOS Setup option A screen similar to the one shown below is displayed This Standard Setup Menu allows users to configure system components such as date time hard disk drive floppy drive and display Once a field is highlighted on line help information is displayed in the right box of the Menu screen Table 3 15 describes the menu fields Phoenix Award BIOS CMOS Setup Utility Standard Setup Date mm dd yy Wed AUg 20 2003 Time hh mm ss 10 23 42 Item Help gt IDE Primary Master IDE Primary Slave IDE Secondary Master Menu Level gt IDE Secondary Slave Drive A 1 44M 3 5 in Change the day month year Drive B None and century Video EGA VGA Halt On All but Keyboard t lt Move Enter Select PU PD Value F10 Save ESC Exit F
53. isk has failed Hard disk cabled disconnected Replace hard disk Check hard disk cables for proper connection Verify hard disk spins up when power is applied CMOS setup data is incorrect Verify CMOS setup data correct if necessary and reboot Hard disk has lost operating system data Partition and reformat hard disk If problem persists the hard disk may need to be replaced Hard disk has failed CMOS setup data is incorrect Floppy disk drive configuration incorrect CMOS data corrupted Diagnostic message POST memory test passed BIOS areas being shadowed BIOS areas being shadowed Previous boot did not complete Floppy drive error Replace hard disk Verify CMOS setup data correct if necessary and reboot Check floppy disk cables and disk controller configuration Replace floppy disk drive if malfunction persists Input correct CMOS setup data save values and reboot Visually inspect memory modules for poor connection Replace CPU board if problem persists No action required No action required No action required Enter setup access the Exit Menu choose the Get Default Values option save the settings exit Setup and then reboot Check cable to floppy drive and check the Setup Menu configuration and then reboot 55 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 5 Troubleshooting Diagnostic Testing On units with MS DOS installed diagnosti
54. ity light will function for the CD ROM CompactFlash or any X Bay units as the RAID controller does not bypass these items In a RAID 1 system there is a primary and a secondary hard drive The RAID controller writes to both drives but only reads from the primary drive If the RAID 1 ATA and IDE are used interchangeably in this context IDE stands for Integrated Drive Electronics ATA stands for Advanced Technology Attachment Both terms refer to the type of HD controller used in PCs 65 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Appendix C The RAID Enabled PC controller detects any problems with the primary drive it switches over to the secondary drive which has an exact copy of all data on the primary drive and informs the operator of the switchover If the RAID controller should detect any problems with the secondary drive it stops writing to it and informs the operator of the problem In either case the operator can schedule a time to replace the failed drive Note The RAID Enabled Industrial PC is configured at time of manufacture The RAID controller is not available as a user installable upgrade When you order a RAID enabled Industrial PC the Adaptec controller will be installed and configured in the unit at the Pro face plant And in addition to the items listed in Chapter 2 you will receive the Adaptec ATA RAID 1200A Installation and User s Guide and the Adaptec RAID driver disk These items will help you t
55. line Replace DIMMs Load correct video drivers from the Documentation and Support Library CD ROM that was shipped with the unit Check printer power and on line status Cable disconnected Check cable connections Improper HMI or other application print function parameters Check print function settings for correct printer type page size and orientation Refer to the applicable software documentation CMOS setup is incorrect Verify CMOS setup and correct if necessary Printer port configuration incorrect Check printer port configuration HMI or other application software configuration problem Check software configuration Refer to the applicable software documentation Printer not working Disk not formatted Replace printer Use formatted disk CMOS configuration incorrect Check CMOS setup data for floppy enable Floppy disk cables not connected correctly Check power and data cable connections Floppy disk drive configuration incorrect CMOS configuration incorrect Check that drive is installed configured and connected Check CMOS setup data Disk not formatted or partitioned Format and install software Disk drive cables not connected correctly Check power and data cable connections Disk drive configuration incorrect Check drive configuration Operating system not loaded Load operating system 54 143158 E
56. nd Enabled IDE Primary or Secondary Master Slave PIO The four IDE PIO Programmable Input Output fields let you set a PIO mode 0 1 for each of the two IDE devices and the two storage devices that the onboard IDE interface supports Modes 0 through 4 provide successively increased performance In Auto mode the system automatically chooses the best mode for each device The choices Auto Mode 0 Mode 1 Mode 2 Mode 3 and Mode 4 IDE Primary or Secondary Master Slave UDMA Ultra DMA100 implementation is possible only if your IDE hard drive supports it and the operating environment includes a DMA driver If both your hard drive and IDE cable support Ultra DMA 100 select Auto to enable BIOS support The choices Auto and Disabled USB Controller This function is used to Enable or Disable onboard USB controller The choices Enabled and Disabled USB 2 0 Controller This function is used to Enable or Disable high speed USB 2 0 device The choices Enabled and Disabled USB Keyboard Mouse Support Select Enabled when you use a Universal Serial Bus USB keyboard or mouse under DOS mode The choices Enabled and Disabled Onboard Audio LAN 1 LAN 2 The default setting for these items are Enabled If you don t utilize an onboard LAN Audio function select Disabled This will not have any effect on jumper setting The choices Enabled and Disabled Init Display First You can select Onboard AGP or
57. nsion Slots 1612 1613 1614 Three full length ISA Three full length ISA Three full length ISA One full length PCI One full length PCI Four full length PCI Two length PCI Six length PCI Three length PCI Four Ye length PCI Note See page 19 for instructions on adding expansion cards CPU Board SBC 860 full size CPU card Socket 478 based Intel Pentium 4 processor with integrated Intel 82845GV chipset DDR USB 2 0 and Ethernet Power Supply The power supply is located on the back of the unit The 1600 comes standard with a 300 watt AC power supply A dual redundant 300 watt AC power supply is optional See page 62 for power supply specifications 5 25 Drive Bays See page 18 for instructions on adding and removing 5 25 devices 3 5 Drive Bays See page 18 for instructions on adding and removing 3 5 devices Speaker This speaker provides buzzing alarms when signaled by software applications Cooling Fan This 82 CFM cooling fan dissipates heat in the chassis Unpacking the System When you remove the 1600 from its box verify that you have the parts listed below Save the box and inner wrapping in the event you need to reship the unit e 1600 unit 6 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 1 Introduction e AC power cord e Y adapter cable e Key for lockable front door panel e Documentation kit which includes Documentation Support Library CD documentation and drivers
58. nu options Note Some units do not support all the options shown on the following screens If a setting is not displayed your unit does not have that particular capability Table 3 14 BIOS CMOS Setup Setup Menu Description Entering Setup Power on the computer and press lt Del gt immediately This will allow you to enter Setup The top menu offers users various functions to configure the system The default page after entering the BIOS setup is Main Standard CMOS setup Standard CMOS Features Use this menu for basic system configuration Date time IDE etc Advanced Features Setup Advanced BIOS Features Advanced Chipset Features Integrated Peripherals Power Management Setup PnP PCI Configurations Use this menu to set the advanced features available on your system Use this menu to change the values of the chipset registers and optimize your system performance Use this menu to specify your settings for integrated peripherals USB Serial port Parallel port keyboard mouse etc Use this menu to specify your settings for power management HDD power down power on by events KB wake up etc This entry appears if your system supports PnP PCI Misc PC Health Status Frequency Voltage Control Monitor your voltages fan speed and temperatures Use this menu to specify your settings for auto detect DI MJ 1 PCI clock and spread spectrum Default Load Opt
59. o understand and use your RAID Enabled PC The Installation and User s Guide covers e Installation of the Adaptec controller e Using the BIOS array Configuration Utility e Installation of the device driver e Using the ATA RAID management software There is also a troubleshooting section to assist you with any questions that may arise You may also contact Pro face Technical Support at support profaceamerica com or 734 944 0482 for assistance 66 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 INDEX A A AN 17 Audio CD MIC 8 LINE IN ooooonccnncccconccconncconccnanccnancinn 31 BIOS setup Mens iii 56 CD ROM drivers 2 vivax beca 61 COM1 amp COM2 POldecocccncccinocinancconaccnancnnancncnncncnncnnns 26 Connectors ACTA ek bet tl et a ated 26 AUTO saan inthe aon HA en 31 Fe OP DY vaivenes 25 AD DE t coooodo ct a le ec 28 HDD icons 29 Internal PS 2 KDOoooooccccccccccccccconcconnncnancncnncnnnnoss 31 LAN1 amp LAN2 cen aeee 30 parallel port LPT1 oenen 26 PS 2 Kbd MOUSE oroa a aael 31 Serial ports Internal cccscceeessereeeeees 26 27 USB Divisa tae ett been mee era 29 diagnostic testing eee eeeeeeeeeseeeeeeeneeeeeeeeeerenaeees 56 documentation Kit oooocccononococinoncncnnnoncnonancnonnnancnnnnns 7 DRAM installation ooooncccnnoniconnnoncnnnoncncnnnarnnnnnnno 18 drivers CDAROM cicuoo cinco crests este eects gitar ee 61 installation cid 60 miscellaneous oooccccnoncccnononcnon
60. oices Enabled and Disabled Memory Hole At 15M 16M Enable this function to allow ISA ROM to map to 15 16M and support legacy ISA devices If you don t utilize legacy ISA devices in your system you are recommended to disable this function to enhance graphic performance The choices Enabled and Disabled AGP Aperture Size MB Aperture size will ensure that all writes posted in the global write buffer to the graphics aperture are retired to DRAM before initiating any CPU PCI cycle This can be used to ensure synchronization between the CPU and AGP master The choices 4 8 16 32 64 128 and 256 On Chip VGA Setting On Chip Frame Buffer Size This function is used to select the amount of main memory that is pre allocated to support the internal graphics device The choices 1MB and 8MB These fields are only editable when the DRAM timing selectable is set to manual If the DRAM timing selectable is not set to manual the fields automatically change based on RAM type 38 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Integrated Peripherals By choosing the Integrated Peripherals option from the Advanced menu the following screen is displayed Table 3 18 describes the Integrated Peripherals menu fields Phoenix Award BIOS CMOS Setup Utility Integrated Peripherals gt OnChip Ide Device Press Enter Item Help gt Onboard Device Pre
61. olation or constant voltage transformers local power disconnects and surge suppressers away from the 1600 The proper location of incoming line devices keeps power wire runs as short as possible and minimizes electrical noise transmitted to the 1600 The power cord outlet must be installed near the equipment and should be easily accessible Avoid overloading the supply circuit Incorporate a readily accessible disconnect device in the fixed wiring for permanently connected systems Make sure the location does not exceed the 1600 s shock vibration and temperature specifications 9 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 2 Installation Mounting Dimensions Figures Figure 2 1 Figure 2 2 and Figure 2 3 show the unit box dimensions for the 1600 series Figures Figure 2 4 through Figure 2 9 show unique unit dimensions for the 1612 1613 and 1614 Optional slide rails and wall or shelf mounting kits are available All of the following dimensions are in inches mm 1600 Front and Rear Dimensions NOTE All dimensions are in inches mm pooo woni iii IA A N ee CNN WO li 18 31 465 1 Figure 2 1 Front Dimensions with Door Closed 19 0 482 6 Figure 2 2 Front View Dimensions Po 16 86 428 24 6 80 172 7 Figure 2 3 Rear View Dimensions 10 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 2 Installation 1612 Dimensions NOTE All dimensions are in inches mm
62. ower Management Setup Menu Note 43 The Setup parameters shown in italics above after the down arrow position are actually only seen when scrolled down to for this CMOS setup 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Table 3 19 Power Management Setup Menu Options Menu Field Description ACPI Function This item allows you to Enable or Disable the Advanced Configuration and Power Interface ACPI The choices Enable and Disable ACPI Suspend Type This configuration sets the way your system responds to the suspend mode SI POS Power on Suspend S3 STR Suspend to RAM The choices SI POS S3 STR and SI amp S3 Run VGA BIOS if S3 Resume This feature assigns the OS to either Enable Disable or Auto run the VGA BIOS after resuming from S3 mode The choices Yes No and Auto Power Management Select Max Saving mode or Min Saving mode or define desired Doze Mode Standby Mode Suspend Mode HDD Power Down functions by using the User Defined submenu Select the type or degree of power saving you desire by choosing on of the following modes Disable default No power Management disable all four modes Min Power Saving Minimum power management suspend session after 1 hr HDD power down after 15 min Max Power Savings The Maximum power management option is only available for SL CPUs suspend after 1 to 2 minutes HDD shutdown after 1 minute
63. panel These front accessible bays can hold up to two 3 5 storage devices including 1 44 MB floppy and internal hard drives These bays hold up to three 5 25 mass storage devices including CD ROM CD Writable Zip and removable hard drives Note The unit holds a maximum of four IDE devices If a removable drive is installed in the system it must be locked in order to operate The display above the lock shows an O when locked and a U when unlocked The display also flashes when the removable hard drive is active 4 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Back View Chapter 1 Introduction COM1 Serial Connector RS 232 Lal Power Connector it q 9 100000000 oo qe Ht Video Connector E e Ethernet Ports o o o o Parallel Port PS 2 Keyboard and Power Supply i Mouse Connector Receptacle COM2 Serial Connector RS 232 485 422 Figure 1 3 Back View of Unit Table 1 3 Features on the Back of the Unit Feature Description Power Connector For AC power units the standard power cord must be securely positioned before turning power ON The 1600 s autoranging AC power supply requires no switch adjustment Parallel Port A printer usually interfaces with the system through t
64. r to prevent unwanted system resets Example program INITIAL TIMER PERIOD COUNTER W_LOOP MOV AX 6f02H setting the time out value MOV BL 30 time out value is 48 units assuming CMOS set for 1 sec unit this equates to 48 seconds INT 15H ADD YOUR APPLICATION PROGRAM HERE CMP EXIT_AP 1 Is your application done JNE W_LOOP No restart you application MOV AX 6f02H Disable Watchdog Timer MOV BL 0 time out value is O units value of O disabled INT 15H EXIT 64 143158 E Appendix C The RAID Enabled IPC Option The component most susceptible to shock and vibration in any Industrial PC is the hard drive Some sources suggest shock mounting the hard drive unfortunately shock mounting may cause the hard drive to become more vibration sensitive at certain frequencies The most common methods to overcome a susceptibility to vibration are through the use of either solid state storage media or redundant hard drives Many of Pro face Xycom s Heavy Duty Industrial PCs offer solid state media in the form of CompactFlash or solid state hard drives While many storage sizes are available the cost of solid state drives escalates considerably as the required drive size increases A second approach is to use RAID RAID stands for Redundant Array of Independent Disks In essence RAID is two or more hard drives hooked up to the same controller either SCSI or IDE The RAID controller can stripe or mirror d
65. rature in range the cooling air at the base of the system must not exceed 50 C Allocate proper spacing between internal components installed in the enclosure When the air temperature is higher than 50 C in the enclosure use a fan or air conditioner 16 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 2 Installation Electrical Noise Electrical noise is seldom responsible for damaging components unless extremely high energy or high voltage levels are present However noise can cause temporary malfunctions that can result in hazardous machine operation in certain applications Noise may be present only at certain times may appear at widely spread intervals or in some cases may exist continuously Noise commonly enters through input output and power supply lines and may also be coupled through the capacitance between these lines and noise signal carrier lines This usually results from the presence of high voltage or long close spaced conductors When control lines are closely spaced with lines carrying large currents the coupling of magnetic fields can also occur Use shielded cables to help minimize noise Potential noise generators include switching components relays solenoids motors and motor starters Refer to the relevant Federal State Provincial and local electric codes that provide data such as the size and types of conductors color codes and connections necessary for safe grounding of electrical components It is re
66. ring facility at Pro face is ISO certified and is accredited by ANSI RAB and the RVA See pages 11 13 for detailed dimensions 62 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Appendix A Technical Specifications Environmental Specifications Table A 2 lists the environmental specifications for the 1600 series Industrial PC Table A 2 1600 Environmental Specifications Characteristic Specification Temperature Operating 0 to 50 C 32 to 122 F Nonoperating 20 to 60 C 4 to 158 F Humidity Operating 20 to 80 RH non condensing Non operating 5 to 90 RH non condensing Altitude Operating Sea level to 15 000 feet Non operating Sea level to 50 000 feet Vibration Operating 5 2000 Hz 0 006 peak to peak displacement 5g maximum acceleration Non operating 5 2000 Hz 0 081 peak to peak displacement packaged 2 g maximum acceleration Shock Operating 2g peak acceleration 11 msec duration 1 2 sine wave Non operating 7 5g peak acceleration 11 msec duration Ye sine wave packaged These values are consistent with internal component specifications These values are with solid state hard drives and not rotating media drives Note CD ROM and standard hard disk drives should not be used in applications where high levels of shock and vibration are present If a CD ROM drive is installed the shock and vibration specifications of the 1600 are limited to the
67. s chapter offers detailed installation instructions and outlines the options for the 1600 series It also includes the guidelines for preparing your 1600 unit for installation and use Installation Overview Here are some factors to take into account before mounting your 1600 unit inside an enclosure Select an enclosure and place the unit in a position that allows easy access to the 1600 ports Account for the unit s depth when choosing the depth of the enclosure The unit must be mounted in an approved fire and electrical enclosure See the section Mounting Dimensions for the dimensions and mounting instructions Consider locations of accessories such as AC power outlets for installation and maintenance convenience Prevent condensation by installing a thermostat controlled heater or air conditioner To allow for maximum cooling avoid obstructing the airflow Place any fans or blowers close to the heat generating devices If using a fan ensure that outside air is not brought inside the enclosure unless a fabric or other reliable filter is used This filtration prevents conductive particles or other harmful contaminants from entering the enclosure Do not select a location near equipment that generates excessive electromagnetic interference EMI or radio frequency interface RFI equipment such as high power welding machines induction heating equipment and large motor starters Place incoming power line devices such as is
68. ss Enter gt SuperlO Device Press Enter Menu Level tl lt Move Enter Select PU PD Value F10 Save ESC Exit F1 General Help F5 Previous Values F7 Optimized Defaults F9 Menu Phoenix Award BIOS CMOS Setup Utility OnChip IDE Device IDE HDD Block Mode Enabled Item Help On Chip Primary PCI IDE Enabled IDE Primary Master PIO Auto IDE Primary Slave PIO Auto IDE Primary Master UDMA Auto Menu Level gt gt IDE Primary Slave UDMA Auto On Chip Secondary PCI IDE Enabled pibe feeds IDE Secondary Master PIO Auto select Enabled for IDE Secondary Slave PIO Auto automatic detection of IDE Secondary Master UDMA Auto the optimal number of IDE Secondary Slave UDMA Auto block read writes per On Chip Serial ATA Setting sector the drive can SATA Mode Disabled support On Chip Serial ATA Auto Serial ATA PortO Mode SATAO Master Serial ATA Porti Mode SATA1 Master tl lt Move Enter Select PU PD Value F10 Save ESC Exit F1 General Help F5 Previous Values F7 Optimized Defaults F9 Menu Integrated Peripherals screens are continued on the next page 39 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Phoenix Award BIOS CMOS Setup Utility OnBoard Device USB Controller USB 2 0 Controller AC97 Audio CSA LAN Giga LAN USB Keyboard Support 182562ET LAN10 100M Enabled Enabled Auto Au
69. st build up could cause the unit to malfunction e Base your maintenance schedule on the operating environment of the system If the area is dusty you should schedule maintenance more often than if it is a dry clean area Check the filter often to determine if it needs to be changed ahead of schedule e Remove dust and dirt from PC components If dust builds up on heat sinks and circuitry an obstruction of heat dissipation could cause the unit to malfunction If dust reaches the electronic boards a short circuit could occur e Check the connections to I O modules especially in environments where shock could loosen the connections Check to see that all plugs sockets terminal strips and module connections are secure e Remove unnecessary articles such as drawings or manuals from the unit They can obstruct airflow and create hot spots which causes the system to malfunction e Do not place noise generating equipment near the 1600 e Stock spare parts to minimize down time resulting from part failure The spare parts stocked should be 10 percent of the number of each unit used The main CPU cards should have one spare each Each power supply should have a back up In certain applications where immediate operation of a failed system is required you may need to stock a spare computer module e Replace the module with the correct type If the new module solves the problem but the failure recurs check for inductive loads that may be
70. t B Video RAM Test L Speaker Port Test Extended RAM Test M LPT1 Printer Port Test D Real Time Clock Test N LPT2 Printer Port Test E COM1 Serial Port Test O C Hard Drive Interface Test F COM2 Serial Port Test P D Hard Drive Interface Test G COM3 Serial Port Test Q A Floppy Drive Interface Test H COM4 Serial Port Test R B Floppy Drive Interface Test I Math Coprocessor Test S eyboard eypad Tests J Video Adjustments Test Test Selected ENTER START TESTING Use the letters to move the cursor and select deselect or use the arrow keys to move then use the SPACE key to select deselect a test or function Figure 5 2 Main Menu Note Please read the DIAG TXT file on the diagnostics disk for detailed information about the tests Caution Avoid repeated running of any hard disk diagnostic utility if you use the Solid State Flash drive option The Flash drive has a limited number of writes to each logical sector Repeated writes from a diagnostic utility will prematurely shorten the life of the drive 58 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 5 Troubleshooting Reinstalling Operating Systems The 1600 series CPU ships with either Windows NT Windows 2000 or Windows XP Professional operating system preinstalled If you need to reinstall an operating system refer to the appropriate section below If you want to change operating systems you will need to use the manufacturer s instruc
71. t View with Door Open 3 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Feature Power ON OFF Switch Reset Switch PS Reset Switch Diagnostic LEDs PS 2 Mouse Connector PS 2 Keyboard Connector 3 5 Drive Bays 5 25 Drive Bays Removable Drive Lock Chapter 1 Introduction Table 1 2 Features on the Front of the Unit Description This switch should be positioned to OFF O until the system is properly configured and connected to an appropriate power source This switch restarts the computer The power supply PS reset switch resets the power supply alarm when triggered by a power supply interruption This switch is present only on units with dual redundant 300 watt AC power supply Power Lit when there is power to the 1600 HDD1 Lit when the hard drive is being accessed The following LEDs apply only to units with dual redundant power supplies PS Alarm Flashes when a power supply malfunctions PS1 Lit when first power supply is functioning properly PS2 Lit when second power supply is functioning properly A mouse can interface with the system via this 6 pin PS 2 compatible connector Caution Do not connect a mouse to this front connector if a mouse is plugged into the mouse connector on the rear panel A keyboard can interface with the system via this 6 pin PS 2 compatible connector Caution Do not connect a keyboard to this front connector if a keyboard is plugged into the keyboard connector on the rear
72. tem reconfiguration The choices Enabled and Disabled Resources Controlled By The Award Plug and Play BIOS has the capacity to automatically configure all the boot and Plug and Play devices If you choose Auto you cannot select IRQ DMA and memory base address fields since BIOS automatically assigns them The choices Auto ESCD and Manual IRQ Resources Legacy ISA PCI ISA PnP When resources are controlled manually assign each system interrupt a type depending on the type of device using the interrupt There are two types to choose from legacy ISA and PCI ISA PnP Devices compliant with the original PC AT bus specification requiring a specific interrupt such as IRQ4 for serial port 1 Devices compliant with the Plug and Play standard whether designed for PCI or ISA bus architecture DMA Resources Legacy ISA PCI ISA PnP When resources are controlled manually assign each DMA channel a type depending on the type of device using the DMA channel There are two types for choice Legacy ISA and PCI ISA PnP Devices compliant with the original PC AT bus specification requiring a specific DMA channel Devices compliant with the Plug and Play standard whether designed for PCI or ISA bus architecture PCI VGA Palette Snoop Enabling this item informs the PCI VGA card to keep silent and to prevent conflict when palette register is updated i e accepts data without responding any communication
73. the program Table 3 22 describes these options Table 3 22 Exit Setup Menu Options Menu Field Description Save amp Exit Setup If you select this option and press lt Enter gt from the top menu the values you entered in the setup utilities will be recorded in the chipset s CMOS memory The microprocessor will check this every time you turn your system on and compare this to what it finds as it checks the system This record is required for the system to operate Exit without saving Selecting this option and pressing lt Enter gt lets you exit the Setup program without recording any new values or changing old ones 49 143158 E Chapter 4 Maintenance The 1600 is designed to withstand the harsh environment of the factory floor Routine maintenance can help keep your 1600 in good operating condition Preventive maintenance consists of several basic procedures that significantly reduce the chance of system malfunction Schedule preventive maintenance along with the regular equipment maintenance to minimize down time General Preventive Maintenance Here are some preventive measures you can take e Clean the fan filter periodically to ensure that the air circulating in the unit is clean Wash the filter with warm water and dish soap and let it air dry Do not scrub the filter and do not re install it into the unit until it is completely dry Caution Do not operate the 1600 without a fan filter Du
74. the appropriate setting for your system The choices SPP EPP ECP and ECP EP ECP Mode Use DMA Select a DMA channel for the port The choices 1 and 3 42 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Power Management Setup By choosing the Power Management Setup option from the main menu the following screen is displayed This sample screen contains the default values for the ROCKY 4786EVG Table 3 19 describes the menu fields Phoenix Award BIOS CMOS Setup Utility Power Management Setup Power Supply Type ACPI Function ACPI Suspend Type X Run VGABIOS if S3 Resume Power Management Video Off Method Video Off in Suspend Suspend Type MODEM Use IRQ Suspend Mode HDD Power Down Soft Off by PWR BTTN Wake Up by PCI Card X USB KB Wake Up From S3 Resume by Alarm X Date of Month Alarm X Time hh mm dd Alarm Primary IDEO Secondary IDEO Primary IDEO Secondary IDEO FDD COM LPT PORT PCI PRIQ A D AT Enabled Enabled Auto User Define DPNS Yes Stop Grant 3 Disabled Disabled Instant Off Enabled Disabled Disabled 0 0 0 0 Disabled Disabled Disabled Disabled Disabled Disabled Item Help Menu Level gt tl lt Move Enter Select PU PD Value F10 Save ESC Exit F1 General Help F5 Previous Values F7 Optimized Defaults F9 Menu screen Figure 3 6 P
75. tion manual Note If you need to reinstall the Windows NT Windows 2000 or Windows XP Professional operating system you must have an internal CD ROM drive or an external parallel port CD ROM drive Windows 2000 Reinstallation If you need to reinstall the Windows 2000 operating system refer to the Pro face Xycom Workstation Recovery Media Software Installation Instructions for Microsoft Windows 2000 shipped with systems preinstalled with Windows 2000 This document is devoted to the reinstallation of your Windows 2000 operating system and drivers utilizing the Recovery Media provided with your Pro face Xycom industrial computer If you want to install a new operating system or reinstall a current operating system refer to the operating system s manual for directions Note This procedure assumes that the computer hard disk drive has been completely corrupted or replaced Warning This procedure will destroy data that may exist on the hard disk drive Windows NT Reinstallation If you need to reinstall the Windows NT operating system refer to the Pro face Xycom Workstation Recovery Media Software Installation Instructions for Microsoft Windows NT Workstation 4 0n shipped with systems preinstalled with Windows NT This document is devoted to the reinstallation of your Windows NT Workstation 4 0 operating system and drivers utilizing the Recovery Media provided with your Pro face Xycom industrial computer
76. to Enabled Enabled Item Help Menu Level F5 Previous Values F7 Optimized Defaults 1 gt Move Enter Select PU PD Value F10 Save ESC Exit F1 General Help F9 Menu Phoenix Award BIOS CMOS Setup Utility SuperlO Device Onboard FDC Controller Onboard Serial Port 1 Onboard Serial Port 2 x UART Mode Select x RxD TxD Active x IR Transmission Delay x UR2 Duplex Mode Use IR Pins Onboard Parallel Port Parallel Port Mode x EPP Mode Select x ECP Mode Use DMA PWRON After PWR Fail Enabled 3F8 IRQ4 2F8 IRQ3 Normal Hi Lo Enabled Half IR Rx2Tx2 378 IRQ7 SPP EPP1 7 3 Off Item Help Menu Level gt gt tl lt Move Enter Select PU PD Value F10 Save ESC Exit F1 General Help F5 Previous Values F7 Optimized Defaults F9 Menu Figure 3 5 Integrated Peripherals Menu and Sub Menus 40 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Table 3 18 Integrated Peripherals Menu Options Menu Field Description IDE DMA transfer access This function is used to Enable or Disable IDE DMA transfer in DOS mode The choices Enabled and Disabled On Chip Primary Secondary PCI IDE The integrated peripheral controller contains an IDE interface with support for two IDE channels Select Enabled to activate each channel separately The choices Disabled a
77. troubleshooting tables to help diagnose and correct problems Table 5 1 offers actions for problems that occur without an error message Table 5 2 offers actions for error messages that occur during the POST Each chart provides one or more probable causes and a corresponding course of action The tables are only guidelines and do not replace proper diagnostic procedures Pro face recommends you verify that the actions taken to correct a problem are appropriate Pro face also recommends that you attempt to determine the failure s root cause For example if the line fuse has blown establishing the reason for the excess current that caused the fuse to blow will help to prevent it from happening again 53 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 General Operational Problems Chapter 5 Troubleshooting Use Table 5 1 when there is a problem but no error messages occur during power up or normal operation Table 5 1 Troubleshooting General Problem Problem Blank screen on attached monitor Screen color or picture is distorted Printer functions not working Floppy disk drive not working Hard disk drive not working Possible Cause Power disconnected Action Check power supply voltage and connection integrity Video cable disconnected Check video cable and connection integrity Line fuse blown Determine cause and replace fuse Faulty RAM Video drivers were not loaded Printer is not on
78. u Figure 3 9 Frequency Voltage Control 48 143158 E 1600 Series with Pentium 4 Chapter 3 ROCKY 4786EVG P4 Board amp BIOS Setup Table 3 21 Frequency Voltage Control Menu Field Description Auto Detect DIMM PCI CLK This item allows you to enable disable auto detect DIMM PCI clock The choices Enabled and Disabled Spread Spectrum When the system clock generator pulses the extreme values of the pulse generate excessive EMI Enabling pulse spectrum spread modulation changes the extreme pulse spikes to flat curves thus reducing EMI This benefit may in some cases be outweighed by problems with timing critical devices such as a clock sensitive SCSI device The choices 0 25 0 50 and Disabled Load Optimized Defaults Select Defaults from the top menu to access the Load Optimized Defaults settings When you select this item you get a confirmation dialog box with a message similar to Load Optimized Defaults Y N Pressing Y loads the default values that are factory settings for optimal performance system operations Security Setup You can set the password to restrict unauthorized access to enter or change the options of the setup menus To abort the process at any time press Esc NOTE To clear the password simply press Enter when asked to enter a password This disables the password function Exit Setup Choosing Exit from the top menu provides access to two options to exit
79. ve type are available 1 NONE No drive type to be selected 2 Manual This will allow you to manually set the drive type you are using in your system See below Select the correct specifications for the diskette drive s installed in the computer None No diskette drive installed 360K 5 25 in 5 1 4 inch PC type standarddrive 360Kbyte capacity 1 2M 5 25 in 5 1 4 inch AT type high density drive 720Kbyte capacity 720K 3 5 in 3 1 2 inch double sided drive 360Kbyte capacity 1 44M 3 5 in 3 1 2 inch double sided drive 1 44Mbyte capacity 2 88 3 5 in 3 1 2 inch double sided drive 2 88Mbyte capacity Video This function setting allows you to select the video type The choices are EGA VGA CGA 40 CGA 80 and MONO Halt On During the Power On Self Test POST the computer will stop if the BIOS detects a hardware error You can tell the BIOS to ignore certain errors during POST and continue the boot up process The choices are All But Keyboard All But Diskette All But Disk Key All Errors No Errors Base Memory Typically 640 KB Also called conventional memory The DOS operating system and conventional applications use this area Extended Memory Above the 1 MB boundary Early IBM personal computers could not use memory above 1 MB but current PCs and their software can use extended memory Total Memory The fields show the total installed random access memory RAM 34 143158 E

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