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Acer 3600GT/3600V User's Manual
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1. CPUFAN1 CPU D LED1 00 por DIMMs O i Back Panel I O i E f I ALRI GE e FDD1 JPW1 O JM i J BES oie IDE1 amp IDE2 JUSB MS el bale JLAN LED1 ele BE AGP Slot gt 0 SATA1 SATA2 LAN1 s i __ mp e SYSFAN1 ISPK JBAT1 PCI Slots La n C e JFP1 A e 33 JAUD1 X N WC USB Ports JBIOS1 JUSB2 amp JSUB3 JGP3 JRECOVER JCI1 JGP2 JGP1 LAN L In Parallel Optional m I md IN K 850 Lad Keyboard Chapter 5 COM A for Springdale G VGA Port USB Ports L Out Mic In or COM B for Springdale PE 104 Jumper and Connector Description ATX 12V Power Connector Chass
2. TS 290900 booo b 000000 000 I 000000 booo 000000 000 000000 pooo 900000 e000 000000 R000 000000 000 000000 000 OANOQO 000 000000 0000 Top Parallel Port 0000200990090009 000000 00000000000000000000 0000 CA Bottom COMA VGA port gt Lo T 1 gt me T J Top LAN jack Bottom USB ports JUSB MS 2 T Line In pen LEDI M Line Out C B Mic AGP Slot Broadcom BCM5705 10000000000000000000000000000000 10000000000000000 I0000000000000000000000000000000 10000000000000000 o JLAN1 PCI Slot 1 E0CT00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 JSPK 1 N00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000010 GE PCI Slot 2 CD1 EICTNIOONONOOTTNTNNONINNINNNNOTTTNIINNTOFOIOOTOTTNN DTTTTTODO0N000ONN DON DOUDOODDOIDOUDIOOI LI NNN ON N 000 Codec PCI Slot 3 I1000000000 U0 QUU0DO0 D O 110000 100000 I 1000000000 10 10001010 1 1 100001 100000 JAUD1 o o al a a G o o O AG
3. a a N N CHILE t ar i WU N p i Light blue Audio in Line in jack 9 Lime Audio out Line out jack K Pink Microphone in jack rear a Chapter 1 CRT LCD monitor port Burgundy Parallel printer port Teal or Turquoise Serial port USB ports PS 2 keyboard port PS 2 mouse port Power cord socket NOTE The system has two microphone in ports front and rear However you can not use both of them at the same time The default setting for your system enables the microphone in port in front and disables the one at the back NOTE The CRT monitor port is automatically disabled when an add on AGP VGA card is installed into the system for Intel 865G chipset Connect the monitor to the VGA port instead Chapter 1 Front Panel for Veriton 5600GT 5600V The computer s front panel consists of the following Chapter 1 mr Floppy drive eject button Floppy drive LED One button recovery slot Headphone out port Microphone in port front USB ports Power button Power LED mn 2 a ert O EG LAN activity LED Hard disk drive activity LED m J Optical drive StoplEer Aution NOTE The system has two microphone in port
4. The following are typical values 16KB Best for sequential transfers 64KB Good general purpose strip size 128KB Best performance for most desktops and workstations Select the strip value for the RAID 0 1 array by scrolling through the available values by using the Or keys and pressing the enter key to select and advance to the next field The available values range from 4KB to 128 KB in power of 2 increments The strip value should be chosen based on the planned drive usage Here are some suggested selections 16 KB Best for sequential transfers 64 KB Good general purpose strip size 128 KB Best performance for most desktops and workstations The default value Chapter 2 Chapter 2 NOTE RAID 1 can not select Strip Size CREATE ARRAY MENU Strip Size N A HAID Level HAIDL Mirror Capacity 111 768 Create Volume Enter a string between 1 and 16 characters in length that can be used to uniquely identify the RAID volume This nama is case sensitive and Can mot contain special characters From the Strip size press the SJ or enter key to advance to the Create Volume prompt The window will appear as follows CREATE ARRAY MENU Name RAID Volumel Strip Size 128KB RAID Level RAIDO Striping Capacity 223 5GB Press ENTER to Create the specified volume Then Press enter to create the specified volume and the following prompt will show 58 59
5. 50 VO2VF 701 50 VO2VF 501 50 V02VF 502 50 V02VF 503 50 V02VF 504 50 V02VF 505 50 V02VF 506 50 V02VF 507 50 V02VF 508 50 V02VF 701 50 V02VF 702 50 V02VF 703 50 V02VF 704 50 V02VF 705 50 V02VF 706 50 V02VF 707 50 V02VF 708 50 V02VF 709 50 V02VF 710 Boards MB J89MR 865G ICH5R for VT7600GTR MB J89MG 865G ICH5 kit for VT76 56 3600GT MB J89MV 865GV ICH5 kit for VT76 56 3600V MB V0205 001 MB V0305 001 MB V0405 001 Chapter 6 For VT3600 DAUGHTER BOARD 4USB 2AUDIO POWER BUTTON BOARD For VT5600 DAUGHTER BOARD 4USB 2AUDIO POWER BUTTON BOARD For VT7600 DAUGHTER BOARD MODULE DAUGHTER BOARD 4USB 2AUDIO POWER BUTTON BOARD EXTENSION DAUGHTER BOARD 55 VO2VF 301 55 V02VF 302 55 V02VF 702 55 V02VF 302 55 V02VF 701 55 V02VF 702 55 V02VF 302 55 V02VF 703 114 115 Add on Card Pointing Device Keyboard VGA CARD RADEON 9200 64MB DDR LP W TV OUT NTSC LP BRACKET FIG Tl 4200 8X VGA CARD RADEON 9200 64MB DDR LP W TV OUT PAL LP VGA9207 004 BRACKET FIG TI 4200 8X VGA CARD FX 5200 64MB W TW OUT PAL LP BRACKET LEADTEK LR2967 VGA CARD FX5200 64MB W TW OUT NTSC LP BRACKET LEADTEK LR2967 VGA CARD XABRE200 AGP 8X 32M LP BRACKET MODEM CARD 56K ASKEY 1456 VOH76D INT MODEM CARD F 1156l R12 EU LOW PROFILE GVC CORDED MOUSE USB OPTICAL GENIUS POWERSCROLL EYE SILVER CORDED MOUSE PS2 2 BUTTON WHEEL GENIUS POWERSCROLL BLACK VG A9207 003 VG 29604 005 VG 29604 006
6. CREATE ARRAY MENU Name RAID Volumel Strip Size 128KB RAID Level RAIDO Striping Capacity 223 5GB Press ENTER to Create the specified volume Press lt Y gt to confirm the selection or press lt N gt to create the RAID volume again Then you will return to the main menu with an updated status as follows Delete RAID Volume Reset Disks to Non RAID RAID Volumes ID Name Level Strip Size Status Bootable 0 RAID Volumel RAIDO Stripe 128KB 223 5GB Yes Non RAID Disks None defined Scroll to option 4 Exit and press enter to exit the RAID Configuration utility The following prompt appears Chapter 2 Delete RAID Volume Reset Disks to Non RAID Exit RAID Volumes ID Name Level Strip Size 0 RAID Volumel RAIDO Stripe 128KB 223 5GB Non RAID Disks None defined Click lt Y gt to confirm the exit 2 Delete RAID Volume Chapter 2 Here you can delete the RAID volume but please be noted that all data on RAID drives will be lost NOTE If your system currently boots to RAID and you delete the RAID volume in the Intel RAID Option ROM your system will become unbootable Select option 2 Delete RAID Volume from the main menu window and press enter key to select a RAID volume for deletion The following window will appear DELETE ARRAY MENU Drives Capacity Status Bootable Deleting a volume will destroy the volume dat
7. Load default settings in setup Check all main board jumper positions and switch settings Check all adapter card jumper positions Check all device jumper positions Check all cables and connectors for proper installation If the jumpers switches and voltage settings are correct remove or disconnect the following one at a time 10 Non Acer devices m m m m m m m m External devices Any adapter card modem card LAN card or video card if installed CD DVD ROM drive Diskette drive Hard disk drive DIMM Processor Main board 11 Power on the system unit 12 Repeat steps 2 through 5 until you find the failing device or adapter Chapter 4 Jumper and Connector Information Jumpers and Connectors Refer to the following figure for the location of the jumpers and connectors on the main board
8. OT O I 2 Initialize Init Onboard AUDIO switch Reserved m F OT OT Ti 3 Reserved O O 3 Okay to enter Setup utility i e not until this POST stage can users enter the CMOS setup utility Chapter 4 94 95 O N a gt Prepare memory size information for function call INT 15h ax E820h Reserved 00 gt Turn on L2 cache gt Reserved ep Bh Program chipset registers according to items described in Setup amp Auto configuration table eo js A en fma 1 en jsne 1 Reserved O l I ep Dh 1 Assign resources to all ISA PnP devices 2 Auto assign ports to onboard COM ports if the corresponding item in Setup is set to AUTO Reserved E Fh 1 Initialize floppy controller 2 Set up floppy related fields in 40 hardware O gt N O a gt ep Reserved Reserved N ST N NO 3 Reserved N 3h Optional Feature Enter AWDFLASH EXE if AWDFLASH is found in floppy drive ALT F2 is pressed Ah Reserved vy 7 Detect amp install all IDE devices HDD LS120 ZIP CDROM 5h N o e Fh 1 Switch back to text mode if full screen logo is supported If errors occur report errors amp wait for keys N N If no errors occur or F1 key is pressed to continue Clear EPA or customization logo Reserved Reserved 1 Call chipset power management hook 2 Recover the text fond used by EPA logo
9. Description Options _ Lets you set the date following the weekday month day year format Lets you set the time following the hour minute second format Lets you configure the hard disk drive connected to the master port of IDE channel 0 To enter the IDE Channel 0 Master setup press enter The IDE CD ROM is always automatically detected Lets you configure the hard disk drive connected to the slave port of IDE channel 0 To enter the IDE Channel 0 Slave setup press enter The IDE CD ROM is always automatically detected Lets you configure the hard disk drive connected to the master port of IDE channel 1 To enter the IDE Channel 1 Master setup press enter The IDE CD ROM is always automatically detected Weekday Sun Mon Sat Month Jan Feb Dec Day 1 to 31 Year 1980 to 2079 Hour 0 to 23 Minute 0 to 59 Second 0 to 59 Show the Status None HDD or CD ROM Number Show the Status None HDD or CD ROM Number Show the Status None HDD or CD ROM Number Chapter 2 IDE Channel 1 Slave Lets you configure the hard disk drive connected to the Show the Status slave port of IDE channel 1 None To enter the IDE Channel 1 Slave setup press enter HDD or CD ROM Number The IDE CD ROM is always automatically detected Drive A Allows you to configure your floppy drive A 1 44 MB 3 5 inch None 360 KB 5 25 inch 1 2 MB 5 25 inch 720 KB 3 5 inch 2 88 MB 3 5 inch Drive B All
10. DS I I Nr Ll N Chapter 1 12 Jose so joss C jee KANIN Jrememese ON MO Kasa Power button Power LED 11 LAN activity LED Ip Hard disk drive activity LED NOTE The system has two microphone in ports front and rear However you can not use both of them at the same time The default setting for your system enables the microphone in port in front and disables the one at the back Chapter 1 Rear Panel for Veriton 7600GTR 7600GT 7600V Veg a NN e N A W I VP l n DOMNI T T o Light blue Audio in Line in jack 9 Lime Audio out Line out jack k Chapter 1 13 14 Microphone in jack rear N N CRT LCD monitor port Burgundy Parallel printer port Teal or Turguoise Serial port USB ports PS 2 keyboard port N Power cord socket NNN Power cord socket 1 120933992 NOTE The system has two microphone in ports front and rear However you can not use both of them at the same time The default setting for your system enables the microphone in port in front and disables the one at the back NOTE The CRT monitor port is au
11. Enabled commands or multiple sector read write If your Disabled IDE hard drive supports block mode most new drives do select Enabled for automatic detection of the optimal number of block read write per sector the drive can support IDE DMA Transfer Access This item allows you to enabled the transfer Enabled access of the IDE DMA Disabled On Chip Primary PCI IDE The integrated peripherals controller contains an Enabled On Chip Secondary PCI IDE IDE interface with support for two IDE channels Disabled Choose Enabled to activate each channel separately IDE Primary Master PIO The four IDE PIO Programmed Input Output Auto mode 1 mode 2 mode 3 IDE Primary Slave PIO fields let you set a PIO mode 0 4 for each of the and mode 4 IDE Secondary Master PIO four IDE devices that the onboard IDE interface supports Modes 0 through 4 provide IDE Secondary Slave PIO successively increased performance For example mode 0 data transfer rate is 3 3MB s mode 1 is 5 2 MB s mode 2 is 8 3MB s mode 3 is 11 1 MB s and mode 4 is 16 6MB s In Auto mode the system automatically determines the best mode for each device Chapter 2 IDE Primary Master UltraDMA Ultra DMA 33 implementation is possible only if IDE Primary Salve UltraDMA your IDE hard drive supports it and the operating Disables IDE Secondary Master UltraDMA environment includes a DMA driver If your hard drive and your system software both support ESSI SIANG STA
12. Host cycles that hit the aperture range are forwarded to the AGP without any translation Init Display First This item specifies which VGA card is your primary PCI Slot graphics adapter Onboard AGP On Chip VGA This setting determines whether the system RAM Enabled can be allocated to on chip video controller for Disabled video purposes When setting to Enabled up to 128MB system RAM will be allocated to on chip video controller On Chip Frame Buffer Size Frame Buffer is the video memory that stores data 1M 8M 16M for video display frame This field is used to determine the memory size for Frame Buffer Larger frame buffer size increases video performance Boot Display Use this field to select the type of device you want Auto CRT TV EFP to use as the display s of the system Chapter 2 37 Integrated Peripherals Phoenix AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility Integrated Peripherals OnChip IDE Device Press Enter Item Help Onboard Device Press Enter Super IO Device Press Enter Henu Level ai Tle Move Enter Select PU PD Value Fl Save ESC Exit Fl General Help Fo Previous Values F Optimized Defaults The following table describes each Integrated Peripherals parameter Settings in boldface are the default and suggested settings OnChip IDE Device Press Enter to enter the sub menu and the following screen appears IDE HDD Block Mode Block mode is also called block transfer multiple
13. Report No FDD For WIN 95 Ho Full Screen LOGO Show Enabled Enter Select 7 PU PD Yalue Fo Previous Values Tl Hove Pre ESC Ex1t Fl General Help Optimized Defaults The following table describes each Advanced BIOS Features parameter Settings in boldface are the default and suggested settings Parameter Hard Disk Boot Priority Selects the hard disk boot priority Virus Warning Allows you to choose the Virus warning feature for the IDE hard disk boot sector protection If this function is enabled and someone attempts to write data into this area BIOS will show a warning message on screen and alarm beep CPU L1 amp 2 Cache Uses internal level 1 L1 and external level 2 L2 cache memory to improve performance Hyper Threading Technology increase transaction rates and reduces end user response times The technology treats the two cores inside the processor as two logical processors that can execute instructions simultaneously In this way the system performance is highly improved If you disable the function the processor will use only one core to execute the instructions Chapter 2 Options Press Enter Show Hard Disk Name 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Disabled Enabled Enabled Disabled The processor uses Hyper Threading technology to Enabled Disabled 32 Quick Power On Self Test This parameter speeds up POST by skipping some items that are normally checked First Boot Device Secon
14. VG 20005 002 FX 14501 002 FX 56102 004 MS PSE04 005 MS PSE04 006 CORDED MOUSE USB WHEEL STANDARD GENIUS BLACK MS PSE04 007 PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 US VER 104KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 T CHINESE VER 104KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 ARABIC VER 104KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 THAI VER 104KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 SPANISH US VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 INTL US VER 104KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 CANADIAN FRENCH VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 BRAZILIAN VER 107KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 UK VER 104KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 FRENCH VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 GERMANY VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 ITALIAN VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 SWISS VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 SWEDISH VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 BELGIUM VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 DUTCH VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 SPANISH VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 PORTUGESE VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 ICELAND VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 NORWEGIAN VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 HEBREW VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 POLISH VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 SLOVENIAN VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 SLOVAKIAN VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 TURKEY VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 RUSSIAMVER 104KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 HUNGARIA VER 105KEYS PS 2 KEYBOARD KBP2971 GREEK VER 104KEYS KB KBP03 066 KB KBP03 067
15. not for full screen logo 0 Oo O DTI gt 00 N 3 3 If password is set ask for password Save all data in stack back to CMOS Initialize ISA PnP boot devices l QD gt 00 N a gt Chapter 4 USB final Initialization NET PG Build SYSID structure Switch screen back to text mode Set up ACP table at top of memory Invoke ISA adapter ROMs Assign IRQs to PCI devices Initialize APM 8 Clear noise of IRQs 87n Reserved en js SOS 92n Reserve I san ReadHDD boot sector information for Trend Anti Virus code 1 Enable L2 cache W 2 Program boot up speed 3 Chipset final initialization 4 Power management final initialization 5 Clear screen amp display summary table 6 Program K6 write allocation 7 Program P6 class write combining Gu 1 Program daylight saving 2 Update keyboard LED amp typematic rate 1 Build MP table 2 Build amp update ESCD 3 Set CMOS century to 20h or 19h 4 Load CMOS time into DOS timer tick 5 Build MSIRQ routing table Boot attempt INT 19h Chapter 4 96 POST Error Messages List If you cannot run the diagnostics program tests but did receive a POST error message use POST Error Messages List to diagnose system problems If you did not receive any error message look for a description of your error symptoms in Error Symptoms List on page 120 NOTE When you have deemed it necessary to replace an FRU and have don
16. ojol a a ojojojo USB2 USB3 D_LED1 ET CPUFAN1 23 DDR 1 DDR2 Intel ICH5 5R JGP2 E JGP1 JRECOVER ERER COM2 SMCS LPC47M192 NC gt ok oo a oa 1 Kol HEL lt 5 ge 2 oo Ol oo AN oda N Oo lt LU LLI ere A a O a Qa SATA2 SYSFAN1 M JFP1 SATA1 iR Sall JBATIS TE q BIOSE JGP3 Jame os J JBIOS1 FDD1 Chapter 5 106 107 Chapter 5 FRU Field Replaceable Unit List This chapter gives you the FRU Field Replaceable Unit listing in global configurations of Veriton 7600GTR GT V 5600GT V and 3600GT V Refer to this chapter whenever ordering for parts to repair or for RMA Return Merchandise Authorization IMPORTANT Please note WHEN ORDERING FRU PARTS that you should check the most up to date information available on your regional web or channel For whatever reasons a part number change is made it will not be noted in the printed Service Guide For ACER AUTHORIZED SERVICE PROVIDERS your Acer office may have a DIFFERENT part number code to those given in the FRU list of this printed Service Guide You MUST use the local FRU list provided by your regional Acer office to order FRU parts for repair and service of c
17. 2 Disconnect the two front USB connectors from the main board Disconnect the LAN LED connector from the main board Disconnect the internal speaker connector from the main board 5 Disconnectthe one button recovery connector chassis intrusion switch connector front panel connectors and system fan connector from the main board Removing the CPU Fan Sink and CPU 1 Disconnect the CPU fan connector from the main board 2 Remove the two latches on both side of the fan sink 3 Removethe CPU fan sink from the main board Chapter 3 85 4 Pull the socket lever up to 90 degree and then pull out the CPU from the socket 5 Put the socket lever back to the original position Removing the System Fan and Main Board 1 Remove the two screws holding the system fan 2 Take out the system fan 3 Remove the eight screws holding the main board as the picture shows 4 Detach the main board from the lower case carefully Removing the Intrusion Alarm Daughter Board Module and LCD Module 1 Remove the two screws holding the intrusion alarm and then take out the intrusion alarm 86 Chapter 3 2 Remove the front panel as the video Shows 3 Disconnect the front panel audio connector from the daughter board 4 Disconnect the two front USB connectors from the daughter board 5 Remove one screw holding the daughter board bracket 6 Remove the daughter board module as the video shows 7
18. DH2 CHASSIS 124 FID LENS 20549 016 12 TOP COVER 20551 001 25 FIN BUTTON 20549 034 13 TOP COVER COSS 20551 002 26 RECOVER SVITCH 48349 001 111 Chapter 6 Northwood 2 4G Socket 478 Northwood 2 6G Socket 478 Northwood 2 8G Socket 478 Northwood 3 0G Socket 478 Northwood 3 06G Socket 478 D1 Northwood 3 20G Socket 478 CPU Processor CELERON 2 0G SOCKET 478 D1 Celeron 2 4G Socket 478 D1 Celeron 2 5G Socket 478 D1 Celeron 2 6G Socket 478 D1 Celeron 2 7G Socket 478 D1 Celeron 2 8G Socket 478 D1 KC DCD01 20A KC DCD01 24A KC DCD01 25A KC DCD01 26A KC DCD01 27A KC DCD01 28A KC DP001 24C KC DP001 26C KC DP001 28C KC DP001 30C KC DPD01 306 KC DP001 32C MICRON DDR 333 256MB DIE 0 13U CL 2 5 MICRON DDR 333 512MB DIE 0 13U CL 2 5 MICRON DDR 400 256MB DIE 0 13U CL 2 5 MICRON DDR 400 512MB DIE 0 13U CL 2 5 INFINEON DDR333 128MB 0 11U CL 2 5 INFINEON DDR333 256MB 0 14U 32M 8 8 INFINEON DDR333 256MB 0 11U CL 2 5 INFINEON DDR333 512MB 0 14U 64M 8 8 INFINEON DDR333 512MB 0 11U 64M 8 8 INFINEON DDR333 1GB 0 14U 64M 8 16 CL2 INFINEON DDR400 128MB 0 14U 32M 8 16 CL 3 INFINEON DDR400 256MB 0 14U 32M 8 16 CL 3 INFINEON DDR400 512MB 0 14U 32M 8 16 CL 3 NANYA DDR333 128MB 0 14U 16M 16 4 NANYA DDR333 256MB 0 14U CL2 5 NANYA DDR333 512MB 0 14U NANYA DDR400 128MB NANYA DDR400 256MB NANYA DDR400 512MB CL3 KN 25604 007 KN 51204 005 KN 25604 006 KN 51204 009 KN 12802 008
19. DMA Ultra DMA 33 Ultra DMA 66 and Ultra DMA 100 select Auto to enable BIOS support SATA Mode Select SATA Mode IDE RAID On Chip Serial ATA This setting is used to specify the SATA Disable Auto Legacy Mode controller Native Mode If Legacy Mode is selected PATA and SATA will be combined If Native Mode is selected PATA and SATA will both be enabled If Auto is selected PATA and SATA will be arranged by BIOS and you will be able to see the IDE Device status listed in Standard COMS Features Serial ATA Port 0 1 Mode Select a compatible mode for Port 1 and Port 2 Primary Master from Award setting to the chipset settings Primary Slave Primary Master Compatible Mode with Serial Secondary Master ATA Port 1 set to Primary Master Primary Slave Compatible Mode with Serial ATA Port 1 set to Primary Slave Secondary Master Compatible Mode with Serial ATA Port 1 set to Secondary Master Secondary Slave Compatible Mode with Serial ATA Port 1 set to Secondary Slave Primary Master Compatible Mode with only Serial ATA Enabled and Port 1 set to Primary Master Secondary Master Compatible Mode with only Serial ATA Enabled and Port 1 set to Secondary Master SATAO Master Enhance Mode with Port 1 set to Native Mode Master SATA1 Master Enhance Mode with Port 2 set to Native Mode Master Secondary Slave Primary Master Secondary Master SATAO Master SATA1 Master Onboard Device Press Enter to enter the sub menu
20. KB KUS03 056 KB KUS03 057 KB KUS03 060 KB KUP03 034 KB KUP03 035 KB KUP03 036 KB KUP03 037 KB KUP03 038 KB KUP03 039 KB KUP03 040 KB KUP03 041 KB KUP03 042 KB KUS03 001 KB KUS03 002 KB KUS03 003 KB KUS03 004 116 117 Power Supply USB KEYBOARD KU0355 SPANISH US VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 CANADIAN FRENCH VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 BRAZILIAN VER 107KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 SWISS VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 BELGIUM VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 ICELAND VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 NORWEGIAN VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 HEBREW VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 POLISH VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 SLOVENIAN VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 SLOVAKIAN VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 TURKEY VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 RUSSIAMVER 104KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 HUNGARIA VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 GREEK VER 104KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 CZECH 104KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 JAPANESE 109KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 TURKEY F 105KEYSt USB KEYBOARD KU0355 S CHINESE 104KEYS WIRELESS KB GRAY WUR0355 US VER 104 KEYS W I MOUSE RECEIVER WIRELESS KB GRAY WUR0355 T CHINESE VER 104 KEYS W I MOUSE RECEIVER WIRELESS KB GRAY WUR0355 INT L US VER 104 KEYS W I MOUSE RECEIVER WIRELESS KB GRAY WUR0355 ARABIC VER 104 KEYS W I MOUSE RECEIVER WIRELESS KB GRAY WUR0355 THAIS VER 104 KEYS W MOUSE RECEIVER WIREL
21. KN 25602 005 KN 25602 010 KN 51202 004 KN 51202 008 KN 1GB02 004 KN 12802 005 KN 25602 008 KN 51202 006 KN 12803 005 KN 25603 008 KN 51203 004 KN 12803 014 KN 25603 011 KN 51203 007 Optical Drive Chapter 6 CD ROM DRIVE 52X LITEON CD52 LGO LTN 6525 WHITE CD ROM DRIVE 52X MSI MS 8152 BLACK CD ROM DRIVE 52X BTC F564E BLACK CD RW DRIVE 52XR 24XRW 52XW LITE ON LTR 52246S BLACK CD RW DRIVE 52XR 32XRW 52XW HLDS GCE 8523B BLACK DVD ROM DRIVE 16X PIONEER DVD 121RD WHITE DVD ROM DRIVE 16X LITE ON XJ HD166S BLACK DVD CDRW COMBO DRIVE 48X HLDS GCC 4480B WHITE COMBO DRIVE 48X HLDS GCC 4480B BLACK DVD SUPER MULTI DVD RW DVD RAM 4X 2 4X 2X 2X HLDS GSA 4040B WHITE DVD SUPER MULTI DVD RW DVD RAM 4X 2 4X 2X 2X HLDS GSA 4040B BLACK KD 52X09 002 KD 0520B 003 KD 0520A 001 KR 05201 001 KR 0520C 001 KV 16X05 003 KV 01604 001 KO 48X0A 001 KO 0480A 001 KU 0040C 001 KU 0040D 007 112 Hard Disk Drive HDD 80GB 7200RPM SATA SEAGATE ALPINE ST380013AS KH 08001 005 HDD 120G 7200RPM SATA SEAGATE ALPINE ST3120026AS KH 12001 005 HDD 160G 7200RPM SATA SEAGATE ALPINE ST3160023AS KH 16001 004 HDD 40GB 5400RPM ATA 100 SEAGATE C2 ST340015A KH 04001 002 HDD U9 80G 5400RPM SEAGARE ST380012A KH 08001 002 HDD 120GB 5400RPM ATA 100 SEAGATE U9 ST3120025A KH 12001 002 HDD 40GB 7200RPM SEAGATE CUDA VI ALPINE ST340014A KH 04001 001 HDD 80GB 7200RPM SEAGATE CUDA VI ALPINE ST380011A KH 08001 001 HDD 120GB 7200RPM SEAGATE CU
22. Phoenix RwardBI0S CMOS Setup Utility IDE Channel Master IDE HDD Auto Detection Press Enter IDE Channel O Master Auto Menu Level iki Access Mode Auto To auto detect the Capacity HDD s size head on this channel Cylinder Head Precomp l anding Zone Sector fTl Move Enter Select PU PD Value Fl0 Save ESC Exit Fl General Help Fo Previous Values F Fail Safe Defaults Fi Default Settings IDE HDD Auto Detection Auto detects your hard disk drive Press Enter si IDE Channel 0 Master Slave Displays the device type IDE Channel 1 Master Slave Access Mode Selects the HDD access mode CHS 31 Chapter 2 Advanced BIOS Features The following screen shows the Advanced BIOS Features Phoenix AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility Advanced BIOS Features Menu Level a Hard Disk Boot Priority Press Enter Virus Warning Disabled CPU 1 amp L2 Cache Enabled Hyper Ihreading lechnologylEnabledl Quick Power On Self lest Enabled First Boot Device Floppy Select Hard Disk Boot Device Priority Second Boot Device Third Boot Device Boot Other Device Swap Floppy Drive Boot Up Floppy Seek Boot Up NumLock Status Gate A20 Option Typematic Rate Setting Security Option APIC Mode Hard Disk CDROM Enabled Disabled Disabled On Fast Disabled Setup Enabled HPS Version Control For OS 1 4 05 Select For DRAM gt 64MB Non 0 HDD M A R T Capability Enabled
23. Remove the two screws holding the daughter board 8 Remove the daughter board from the daughter board bracket Chapter 3 87 9 Pull the internal speaker cable front panel cables LAN LED cable and one button recovery cable as the video Shows 10 Remove one screw holding the LED module holder 11 Remove the LED module as the video Shows 12 Remove the reset button as the video Shows 13 Pull out the reset cable carefully Removing the Upper Case and Power supply 1 Remove one screw holding the upper cover 2 Remove the upper cover as the video Shows Mi PSN CSS a gt lt a XDR Remove one screw holding the power supply as the video shows Remove the two screws holding the power supply on the rear side Remove the power supply bracket O Aa 5 S Detach the power supply from the housing caretully 88 Chapter 3 PEER PERSERNE PER PETE OE a a a a 9999 22722270009 D 3 2722222009 39939339399 9999393909 9999999090 w U E 89 Chapter 3 Troubleshooting This chapter provides troubleshooting information for the Veriton 7600GTR 7600GT 7600V 5600GT 5600V and 3600GT 3600V Chapter 4 m m m E Power On Self Test POST Index of Error Message Index of Error Symptoms Undetermined Problems 90 Power On Self Test POST Each time you turn on the system the Power on Self Test POST is initiated Several
24. SATA is the latest generation of the ATA interface SATA hard drives deliver blistering transfer speeds of up to 150MB sec Serial ATA uses long thin cables making it easier to connect your drive and improving the airflow inside your PC 1 Supports 150 MB s transfers with CRC error checking 2 Data handling optimizations including tagged command queuing elevator seek and packet chain command Following are the Parallel ATA P ATA and Serial ATA S ATA device configurations supported by Intel ICH5R Introduction Following are the Parallel ATA P ATA and Serial ATA S ATA device configurations supported by Intel ICH5R ATA Operate Mode There are two modes to select Legacy mode and Native mode Legacy Mode 2 In this mode system BIOS just assign the traditional 14 and 15 IRQs to use for HDD 2 Older OSs that do not support switch to Native Mode DOS Win2K Win98 ME should set SATA and PATA to Legacy Mode Q Maximum 4 ATA devices to connect Q Combine mode and Non Combine mode 1 Non Combined Mode P ATA devices only Maximum of 4 devices Disable 2 Non Combined Mode S ATA devices only Maximum of 2 devices 53 Chapter 2 Primary or Secondary Secondary or Primary Disable 3 Combined Mode S ATA devices and P ATA devices Maximum of 2 devices each thus total 4 devices at maximum P ATA Controller P ATA Controller Disable Disable 7 r Secondary Secondar
25. Sweep rate 1 octave minute Direction X Y Z axis Test cycles 2 cycles per axis Non operating 5 27 1 Hz 0 6G Packed 27 1 50 Hz 0 4mm peak to peak 50 500 Hz 2 0G Sweep rate 0 5 coactive minute Direction X Y Z axis Test cycles 4 cycles per axis Switching Power Supply A 1 Input freguency 57Hz to 63Hz Chapter 1 21 22 A 2 Input voltage 100 120 VRMS 90 132 VRMS 200 240 VRMS 180 264 VRMS A 3 Input current This is 200W power supply Q This 4A includes the outlet supply current 2A Measure at line input 90 VRMS and maximum load condition 200W Power Supply NOTE 1 5V amp 3 3V total power is 110W max 250W Power Supply 1 5V amp 3 3V total power is 150W max Chapter 1 Memory Channel Mode DIMM Population Matching DIMM pairs Rank Row Size Size of one side of the DIMM 2x the size of one side of the DIMM populated in the channel populated in the channel A or B 64MB 512MB 128MB 1GB Channel Size 64 bits 128 bits Page Size Size read from DIMM 2 x Size read from DIMM 4KB 8KB 16KB 8KB 16KB 32KB Channel A Channel B Single Channel Mode CHA CHB SC Mode CHA Only SC Mode CH B Only VSC Mode CH A amp B Single Channel SC mode is also referred to as Virtual Single Channel VSC mode NOTE Memory channel speed determined by slowest DIMM populated in system Dual Channel Mode Chapter 1 23 24 12
26. The 865G 865GV chipsets offer high bandwidth interfaces such as dual channel DDR400 main memory 800 MHz system bus integrated graphics controller with Intel Extreme Graphics 2 Technology AGP8X Graphics for Intel 865G chipset Intel Communication Streaming Architecture featuring a Dedicated Network Bus DNB interface for wire speed Gigabit Ethernet GbE and Hi Speed USB 2 0 connectivity to ensure the flexibility and performance you expect Chapter 1 1 Features Performance Q Intel Pentium 4 supporting FSB up to 800 MHz or 3 intel Celeron supporting FSB up to 400 MHz 3 Intel Hyper Threading Technology supported on 3 06 GHz and higher Pentium 4 system OQ Intel 865G ICH5R for VT7600GTR Intel 865G ICH5 for VT 7600GT 5600GT 3600GT Intel Bt E E E E Be 865GV ICH5 for VT7600V 5600V 3600V chipset Integrated VGA 8X AGP expansion slot for Intel 865G chipset DDR400 333 266 SDRAM 4 DIMM slots expandable to 4GB dual channel memory Power management function CD ROM CD RW DVD ROM or DVD CD RW combo drive High capacity Enhanced IDE hard disc Supports USB 2 0 high performance peripherals Plug and Play PnP feature Multimedia m 3 D quality audio system via onboard audio controller QO Audio in Line in Audio out Line out Headphone out and Microphone in interfaces NOTE The system has two microphone in jacks front and rear However you can not use both of them at the same time By default your syst
27. bracket holder as the picture Shows 4 Pull the ODD lock and then detach the ODD from the frame 76 Chapter 3 5 Disconnect the FDD power cable and FDD cable from the FDD 6 Pullthe FDD lock and then detach the FDD from the frame 7 Disconnect the HDD cable and HDD power cable from the HDD 8 Press the right and left HDD holders and then detach the HDD carefully 9 Remove the right ODD holder 10 Remove the left FDD holder 11 Remove the left and right HDD holders Chapter 3 17 m owe p i Removing the Internal Cables Connectors and Memory 1 Disconnect the main power connector from the main board B le 190 oi M ten aa DASANE Fn VER yr KA FONAN 2 Disconnect the 12 voltage power connector from the main board 4 Press the leavers on the both sides of the DIMM socket outward to release the DIMM and then gently pull the DIMM out to remove it Removing the CPU Fan Sink and CPU 1 Disconnect the CPU fan connector from the main board 2 Remove the two latches on both side of the fan sink 3 Remove the CPU fan sink from the main board 78 Chapter 3 4 Pull the socket lever up to 90 degree and then pull out the CPU from the socket 5 Put the socket lever back to the original position Removing the Internal Cables Connectors and Memory 1 Disconnect the front panel audio connector from the main board Dis
28. drive is configured correctly in BIOS Setup cable jumper are set correctly before diagnosing any hard disk drive problems If only one drive is installed please make sure the drive is connected to master connector or the drive is set to master Hard disk drive test failed Hard disk drive cannot format completely Enter BIOS Setup and Load default settings Hard disk drive cable Hard disk drive Main board Enter BIOS Setup and Load default settings Hard disk drive cable Hard disk drive Main board Hard disk drive has write error 1 Enter BIOS Setup and Load default settings 2 Hard disk drive Hard disk drive LED fails to light but system operates normally 1 With the system power on measure the voltage of hard disk LED connector 2 Hard drive LED cable CD DVD ROM Drive NOTE Ensure CD DVD ROM drive is configured correctly in BIOS Setup cable jumper are set correctly and its laser beam is clean before diagnosing any CD DVD ROM dfrive problems CD DVD ROM drive LED doesn t come on 1 CD DVD ROM drive but works normally CD DVD ROM drive LED flashes for more than 30 seconds before LED shutting off Software asks to reinstall disc Software displays a reading CD DVD error CD DVD ROM drive cannot load or eject when the system is turned on and its eject button is pressed and held CD DVD ROM drive does not read and there are no messages are displayed CD DVD ROM drive
29. if you have installed more than 64MB of memory and you are running the OS 2 operating system The S M A R T Self Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology system is a diagnostics technology that monitors and predicts device performance For compatibility with Windows 95 logo certification select Yes to release IRQ6 when the system contains no floppy drive When this setting is set to Yes users have to select Disabled for the Onboard FDC Controller in the Integrated Peripherals menu This item enables you to show the company logo on the bootup screen Enabled Shows a still image logo on the full screen at boot Disabled Shows the POST messages at boot 1 4 1 1 Non OS2 OS2 Enabled Disabled Enabled Disabled 34 Advanced Chipset Features The following screen shows the Advanced Chipset Features Phoenix AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility Advanced Chipset Features DRAM Timing Selectable CAS Latency Time Active to Precharge Delay DRAM RASH to CASH Delay DRAM RASH Precharge System BIOS Cacheable Video BIOS Cacheable Memory Hole At 19M 16M Delay Prior to Thermal AGP Aperture Size MB Init Display First xx On Chip VGA Setting On Chip YGA On Chip Frame Buffer Size Boot Display Tl Move Enter Select PU PD Value 9 Preyvious Values By SPD 2 8 4 Enabled Disabled Disabled 16 Min 128 Onboard AGP N i vt ESC Ex1t Fl General H
30. pin clone Y cable S ATA Cable MSI S ATA cable for H80 H40 H360 MSI S ATA power cable 2 conn for H80 H40 H360 12V DC SPK Cable MSI 12V DC jack cable for H80 H40 H360 Internal USB Cable MSI Internal USB cable with H80 H40 PCI bracket lt D 3 TI W O MSI 52X Liteon 52X MSI 52X Pioneer 16X 40X Liteon 16X O ET z Slo I O O olg Z vllo Ola OD O I HLDS 16X DVD ROM Acer Color w o logo HLDS 48X Pioneer 4 2 16 8 12 32 DVD Dual NEC 4X DVD Dual Acer color w o Acer logo Pioneer 4X DVD Dual Acer color w o Acer logo DVD ROM DVD RW Daughter board DVD Super Multi HLDS 4X DVD Super Multi RAM R R MSI USB AUDIO Board for H80 H40 H360 MSI Front USB2 0 DB USB cable MSI Front USB2 0 DB standard Audio cable 10pin Extension Board MSI Extension daughter board Debug Connector Bracket Debug LED bracket 1 x Com port Cables for H80 H40 Mouse Genius Mouse USB Wheel Standard Genius Mouse USB Wheel Optical 123 Appendix B VGA Card FIC Radeon 9200 64MB DDR LP W TV OUT NTSC ATX bracket FIC Radeon 9200 64MB DDR LP W TV OUT PAL ATX bracket MSI Ti 4200 8X 128M DDR ATX w TV out PAL ATX bracket MSI Ti 4200 8X 128M DDR ATX w TV out NTSC ATX bracket MX 440 8X 64M DDR LP w TV out PAL ATX bracket w LP BKT MX 440 8X 64M DDR LP w TV out NTSC ATX bracket w LP BKT VGA ECS Xabre200 AGP 8X 32M ATX Bracket DVI adapter card Leadtek DVI Adapter Card for 845G c
31. specification PCI ISA PnP for devices compliant with the Plug and Play standard whether designed for PCI or ISA bus architecture When set to Enabled multiple VGA devices operating on different buses can handle data from the CPU on each set of palette registers on every video device Bit 5 of the command register in the PCI device configuration space is the VGA Palette Snoop bit 0 is disabled For example if there are two VGA devices in the computer one PCI and one ISA and the Disabled Data read or written by the CPU is only directed to the PCI VGA device s palette registers Enabled Data read or written by the CPU is directed to both the PCI VGA device s palette registers and the ISA VGA device s palette registers permitting the palette registers of both VGA devices to be identical NOTE Some VGA cards have required settings for this feature Check your VGA card manual before setting this parameter The items allow you to assign an IRO line to INT Auto 3 4 5 7 9 10 11 12 14 Pin 1 8 separately Selecting Auto allows BIOS to determine the appropriate IRQ for each INT pin Disabled Enabled 44 PC Health Status Phoenix AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility PC Health Status Chassis Intrusion Detect Disabled CPU Temperature Ambient Temperature Menu Level w VCore From VID 5 Vecp 3 J3V 5V 12V HYcc 1 9V 1 8V CPU FAN Speed SYSTEM FAN Speed Tle Move Enter Select PU P
32. the left cover out and then gently pull it outward to detach it from the housing Removing the Front Panel 1 Remove the front panel as the picture shows carefully Removing the ODD FDD HDD 1 Disconnect the ODD power cable and ODD cable from the ODD 2 Disconnect the FDD cable and FDD power cable from the FDD Chapter 3 69 Disconnect the HDD cable and HDD power cable from the HDD 3 Pull the ODD lock and then detach the ODD from the frame 4 then detach the FDD from the frame nd Pull the FDD lock a 5 Press the right and left HDD holders and then detach the HDD carefully 6 Remove the left ODD holder Remove the left FDD holder 7 8 Remove the left and right HDD holders 9 Chapter 3 70 Removing the Internal Cables Connectors and Memory 1 Disconnect the main power connector from the main board 2 Disconnect the 12 voltage power connector from the main board 3 4 Press the leavers on the both sides of the DIMM socket outward to release the DIMM and then gently pull the DIMM out to remove it 5 Disconnect the front panel audio connector from the main board 6 Disconnect the two front USB connectors from the main board Chapter 3 71 7 Disconnect the internal speaker connector from the main board 8 Disconnectthe LAN LED connector from the main board E 1 9 Disconnectthe one button recovery connector chassis intrusion sw
33. w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Candian French 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Sweden 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Hungaria 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Greek 104keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Brazilian 107keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Japanese 109keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 124 125 Keyboard USB Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Chicony Swiss USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105 keys w palm US ver USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 104 keys w palm T Chinese ver USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 104 keys w palm Spanish US USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Thailand USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 104keys w palm International US USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 104key w palm Czech USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 104keys w palm Arabic USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 104keys w palm Belgium USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105 keys w palm Chinese USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 104keys w palm Danish USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Italian USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm French USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Germany USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Hebrew USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 104keys w palm Polish USB KB acer
34. 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Slovenian USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Slovakian USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 104keys w palm Iceland USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Norwegian USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Holland USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Portuguese USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Turkey F USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Russian USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 104keys w palm Spanish USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Turkey USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm UK USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Candian French USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Sweden USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Hungaria USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 105keys w palm Greek USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 104keys w palm Brazilian USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 107keys w palm Japanese USB KB acer 002 KUP0355 109keys w palm Appendix B Online Support Information This section describes online technical support services available to help you repair your Acer Systems If you are a distributor dealer ASP or TPM please refer your technical queries to your local Acer branch office Acer Branch Offices and Regional Business Units may access our website However some information sources will require a user i d and password These can be obtained directly from Acer CSD Taiwan Acer s Website offers you convenient and valuable support resources whene
35. 8MB 1GB 128MB 1GB 128MB 1GB 128MB 1GB 512MB 4GB The following conditions must be met 2 Matched DIMM configuration in each channel 3 Same Density 128MB 256MB 512MB etc 2 Same DRAM technology 128Mb 256Mb or 512Mb 3 Same DRAM bus width x8 or x16 a Both either single sided or dual sided Matched in both Channel A and Channel B memory channels 2 Populate symmetrical memory slots Slot 0 or Slot 1 The following conditions do not need to be met Q Same brand OH Same timing specifications 3 Same DDR speed Symmetrical DIMMs must be identical for optimal performance OH Same DIMM density e g 128MB 256MB 512MB etc 2 Same DRAM Technology e g 128M bit 256M bit etc 2 Same DRAM bus width e g x8 or x16 a Single Sided or Dual Sided NOTE Note Memory interface speed will be set to lowest speed of memory populated Memory Characteristics Optimize performance for single or dual channel is obtained with matched DIMM population Table below shows DIMMs with same Organization and Density but are non matching as bus width technology and or external banks are different 2 Mixing these DIMMs will put platform into single channel mode Non Matched 128MB DIMMs Non Matched 256MB DIMMs Same Same Different Bus Different Same of Organization Density Width Technology DRAM Banks Same Same Same Different Different of Organization Density Bus Width Technology DRAM Banks Chapter 1 Maximizing Performanc
36. All Windows R Displays Run dialog box When activated all alphabetic characters typed appear in uppercase same function as pressing shiFT lt letter gt 11 Function keys The function keys F1 F12 let you perform specific functions depending on the application that uses them Palm rest The detachable palm rest provides you a comfortable place to rest your hands while typing Chapter 1 Hardware Specifications and Configurations Processor Socket 478 Speed Internal 1 4 3 2GHz External 400 533 800MHz Data Bus Frequency for Springdale G Minimum operating speed 0 MHz If Stop CPU Clock in Sleep State the BIOS Setup is set to Enabled Voltage Processor voltage can be detected by the system without setting any jumper Intel Pentium 4 1 8 3 2GHz FSB400 533 800MHz Intel Celeron 2 0 2 6GHz and above Support protocol PCI 2 1 APM1 2 DMI 2 00 1 E IDE ACPI 1 0 ESCD 1 03 ANSI ATA 3 0 PnP 1a Bootable CD ROM 1 0 ATAPI NOTE The BIOS can be overwritten upgraded using the FLASH utility AWDFLASH EXE System Memory Support memory module package 184 pin DIMM e Support to Error Correction Code ECC No feature Memory module combinations You can install memory modules in any combination as long as they match the Memory Combination specifications Memory Combinations 128MB 1GB 128MB 1GB 128MB 1GB 128MB 1GB 128MB 4GB NOTE Please read Memory Channel Mode on page 19 18 Chap
37. Corporation All Rights Reserved RAID Volumes None defined Non RAID Disks Port Drive Model Serial Size Status Bootable 0 ST3120023A5 AKAOJI1 AT 111 7GB Yes H ST3120023A8S AKAGHOMO 111 7GB Yes Press lt CTRL I gt to enter Configuration Utility After the above message shows press rai and lt I gt keys simultaneously to enter the RAID Configuration Utility 2 Creating Deleting and Resetting RAID Volumes oo MAIN MENU Delete RAID Volume Reset Disks to Non RAID Exit DISK VOLUME INFORMATION RAID Volumes None defined Non RAID Disks Port Drive Model Serial Size Bootable 0 ST3120023A8S 3 KAOJ1ZJ 111 7 GB Yes 1 ST3120023A5 3 KAOHOMO 111 7GB Yes Chapter 2 56 1 Create RAID Volume Select this option and press enter The following screen appears CREATE ARRAY MENU Strip Size 128KB RAID Level RAIDO Striping Capacity 223 5GB Create Volume HELP Enter a string between 1 and 16 characters in length that can be used to uniguely identify the RAID volume This name is case sensitive and can not contain special characters Specify a RAID Volume name and then press the ii or enter key to go to the next field CREATE ARRAY MENU Name RAID Volumel Strip Size RAID Level RAIDO Striping Capacity 223 5GB Create Volume HELP Choose the strip value best suited to your RAID usage model
38. D Value Fl Save ESC Ex1t Fl General Help Fo Previous Values F Optimized Defaults Chassis Intrusion Detect The field enables or disables the feature of Disabled recording the chassis intrusion status and issuing Enabled a warning message if the chassis is once opened To clear the warning message set the field to Reset The setting of the field will automatically return to Enabled later CPU Temperature Ambient These items display the current status of all of Temperature VCore From VID the monitored hardware devices components 2 5V Vccp 3 3V 5V 12V such as CPU voltages temperatures and all HVcc 1 5V 1 8V CPU FAN fans speeds Speed System FAN Speed 45 Chapter 2 Frequency Control Phoenix AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility Frequency Voltage Control Auto Detect PCI Clk Enabled Menu Level a Tle Move Enter Select PU PD Value Fl Save ESC Exit Fl General Help Fo Preyvious Values Fi Optimized Defaults The following table describes the parameters found in this menu CPU Clock Ratio Core Clock Frequency to System Bus Ratio Core Clock Frequency to System Bus Ratio RO Auto Detect PCI CLK EE option allows you to enable disable the feature of auto Enabled detecting the clock frequency of the installed PCI bus Disabled Chapter 2 46 Load Optimized Settings You need to reload the BIOS default settings every time you make changes to your system hardware configuration s
39. DA VI ALPINE SEAGATE KH 12001 001 513120022A HDD 40GB 3 5 IN 5400RPM WD 400EB 42CPF0 KH 04008 004 HDD 40GB 3 5 IN 7200RPM WD XL40S 400BB 00DEAO KH 04008 002 HDD 80GB 7200RPM ATA100 WD WD800BB 00DKAO KH 08008 003 HDD 80GB 5400RPM WD PROTEGE WD800EB 00DJFO KH 08008 004 HDD 120GB 7200RPM WD CAVIAR WD1200BB 00DWAO KH 12008 001 Floppy Disk Drive FDD 1 44MB PANASONIG JU 256A048P KF 25602 002 FDD 1 44MB MITSUMI D353M3D R694005 KF 35301 001 FDD 1 44MB NEC FD 1231T STD R2 KF 12301 001 113 Chapter 6 Main board For VT3600 FDD CABLE 34PIN 2CON HDD IDE CABLE 40PIN SHORT ODD CABLE 40PIN LONG AUDIO CABLE 10PIN 2CON USB CABLE 10PIN 2CON LED CABLE LAN POWER HDD POWER BUTTON BOARD W BRACKET RESET CABLE INTRUSION ALARM CABLE 2PIN LAN CABLE POWER HDD LED CABLE For VT5600 FDD CABLE 34PIN 2CON HDD ODD IDE CABLE 40PIN 3CON AUDIO CABLE 10PIN 2CON USB CABLE 10PIN 2CON LED CABLE LAN POWER HDD RESET CABLE INTRUSION ALARM CABLE W BRACKET MODULE RESET CABLE INTRUSION ALARM CABLE 2PIN POWER HDD LED CABLE LAN CABLE For VT7600 FDD CABLE 34PIN 2CON HDD IDE CABLE 40PIN SHORT ODD IDE CABLE 40PIN LONG AUDIO CABLE 10PIN 2CON USB CABLE 10PIN 2CON RESET CABLE LED POWER BUTTON CABLE W BRACKET INTRUSION ALARM CABLE 2PIN S ATA CABLE 7PIN 2CON S ATA POWER CABLE 2CON 50 VO2VF 301 50 V02VF 302 50 V02VF 303 50 V02VF 304 50 V02VF 305 50 V02VF 306 50 V02VF 307 50 V02VF 308 50 V02VF 309 50 VO2VF 310
40. ESS KB GRAY WUR0355 GERMANY VER 105 KEYS W l MOUSE RECEIVER WIRELESS KB GRAY WUR0355 ITALIAN VER 105 KEYS W I MOUSE RECEIVER WIRELESS KB GRAY WUR0355 FRENCH VER 105 KEYS W I MOUSE RECEIVER WIRELESS KB GRAY WUR0355 SWEDEN VER 105 KEYS W I MOUSE RECEIVER WIRELESS KB GRAY WUR0355 SPANISH VER 105 KEYS W I MOUSE RECEIVER WIRELESS KB GRAY WUR0355 DUTCH VER 105 KEYS W I MOUSE RECEIVER WIRELESS KB GRAY WUR0355 PORTUGESE VER 105 KEYS W I MOUSE RECEIVER WIRELESS KB GRAY WUR0355 UK VER 104 KEYS W MOUSE RECEIVER KB KUS03 008 KB KUS03 009 KB KUS03 010 KB KUS03 011 KB KUS03 012 KB KUS03 014 KB KUS03 015 KB KUS03 016 KB KUS03 017 KB KUS03 018 KB KUS03 019 KB KUS03 020 KB KUS03 021 KB KUS03 022 KB KUS03 023 KB KUS03 058 KB KUS03 059 KB KUS03 020 KB KUS03 061 KB WUR03 018 KB WUR03 019 KB WUR03 020 KB WUR03 021 KB WUR03 022 KB WUR03 023 KB WUR03 024 KB WUR03 025 KB WUR03 026 KB WUR03 027 KB WUR03 028 KB WUR03 029 KB WUR03 030 POWER SUPPLY 200W W PFC FSP FSP200 50GLV POWER SUPPLY 200W W O PFC FSP200 50GLV POWER SUPPLY 250W W PFC FSP250 60THA 1PF POWER SUPPLY250W W O FSP250 60THA 1 PY 25008 009 PY 25008 010 PY 25008 001 PY 25008 002 Case Cover Bracket Assembly Chapter 6 Chapter 6 For VT3600 LEFT COVER FRONT BEZEL W ODD DOOR FDD COVER FDD BUTTON ODD DOOR W BUTTON FDD BUTTON FDD COVER W LENS UPPER COVER
41. EYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 HUNGARIA VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 GREEK VER 104KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 CZECH 104KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 JAPANESE 109KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 TURKEY F 105KEYST USB KEYBOARD KU0355 S CHINESE 104KEYS USB KB SILVER KU0355 US VER 104KEYS USB KB SILVER KU0355 T CHINESE VER 104KEYS USB KB SILVER KU0355 INT L US VER 104 KEYS USB KB SILVER KU0355 ARABIC VER 104 KEYS USB KB SILVER KU0355 THAI VER 104 KEYS USB KB SILVER KU0355 GERMANY VER 105 KEYS USB KB SILVER KU0355 ITALIAN VER 105 KEYS USB KB SILVER KU0355 FRENCH VER 105 KEYS USB KB SILVER KU0355 SWEDEN VER 105 KEYS st USB KB GRAY USB KB GRAY USB KB GRAY USB KB GRAY USB KB GRAY USB KB GRAY USB KB GRAY USB KB GRAY eer eae eee ee SA OTe Tee s NA USB KB SILVER KU0355 UK VER 104 KEYS USB KB SILVER KU0355 SPANISH VER 105 KEYS USB KB SILVER KU0355 DUTCH VER 105 KEYS USB KB SILVER KU0355 PORTUGESE VER 105 KEYS MNT 0552 nn Enn 52 N NNN nn N KB KUS03 026 KB KUS03 027 KB KUS03 028 KB KUS03 029 KB KUS03 030 KB KUS03 031 KB KUS03 032 KB KUS03 033 KB KUS03 034 KB KUS03 035 KB KUS03 036 KB KUS03 037 KB KUS03 038 KB KUS03 039 KB KUS03 040 KB KUS03 041 KB KUS03 042 KB KUS03 043 KB KUS03 045 KB KUS03 046 KB KUS03 047 KB KUS03 048 KB KUS03 049 KB KUS03 050 KB KUS03 051 KB KUS03 052 KB KUS03 053 KB KUS03 054 KB KUS03 055
42. KB KBP03 068 KB KBP03 069 KB KBP03 070 KB KBP03 071 KB KBP03 072 KB KBP03 073 KB KBP03 074 KB KBP03 075 KB KBP03 076 KB KBP03 077 KB KBP03 078 KB KBP03 079 KB KBP03 080 KB KBP03 081 KB KBP03 083 KB KBP03 084 KB KBP03 085 KB KBP03 086 KB KBP03 087 KB KBP03 088 KB KBP03 089 KB KBP03 090 KB KBP03 091 KB KBP03 092 KB KBP03 093 KB KBP03 094 Chapter 6 Chapter 6 USB KB GRAY USB KB GRAY USB KB GRAY KU0355 US VER 104KEYS KU0355 T CHINESE VER 104KEYS KU0355 INT L US VER 104 KEYS KU0355 ARABIC VER 104 KEYS KU0355 THAI VER 104 KEYS KU0355 GERMANY VER 105 KEYS KU0355 ITALIAN VER 105 KEYS KU0355 FRENCH VER 105 KEYS KU0355 SWEDEN VER 105 KEYS KU0355 UK VER 104 KEYS KU0355 SPANISH VER 105 KEYS USB KB GRAY KU0355 DUTCH VER 105 KEYS USB KB GRAY KU0355 PORTUGESE VER 105 KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 SPANISH US VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 CANADIAN FRENCH VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 BRAZILIAN VER 107KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 SWISS VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 BELGIUM VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 ICELAND VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 NORWEGIAN VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 HEBREW VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 POLISH VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 SLOVENIAN VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 SLOVAKIAN VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 TURKEY VER 105KEYS USB KEYBOARD KU0355 RUSSIAMVER 104K
43. PU information including brand SMI type Cyrix or Intel and CPU level 586 or 686 Reserved Reserved Initial Early Init Onboard Generator switch 19h Reserved 1Bh Initial interrupts vector table If no special specified all H W interrupts are directed to SPURIOUS INT HDLR amp S W interrupts to SPURIOUS soft HDLR Reserved Initial Early PM INIT switch 1Eh Reserved 1Fh Load keyboard matrix notebook platform Oh Reserved i A i O gt D gt 3 R HPM initialization notebook platform Chapter 4 92 93 R 3h Check validity of RTC value e g a value of 5Ah is an invalid value for RTC minute Load CMOS settings into BIOS stack If CMOS checksum fails use default value instead Prepare BIOS resource map for PCI amp PnP use If ESCD is valid take into consideration of the ESCD s legacy information Onboard clock generator initialization Disable respective clock resource to empty PCI amp DIMM slots Early PCI initialization Enumerate PCI bus number Assign memory amp I O resource Search for a valid VGA device and VGA BIOS and put it into C000 0 24h Reserved 25h Reserved 26h Reserved 7h 8h Initialize INT 09 buffer Reserved 29h 1 Program CPU internal MTRR P6 amp PII for 0 640K memory address 2 Initialize the APIC for Pentium class CPU 3 Program early chipset according to CMOS setup Example onboard IDE controller 4 Measure CPU spe
44. RETENTION MODULE W NAIL 4PCS IO BRACKET HOLDER CHASSIS W IO BRACKET DB BRACKET LED BRACKET WO IO SHIELD IO SHIELD FDD HOLDER ODD HOLDER DISGUISE HDD HOLDER ASSY LEFT HDD HOLDER ASSY RHGHT For VT5600 FRONT BEZEL W ODD DOOR 5 25 EMPTY COVER FDD BUTTON ODD DOOR FDD BUTTON UPPER COVER 5 25 EMPTY COVER RETENTION MODULE W NAIL 4PCS IO BRACKET HOLDER IO BRACKET I O SHIELD CHASSIS W IO BRACKET DB BRACKET LED BRACKET WO IO SHIELD FDD HOLDER ODD HOLDER OPEN ODD HOLDER CONCEALMENT HDD HOLDER ASSY LEFT HDD HOLDER ASSY RHGHT For VT7600 ODD DOOR DISGUISE 5 25 EMPTY COVER FDD BUTTON UPPER COVER DAUGHTER BOARD TOP COVER ASSY BLACK DAUGHTER BOARD TOP COVER BLACK DAUGHTER BOARD PLATE BLACK PLASTIC DAUGHTER BOARD PLATE METAL I O SHIELD I O BRACKET RETENTION MODULE W NAIL 4PCS IO BRACKET HOLDER CHASSIS W IO BRACKET DB BRACKET LED BRACKET WO IO SHIELD FDD HOLDER ODD HOLDER DISGUISE ODD HOLDER OPEN HDD HOLDER ASSY RIGHT HDD HOLDER ASSY LEFT 60 VO2VF 301 60 V02VF 302 42 V02VF 301 42 V02VF 302 42 V02VF 303 60 V02VF 303 42 V02VF 304 42 V02VF 305 60 V02VF 004 TBD 33 V02VF 301 33 V02VF 302 42 V02VF 306 42 V02VF 307 60 VO2VF 501 42 VO2VF 501 42 V02VF 302 60 V02VF 502 42 V02VF 502 42 76DV3 001 42 V02VF 503 33 VO2VF 501 33 76DV3 001 60 V02VF 503 33 V02VF 301 33 V02VF 502 33 V02VF 302 42 V02VF 306 42 V02VF 307 60 V02VF 702 42 V02VF 701 42
45. S Setup Utility Product Information PC Health Status Standard CMOS Features Frequency Voltage Control Advanced BIOS Features Load Optimized Defaults Advanced Chipset Features Set Supervisor Password Integrated Peripherals Power Management Se t Setup Enter Password PnP PCL Configurata tut Saving Esc Quit F9 Menu in BIOS T 1 Select Item F1 To disable the password press enter when prompted to enter the password The screen displays a message Save amp Exit Setup Change Set Disable Password confirming that the password has been disabled Chapter 2 Set User Password IMPORTANT To show the Set User Password 1 Choose Set Supervisor Password and press 2 Type the password and then press 3 Confirm the password and then press 4 The screen as below with Set User Password enabled will be shown To set a password 1 Atthe prompt type your password Your password can be up to 8 alphanumeric characters When you type the characters they appear as asterisks on the password screen box 2 After typing the password press enter At the next prompt re type your password and press enter again to confirm the new password After the password entry the screen automatically reverts to the main screen Phoenix AwardBIOS CHOS Setup Utility Product Information PC Health Status Standard CMOS Features Frequency Voltage Control Advanced BIOS Features Load Optimize
46. Slave and IDE Channel 1 Master Slave Setup 31 Advanced BIOS Features nannaa naaa eet eens 32 Advanced Chipset Features 0 0c eee eee 35 Integrated Peripherals ss ackelss Lemi Marsa s Koss dae at 37 Power Management Setup 0 00 eee tees 40 PHP P GC COnNGQUIATIONS n 4350818 dete sa bitin dear dr a tect Pease mote duet ded 43 PC Hedi SUS ea 45 PICGUEHICY CORIO 32 oats e ee le eh Gul tse thea noe ec A ms ac erates wrk ua te 46 Load Optimized Settings ollu nk eee eens 47 System S STU Lider a ben anti br Le Maddad Set dated an bate bod 48 Set Supervisor Password sataa ansan owas heals eS aoe a Sowa eee Bede es 48 Set User PASSWOrdi saar catia ee ciel ad Weta X ha AA Lek OB ents 49 Bypassing the Password 2 00 vnr vnr vnr eee n rene 49 SAVE amp EU SE TUD 2 2 2 9 abbed ere dg Geek b e dte 51 ET WIM SAVING saag re PA SEE Raa 52 Intel Serial ATA RAID Introduction 2 ll olon es 53 ATA Operate Mode ss xn ocue ss pete s Read ietce KS ses ES 53 RAID BIOS GOnmmour Quorn it mr ini an ok Shia Borg ie bn trond me raati in dat b s 56 Chapter 3 Machine Disassembly and Replacement 64 General Information 0 oloon 65 BEGGE YOU BOGI 24 250 Lord wierd Loke ek t eed DA 65 Disassembly Procedure Flowchart 0 0 0 c cece eee eens 66 Disassembling the Veriton 7600GTR GR V oss kkk knn 69 Disassembling the Veriton 5600GR V nananana nannaa aaaea 76 Disass
47. V02VF 702 42 V02VF 703 60 V02VF 703 42 V02VF 704 42 V02VF 705 42 V02VF 706 33 VO2VF 701 33 VO2VF 702 33 VO2VF 703 42 V02VF 304 42 V02VF 707 60 V02VF 704 33 VO2VF 704 33 VO2VF 705 33 VO2VF 706 42 V02VF 708 42 V02VF 709 118 INTERNAL SPEAKER 38MM NEOSONIC SP CRB04 001 reensamnereevmmsnms isranerant SYSTEM FAN W AIR DUCK TBD HEATSINK W LATCH HI V020B 005 HEATSINK W LATCH HI V020B 004 Foot Stand NNN E FOOT STAND PLASTIC 47 VO2VF 301 Screws SPS SCREW 86 RC9VF 001 MAIN BOARD SCREW 86 RC9VF 002 UPPER COVER SCREW 86 V02VF 301 SYSTEM FAN SCREW 86 V02VF 302 INTRUSION ALARM SCREW 86 V02VF 303 ODD DOOR SPRING 86 V02VF 304 THUMB SCREW 86 V02VF 305 119 Chapter 6 Chapter 6 120 Model Definition and Configuration Veriton 7600GTR 7600GT 7600V 5600GT 5600V 3600GT 3600V 1 Project Name Trumpet 2 Description Trumpet series is positioned to be the first Main Board product that supports the latest Intel Chipset Springdale G GV technology with DDR DIMM module and Hyper Threading Techology As a technology leader in the PC market Bassoon stands for not only the image of the best performance product for Intel s next generation mainstream platform but also a real time to market product for all customers demand to win the market entrance advantage Micro ATX Main board using Intel Pentium 4 Processor in the 478 Pin package delivers a mainstream desktop platform solution With Intel chipsets Spr
48. Veriton 7600GTR 7600GT 7600V Veriton 5600GT 5600V Veriton 3600GT 3600V Service Guide Service guide files and updates are available on the AIPG CSD web for more information please refer to http csd acer com tw SERVICE CD PART NO VD V03V3 001 PRINTED IN TAIWAN Revision History Please refer to the table below for the updates made on Veriton 7600GTR GT V 5600GT V and 3600GT V service guide Copyright Copyright O 2003 by Acer Incorporated All rights reserved No part of this publication may be reproduced transmitted transcribed stored in a retrieval system or translated into any language or computer language in any form or by any means electronic mechanical magnetic optical chemical manual or otherwise without the prior written permission of Acer Incorporated Disclaimer The information in this guide is subject to change without notice Acer Incorporated makes no representations or warranties either expressed or implied with respect to the contents hereof and specifically disclaims any warranties of merchantability or fitness for any particular purpose Any Acer Incorporated software described in this manual is sold or licensed as is Should the programs prove defective following their purchase the buyer and not Acer Incorporated its distributor or its dealer assumes the entire cost of all necessary servicing repair and any incidental or consequential damages resulting from any defect in the softw
49. a on the drive s and cause any member disks to become available as non RAID disks EXISTING DATA WITHIN THIS VOULME WILL BE LOST AND NON RECOVERABLE 60 61 Select the volume and press DEL key to delete the RAID volume The following prompt appears DELETE ARRAY MENU ALL DATA IN THE VOLUME WILL BE LOST Deleting a volume will destroy the volume data on the drive s and cause any member disks to become available as non RAID disks EXISTING DATA WITHIN THIS VOULME WILL BE LOST AND NON RECOVERABLE Press lt Y gt key to accept the volume deletion 3 Reset Disks to Non RAID Select option 3 Reset Disks to Non RAID and press ENTER to delete the RAID volume and remove any RAID structures from the drives The following screen appears WARNING Selecting Yes will cause all data on any RAID disk RAID Volume or Other RAID Disk to be lost Non RAID Disks None defined Press lt Y gt key to accept the selection NOTE You will lost all data on the RAID drives and any internal RAID structures when you perform this operation This operation may cause some issues such as incompatible RAID configuration or a failed volume or failed disk Chapter 2 RAID 0 RAID O uses an algorithm to break files into smaller files of the user defined size called the stripe size Once a file is broken down into these stripes each drive in the array receives one or more of these frag
50. ance When n O Off Fast Normal Normal is selected A20 is controlled by a keyboard controller or chipset hardware This item is used to enable or disable the typematic rate setting including Typematic Rate and Typematic Delay After Typematic Rate Setting is enabled this item allows you to set the rate characters second at which at keys are accelerated This item allows you to select the delay between when the key was first pressed and when the acceleration begins Specifies the type of BIOS password protection that is implemented Setup means that the password prompt appears only when end users try to run Setup System means that a password prompt appears every time when the computer is powered on or when end users try to run Setup This field is used to enable or disable the APIC Advanced Programmable Interrupt Controller Due to compliance with PC2001 design guide the system is able to run in APIC mode Enabling APIC mode will expand available IRQ resources from the system Enabled Disabled Settings 6 8 10 12 15 20 24 and 30 Settings 250 500 750 and 1000 Enabled Disabled Chapter 2 MPS Version Control For OS OS Select For DRAM gt 64MB HDD S M A R T Capability Report No FDD for WIN 95 Full Screen LOGO Show Chapter 2 This field allows you to select which MPS Multi Processor Specification version to be used for the operating system This item is only required
51. and the following screen appears USB Controller This setting is used to enable disable the Enabled onboard USB controller Disabled USB 2 0 Controller Set to Enabled if you need to use any USB 2 0 Enabled device in the operating system that does not Disabled support or have any USB 2 0 driver installed such as DOS USB Keyboard Support This item allows the BIOS to interact with a USB Enabled keyboard or mouse to work with MS DOS based Disabled utilities and non Windows modes Chapter 2 38 USB Mouse Support This item lets you enable or disable the USB Enabled mouse driver within the onboard BIOS The Disabled keyboard driver simulates legacy mouse command and lets you use a USB mouse during POST or after boot if you do not have a USB driver in the operating system AC97 Audio Auto allows the motherboard s BIOS to detect Enabled whether you re using any audio device If so the Disabled onboard audio controller will be enabled If not the onboard audio controller will be disabled If you want to use different controller cards to connect audio connectors set the field to Disabled Onboard LAN Control This setting controls the onboard LAN controller Enabled Disabled SuperlO Device Press Enter to enter the sub menu and the following screen appears POWER ON Function This controls how the PS 2 mouse or keyboard BUTTON ONLY Any KEY can power on the system Hotkey F11 Onboard FDC Controller Select Enabled i
52. are Acer is a registered trademark of Acer Corporation Intel is a registered trademark of Intel Corporation Pentium and Pentium IV are trademarks of Intel Corporation Other brand and product names are trademarks and or registered trademarks of their respective holders Conventions The following conventions are used in this manual Screen messages Denotes actual messages that appear on screen NOTE Gives bits and pieces of additional information related to the current topic WARNING Alerts you to any damage that might result from doing or not doing specific actions CAUTION Gives precautionary measures to avoid possible hardware or software problems IMPORTANT Reminds you to do specific actions relevant to the accomplishment of procedures Preface Before using this information and the product it supports please read the following general information 1 This Service Guide provides you with all technical information relating to the BASIC CONFIGURATION decided for Acer s global product offering To better fit local market requirements and enhance product competitiveness your regional office MAY have decided to extend the functionality of a machine e g add on card modem or extra memory capability These LOCALIZED FEATURES will NOT be covered in this generic service guide In such cases please contact your regional offices or the responsible personnel channel to provide you with further technical details Ple
53. ase note WHEN ORDERING FRU PARTS that you should check the most up to date information available on your regional web or channel If for whatever reason a part number change is made it will not be noted in the printed Service Guide For ACER AUTHORIZED SERVICE PROVIDERS your Acer office may have a DIFFERENT part number code to those given in the FRU list of this printed Service Guide You MUST use the list provided by your regional Acer office to order FRU parts for repair and service of customer machines VI Table of Contents Chapter 1 System Specifications 1 NAVN sr NS GE See Se 1 EEE EE EN EN EN Bie Seas Sn Seah aaah Ween amp Say 2 Front Panel for Veriton 3600GT V 1 e an 3 Rear Panel for Veriton 3600GT V ll lol soon LL 5 Front Panel for Veriton 5600GT V 2 1 ll ll n kN 7 Rear Panel for Veriton 5600GT V 1 ll look 9 Front Panel for Veriton 7600GTR GT V loss ees 11 Rear Panel for Veriton 7600GTR GT V 2 ll soolon 13 System Block Diagram 2sarr saved bena Sekker EA 15 KODEN sie star re 16 Hardware Specifications and Configurations lol uns 18 Memory Channel Mode 00 eee eens 23 Chapter 2 System Utilities 26 EE SS CUD A ch n gen anbe de teria th cated dense dh id om Gene marae aod pp sm dvd Gi d a 27 FPROGUGCU IATOMIMOUON sisu 55 dita eee hace tae ken Salin T sasos RES Dies Da avas 28 slandard GMOS Features srani eraai sha L ski deed Lee eee eee 29 IDE Channel 0 Master
54. atures set Supervisor Password Integrated Periph Power Management SAVE to CMOS and EKIT PnP PCI Configura Esc Quit F9 Menu in BIOS T 1 Select Item F10 Save amp Exit Setup Save Data to CMOS When the Save and Exit dialog box appears press lt Y gt to save and exit or press lt N gt to return to the main menu 51 Chapter 2 Exit Without Saving Highlight this item and press lt Enter gt to discard any changes that you have made in the Setup Utility and exit the Setup Utility Phoenix AwardBLOS CMOS Setup Utility Product Information PC Health Status Standard CMOS Features Frequency Voltage Control Advanced BIOS Features Load Optimized Defaults Advanced Chipset Features set Supervisor Password Integrated Periphe Power Management Quit Without Saving Y N PnP PCI Configurat OF t Saving Esc Quit F9 Menu in BIOS T 1 Select Item F10 Save amp Exit Setup Abandon all Data When the Exit Without Saving dialog box appears press lt Y gt to discard changes and exit or press lt N gt to return to the main menu NOTE If you have made settings that you do not want to save use the Exit Without Saving item and press lt Y gt to discard any changes you have made Chapter 2 52 Intel Serial ATA RAID Introduction The southbridge ICH5R provides a hybrid solution that combines two independent SATA ports for support of up to two Serial ATA Serial ATA RAID drives Serial ATA
55. can play audio CD but no sound output Real time clock is inaccurate Chapter 4 1 CD DVD ROM may have dirt or foreign material on it Check with a known good disc CD DVD ROM is not inserted properly CD DVD ROM is damaged Disconnect all cables from CD DVD ROM drive except power cable then press eject button to try to unload the disk CD DVD ROM drive power CD DVD ROM drive CD may have dirt or foreign material on it Check with a known good disc Ensure the CD DVD ROM driver is installed properly CD DVD ROM drive Ensure the headphone jack of the CD DVD ROM has an output Turn up the sound volume Speaker power connection cable CD DVD ROM drive Ensure the information in the Standard CMOS Feature of BIOS Setup is set correctly RTC battery Main board 100 101 comes from speakers Modem ring cannot wake up system from suspend mode Data fax modem software program invokes but cannot receive send data fax Fax voice modem software program invokes but has no sound output Data files are received normally voice from modem cannot be produced but system sound feature works normally Video memory test failed Video adapter failed Display problem Incorrect colors No high intensity Missing broken or incorrect characters Blank monitor dark Blank monitor bright Distorted image Unreadable monitor Other monitor problems Display changing color
56. connect the two front USB connectors from the main board Disconnect the LAN LED connector from the main board 0 ME28ZEaa7s 4 Disconnectthe one button recovery connector chassis intrusion switch connector front panel connectors and system fan connector from the main board Removing the System Fan Power Supply and Main Board 1 Remove the four screws holding the system fan 2 Take out the system fan Chapter 3 79 3 Remove the four screws holding the power supply on the rear side 4 Detach the power supply from the housing carefully 5 Remove the eight screws holding the main board as the picture shows 6 Detach the main board from the lower case carefully Removing the LED Module and Daughter Board Module 1 Remove one screw holding the LED module holder 2 Removethe LED module as the picture shows 3 Remove the two screws holding the intrusion alarm and then take out the intrusion alarm 80 Chapter 3 4 Remove one screw holding the daughter board bracket 5 Remove the daughter board module as the picture Shows 6 Disconnect the front panel audio connector from the daughter board 7 Disconnect the two front USB connectors from the daughter board 8 Remove the two screws holding the daughter board 9 Remove the daughter board from the daughter board bracket Chapter 3 81 Disassembling the Veriton 3600GT V Opening the Housing This section tells you h
57. d Boot Device Third Boot Device This parameter allows you to specify the system boot up search sequence This parameter allows you to specify the system boot up search sequence This parameter allows you to specify the system boot up search sequence Enabled Disabled Floppy LS120 Hard Disk CD ROM ZIP100 LAN on board LAN Boot from LAN Disabled Floppy LS120 Hard Disk CD ROM ZIP100 LAN on board LAN Boot from LAN Disabled Floppy LS120 Hard Disk CD ROM ZIP100 LAN on board LAN Boot from LAN Disabled Boot Other Device This parameter allows you to specify the system Enabled boot up search seguence Disabled Swap Floppy Drive Setting to Enabled will swap floppy drive a and b Enabled Disabled Boot Up Floppy Seek Setting to Enabled will make BIOS seek floppy Enabled drive a before booting the system Disabled Boot Up NumLock Status Gate A20 Option Typematic Rate Setting Typematic Rate Typematic Delay Security Option APIC Mode Sets the NumLock status when the system is powered on Setting to On will turn on the NumLock key when the system is powered on Setting to Off will allows users to use the arrow keys on the numeric keypad This item is to set the Gate A20 status A20 refers to the first 64KB of extended memory When the default value Fast is selected the Gate A20 is controlled by port 92 or chipset specific method resulting in faster system perform
58. d Defaults Advanced Chipset Features set Supervisor Password D Integrated Peripherals Set User Password Power Management er t Setup Enter Password PnP PCI Configurata_ oioo HHHRVTVT ut Saving Esc Quit F9 Menu in BIOS T J Select Item Fi Save amp Exit Setup Change Set Disable Password To disable the password press enter when prompted to enter the password The screen displays a message confirming that the password has been disabled Bypassing the Password If you forgot your password you can bypass the password security feature through hardware configuration RTC Battery Follow these steps to bypass the password 1 Turn off and unplug the system 2 Open the system housing Take off battery and short it 3 Place on RTC battery reboot the system and enter setup menu to load default setting 49 Chapter 2 Clear CMOS Follow these steps to bypass the password 1 Reset CMOS by adjusting JBAT1 to 2 3 2 Reboot the system 3 Adjust the JP2 back to 1 2 NOTE Please refer to the following JBAT1 Clear CMOS Chapter 2 50 Save amp Exit Setup Highlight this item and press lt Enter gt to save the changes that you have made in the Setup Utility and exit the Setup Utility Phoenix AwardBLOS CMOS Setup Utility Product Information PC Health Status Standard CHOS Features Frequency Voltage Control Advanced BIOS Features Load Optimized Defaults Advanced Chipset Fe
59. dicates that one or more keys have been pressed during the keyboard tests Be sure no objects are resting on the keyboard 97 Chapter 4 Memory Test This message displays during a full memory test counting down the memory areas being tested Memory test fail If POST detects an error during memory testing additional information appears giving specifics about the type and location of the memory error Override enabled Defaults loaded If the system cannot boot using the current CMOS configuration the BIOS can override the current configuration with a set of BIOS defaults designed for the most stable minimal performance system operations Press TAB to show POST screen System OEMs may replace the Phoenix Technologies Award BIOS POST display with their own proprietary display Including this message in the OEM display permits the operator to switch between the OEM display and the default POST display Primary master hard disk fail POST detects an error in the primary master IDE hard drive Primary slave hard disk fail POST detects an error in the secondary master IDE hard drive Secondary master hard disk fail POST detects an error in the primary slave IDE hard drive Secondary slave hard disk fail POST detects an error in the secondary slave IDE hard drive Chapter 4 98 Error Symptoms List NOTE To diagnose a problem first find the error symptom in the left column If directed to a check procedure replace the FRU ind
60. e Optimal configurations for highest performance Matched DDR400 Double sided DIMMs 2 Dual Channel Mode Symmetrical DIMM population Lightly Loaded Config Ch ChB or Q Matched DDR400 Dual Channel Mode Fully Loaded Config or rs 2 Symmetrical DIMM population with matched double sided DIMMs When not using DDR400 highest performing configuration Q Lightly loaded memory population aids in higher performance 2 x8 Bus Width and lower DIMM cache latency also assists in higher performance Dual Channel memory configuration provides higher performance than Single Channel configurations Matched DIMMs need to have identical density DRAM technology DRAM bus width and equal number of memory banks Optimal platform performance with Dual Channel DDR400 matched DIMMs a Fully loaded configurations can be single or double sided DIMMs a Lightly loaded configurations need to be double sided DIMMs When not using DDR400 best performance obtained with 2 Symmetrical DIMM population and matched double sided DIMMs QO Lightly loaded configuration Chapter 1 25 System Utilities Most systems are already configured by the manufacturer or the dealer There is no need to run Setup when starting the computer unless you get a Run Setup message The Setup program loads configuration values into the battery backed nonvolatile memory called CMOS RAM This memory area is not part of the system RAM NOTE If you repeatedly recei
61. e so you must run a total system check to ensure that no other activity has been affected by the change This system check can be done through the diagnostics program NOTE Check all power supply voltages switch and jumper settings before you replace the main board Also check the power supply voltages if you have a system no power condition If you are unable to correct the problem by using the BIOS Messages List table and Error Symptoms List table go to Undetermined Problems To diagnose a problem first find the BIOS error messages in the left column If directed to a check procedure replace the FRU indicated in the check procedure If no check procedure is indicated the first Action FRU listed in right column is the most likely cause BIOS ROM checksum error System halted The checksum of the BIOS code in the BIOS chip is incorrect indicating the BIOS code may have become corrupt Contact your system dealer to replace the BIOS CMOS Battery Failed The CMOS battery is no longer functional Contact your system dealer for a replacement the BIOS CMOS Checksum Error defaults loaded Checksum of CMOS is incorrect so the system loads the default eguipment configuration A checksum error may indicate that CMOS has become corrupt A weak battery may have caused this error Check the battery and replace If necessary Display switch is set incorrectly The display switch on the motherboard can be set to either monochro
62. ed Chapter 2 Power Management Setup Phoenix AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility Power Management Setup ACPI Function ACPI Suspend Type Run VGABIOS if 3 Resume Power Management Video Off Method Video Off In Suspend Suspend Type MODEM Use IRQ Suspend Mode HDD Power Down Sof t Off by PWR BITN CPU THRH Throttling Wake Up by PCI PHE FAN CONTROL Power On by Ring USB KB Wake Up From 53 Resume by Alarm Datelof Month Alarm Timelhh mm ss Alarm Enabled S30STR Auto User Definel DPHS Yes Stop Grant 3 Disabled Disabled Item Help Menu Level p Disabled Enabled Enabled Disabled pn H Q Reload Global Timer Events Primary IDE Primary IDE 1 Secondary IDE 6 Secondary IDE 1 FDD COM LPT Port PCI PIRQUA DI Tl Hove Enter Select PU PD Value Fo Previous Values Disabled Disabled Disabled Disabled Disabled Disabled ESC Exit F10 Save F O ytimized Defaults Fl General Help The Power Management menu lets you configure the system power management feature It works only in APM mode IMPORTANT If an ACPI aware operating system such as Windows 98 or Windows 2000 is installed in ACPI mode the operating system will use the ACPI interfaces Then the settings in Power Management page is non effective The following screen shows the Power Management parameters and their default settings Chapter 2 40 The f
63. ed 5 Invoke video BIOS 2Dh 1 Initialize multi language 2 Put information on screen display including Award title CPU type CPU speed Chapter 4 gt 3h Test 8259 functionality gt gt 3 00 I Reserved aN OT 3 Reserved aN O a gt Reserved Initialize EISA slot IA 3 Reserved aN 3 1 Calculate total memory by testing the last double word of each 64K 2 Program writes allocation for AMD K5 CPU Ah Reserved Bh Reserved Ch Reserved Dh Reserved Eh 1 Program MTRR of M1 CPU 2 Initialize L2 cache for P6 class CPU amp program CPU with proper cacheable range 3 Initialize the APIC for P6 class CPU AJAJAJ AJA 4 On MP platform adjust the cacheable range to smaller one in case the cacheable ranges between each CPU are not identical aN TI Reserved Initialize USB 51h Reserved OT N 3 Test all memory clear all extended memory to 0 OT O 3 Reserved Reserved OT I O I Display number of processors multi processor platform OT R gt Reserved OT N 1 Display PnP logo 2 Early ISA PnP initialization Assign CSN to every ISA PnP device 00 I Reserved Initialize the combined Trend Anti Virus code eno jea SSCS en imane me combro Tend amiviusee OoOo C jaa 5Bh Optional Feature Show message for entering AWDFLASH EXE from FDD optional 1 Initialize Init Onboard Super IO switch A Reserved
64. elp Optimized Defaults Enabled SME Auto The following table describes each Advanced Chipset Features parameter Settings in boldface are the default and suggested settings Parameter DRAM Timing Selectable Selects whether DRAM timing is controlled by the Options SPD Serial Presence Detect EEPROM on the DRAM module Setting to By SPD enables DRAM timings to be determined by BIOS based on the configurations on the SPD Selecting Manual allows users to configure the DRAM timings manually CAS Latency Time receiving it Settings 2 2 5 3 clocks 2 clocks increases the system performance the most while 3 clocks provides the most stable performance Active to Precharge Delay The field specifies the idle cycles before 5T 6T 7T 8T precharging an idle bank DRAM RAS to CAS Delay 35 This controls the timing delay in clock cycles before SDRAM starts a read command after This field allows you to set the number of cycles for a timing delay between the CAS and RAS strobe signals used when DRAM is written to read from or refreshed Fast speed offers faster performance while slow speed offers more stable performance 2T 2 51 3T 2T 3T 4T Chapter 2 DRAM RAS Precharge This item controls the number of cycles for Row Address Strobe RAS to be allowed to precharge If insufficient time is allowed for the RAS to accumulate its charge before DRAM refresh refresh may be incomplete and DRAM ma
65. em enables the microphone in jack in front and disables the one at the back Connectivity 2 Three 32 bit v2 3 Master PCI bus slots support 3 3v 5v PCI bus interface 2 One AGP slot supports 8x 4x at 0 8V AGP 3 0 or 4x at 1 5V 3 3V not supported for Intel 865G chipset 2 Two PS 2 interfaces for mouse and keyboard 3 One serial port QO One parallel port 3 One VGA port a Eight Universal Serial Bus USB 2 0 ports two internal two on the front and four on the rear panel 2 High speed V92 56K Fax modem optional QO Broadcom 5705 10 100 1000MB Gigabit Ethernet LAN support with remote wake up function Expansion 2 3 PCI slots 4 DIMM slots 1 AGP slot for Intel 865G chipset Q Upgradeable memory and hard disk Chapter 1 Front Panel for Veriton 3600GT 3600V The computer s front panel consists of the following EN oe i Optical drive Stop Eject Button 4 Power button Chapter 1 NOTE The system has two microphone in ports front and rear However you can not use both of them at the same time The default setting for your system enables the microphone in port in front and disables the one at the back Chapter 1 Rear Panel for Veriton 3600GT 3600V
66. embling the Veriton 3600GR V 2 ll solo oss 82 Chapter 4 Troubleshooting 90 Power On Self Test POS T ta 20 n avun ia dee eeu SAG wees Sodan 91 POST Error Messages List sete Ede 97 Error VIO TOMAS LE seas vs iat Ss sg t ait Be tach de Gade 99 Undetermined Problems 0 ita cc ee eee nes 103 Chapter5 Jumper and Connector Information 104 Jumper and Connector Description aaa aaaea ee 104 Jumper and Connector Description 0 00 ee ees 105 VII Table of Contents JAMPEF SENNA adeeb roses att 8 Tehd Ka kS Fe Tata v 105 Main Board Layout 2 loss k sk K eee eee eens 106 Chapter 6 FRU Field Replaceable Unit List 108 Veriton 7600GTR GR V Exploded Diagram 0 000 ee eee 109 Veriton 5600GR V Exploded Diagram 000 cc ees 110 Veriton 3600GR V Exploded Diagram 0 cc eee 111 Appendix A Model Definition and Configuration 121 Appendix B Test Compatible Components 122 Microsoft Windows XP Environment Test 0000 eee eee 123 Appendix C Online Support Information 126 VIII Table of Contents System Specifications Overview The Veriton 7600GTR 7600GT 7600V 5600GT 5600V and 3600GT 3600V supports Intel Pentium 4 processor with Hyper Threading HT Technology adding intelligence to help manage and prioritize multiple threads received from the microprocessor This highly flexible and scalable solution meets a broad range of demanding computing needs
67. f you are already in the main menu press ESC again to exit Setup The parameters on the screens show default values These values may not be the same as those in your system The grayed items on the screens have fixed settings and are not user configurable 27 Chapter 2 Product Information The screen below appears if you select Product Information from the main menu The Product Information menu contains general data about the system such as the product name serial number BIOS version etc These information is necessary for troubleshooting maybe required when asking for technical support Phoenix AwardBLOS CMOS Setup Utility Product Information Product Name 000000000000000000000 Sen dl er 000000000000000000000 Hain Board ID HAANAAAHHAAQAAAHAAQHA Henu Level a Main Board S N 000000000000000000000 System BIOS Version 6 00 E SMBIOS version SHBTOS 2 3 System BIOS ID R 3 A BIOS release Date 000000000000000000000 fTl Move Enter Select PU PD Value Fl Save ESC Exit Fl General Help D Previous Values Fi Optimized Defaults The following table describes the parameters found in this menu Parameter Description Product Name Displays the model name of your system Serial Number Number Serial Number Displays your system s serialnumber your system s Displays your system s serial number lt lt lt number Main Board ID Displays the main board s identification number Main Board S N Displays you
68. f your system has a floppy disk Enabled controller FDD installed on the system board Disabled and you wish to use it If you install add on FDC or the system has no floppy drive select Disabled in this field Onboard Serial Port 1 This option is used to assign the I O address and Disable 3F8 IRQ4 2F8 IRQ3 interrupt request IRQ for onboard serial port 2 3E8 IRQ4 2E8 IRQ3 Auto Onboard Serial Port 2 This option is used to assign the I O address and Disable 3F8 IRQ4 2F8 IRQ3 interrupt request IRQ for onboard serial port 2 3E8 IRQ4 2E8 IRQ3 Auto Onboard Parallel Port This option is used to assign the I O address and Disabled 378 IRQ7 278 IRQ5 interrupt request IRQ for the onboard parallel 3BC IRQ7 port Parallel Port Mode Enables you to set the data transfer protocol for SPP EPP1 9 SPP ECP your parallel port EPP1 9 ECP PRINTER SPP Standard Parallel Port EPP Enhanced EPP1 7 SPP EPP1 7 ECP Parallel Port ECP Extended Capabilities Port and ECP EPP ECP Mode Use DMA When the onboard parallel port is set to ECP 3 1 mode the parallel port can use DMA 3 or DMA 1 PWRON After PWR fail This item specifies whether your system will Off On Former sts reboot after a power failure or interrupt occurs Available settings are Off Leaves the computer in the power off state On Leaves the computer in the power on state Former sts Restores the system to the status before power failure or interrupt occurr
69. he daughter board plate from the daughter board module 10 Remove the two screws holding the daughter board 11 Remove the daughter board 12 Disconnect the front panel audio connector from the daughter board 13 Disconnect the two front USB connectors from the daughter board 74 Chapter 3 Removing the Intrusion Alarm and LCD Module 1 Remove the two screws holding the intrusion alarm and then take out the intrusion alarm 2 Remove one screw holding the LED module holder 3 Remove the LED module as the picture Shows gt Sv DIT e o e o o o oo e o o o a 2 o 0 292939 o o o e gt oe J o o 2 o 0 P o o o o p o e o o 2 s o o o p o o F o o e p o p 2 o p oo n O O 4 Remove one screw holding the reset button holder as the picture shows 5 Pull out the reset cable carefully Chapter 3 15 Disassembling the Veriton 5600GT V Opening the Housing This section tells you how to open the housing cover when you need to install additional components inside the system unit CAUTION Before you proceed make sure that you have turned off the system and all peripherals connected to it Removing the Housing 1 Remove the two screws holding the upper cover 2 Slide the upper cover out and then gently pull it outward to detach it from the housing Removing the ODD FDD HDD 1 Remove one screw holding the bracket holder 2 Remove the
70. hipset on die VGA Charming Standard 2 1 Channel Charming Internal speaker Neosonic 3W 3W 15W Active AC Acer White 002 Philips 5W 5W ACTIVE 12V Wireless LAN Adapter Zcom PCI 802 11 CARD Modem Adapter Power Supply Keyboard PS 2 Appendix B Askey V92 56K HSFI ATX GVC Modem F1156I R12 EU ATX Acer Genesis Mini Tower HF Acer Genesis Mini Tower 200W PFC Acer Genesis Mini Tower 200W non PFC FSP 200W PFC FSP 200W non PFC Swiss 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 US 104keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Thailand 104keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Czech 104keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Arabic 104keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Belgium 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Chinese 104keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Danish 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Italian 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 French 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Germany 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Hebrew 104keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Slovenian 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Slovakian 104keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Iceland 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Norwegian 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Portuguese 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Turkey F 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Russian 104keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Spanish 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 Turkey 105keys Gift box w palm KBP2971 PS 2 UK 105keys Gift box
71. icantly slow down RAID O performance as well For example if we had a 1KB stripe size and a 128KB file each drive would have to be written to 64 times to store 64 different 1KB files This creates a bottleneck as the drive attempts to read or write a large number of times for a single file As we mentioned before RAID O has no fault tolerance meaning that if one drive in the array fails the whole array is shot There is no way to rebuild or repair the information stored on a RAID O array This makes a RAID 0 is setup the most susceptible to failure RAID type a fact that usually keeps users with sensitive data from choosing RAID O as their RAID setup At the same time however RAID O is the fastest of all RAID setups Since there is no overhead reguired to store extra information for fault tolerance the speed of RAID O can theoretically perform 2 times the speed of a single drive when there are 2 drives in the array Adding more drives only increases this theoretical performance amount so if you have a 6 drive RAID O array performance could be as large as 6 times the performance of a single drive Using different hard drives in a RAID O setup can result in two problems First off the size of the RAID array will only be the size of the smallest drive multiplied by the number of drives in the array This is because the controller always writes to all the drives in the array and once one is filled no more information can be stored on the array Sec
72. icated in the check procedure If no check procedure is indicated the first Action FRU listed in right column is the most likely cause Processor Processor Fan NOTE Normally the processor fan should be operative and the processor clock setting should be exactly set to match its speed reguirement before diagnosing any processor problems Processor fan does not run but power supply 1 Ensure the system is not in power saving mode See Power fan runs Management in chapter 2 2 With the system power on measure the voltage of processor fan connector Its reading should be 12Vdc Its reading should be 12Vdc If the reading shows normal but the fan still does not work then replace a good fan 3 Main board Processor test failed 1 Processor 2 Main board Main board and Memory NOTE Ensure the memory modules are installed properly and the contact leads are clean before diagnosing any system problems Memory test failed 1 See Memory 2 Main board Incorrect memory size shown or repeated Insert the memory modules in the DIMM sockets properly then during POST reboot the system Memory module Main board System works but fails to enter power saving Enter BIOS Setup and load default settings mode when the Power Management Mode In Windows Systems check settings in Power Management is set to Enabled Property of Control Panel Reload software from Recovery CD Blinking cursor only system does not
73. ing strap and conductive mat for preventing electrostatic discharge Flat bladed screwdriver Phillips screwdriver Hexagonal screwdriver Plastic stick NOTE The screws for the different components vary in size During the disassembly process group the screws with the corresponding components to avoid mismatches when putting back the components Chapter 3 64 General Information Before You Begin Before proceeding with the disassembly procedure make sure that you do the following 1 Turn off the power to the system and all peripherals 2 Unplug the AC adapter and all power and signal cables from the system Chapter 3 65 Disassembly Procedure Flowchart The flowchart on the succeeding page gives you a graphical representation on the entire disassembly seguence and instructs you on the components that need to be removed during servicing Veriton 7600GTR GT V Man Board CD VD BOM 66 Chapter 3 Veriton 5600GT V Chapter 3 67 68 Veriton 3600GT V Chapter 3 Disassembling the Veriton 7600GTR GT V Opening the Housing This section tells you how to open the housing cover when you need to install additional components inside the system unit CAUTION Before you proceed make sure that you have turned off the system and all peripherals connected to it Removing the Housing 1 Turn off the system power and unplug all cables 2 Remove the two screws holding the upper cover 3 Slide
74. ingdale G GV and ICH5 5R VT7600GR series provides the processor interface DDR Double Data rate interface and HUB interface The CPU interface supports the Intel Pentium 4 processor subset of the Extended Mode of Scalable Bus Protocol Intel Springdale G GV is optimized for thelntel Pentium 4 processor and Intel Northwood processor It supports double data rate DRAM at 400MHz 333MHz 266MHz Appendix A 121 Test Compatible Components This computer s compatibility is a test plan released by Acer Internal Testing Department Once the final report is available this chapter will be revised accordingly Appendix B 122 Microsoft Windows XP Environment Test Processor Intel Celeron 2 4G 2 5G 2 6G 2 7G 2 8G Socket 478 Intel Northwood 2 4G 2 6G 2 8G 3 0G 3 06G D1 3 2G Socket 478 Infineon DDR 333 256MB 0 11u CL 2 5 Infineon DDR400 128MB 0 14u 32M 8 16 CL 3 Infineon DDR400 256MB 0 14u 32M 8 16 CL 3 Infineon DDR400 512MB 0 14u 32M 8 16 CL 3 Nanya DDR 333 128MB 0 14u 16M 16 4 Nanya DDR 333 256MB 0 14u CL2 5 Nanya DDR 333 512MB 0 14u CL2 5 Nanya DDR 400 256MB CPU Fan Sink up to 2 8G standard above 2 8G standard Panasonic FDD 1 44MB 1 H Mitsumi 3 mode FDD 1 44MB NEC 3 mode FDD 1 44MB HDD S ATA Seagate Barracuda Alpine SATA 80G 7200RPM Seagate Barracuda Alpine SATA 120G 7200RPM Seagate Barracuda Alpine SATA 160G 7200RPM IDE Cable Ultra 100 3 CONN 150 300 Audio Cable 4 pin Audio Cable 4
75. is Intrusion Switch Connector 20 pin Power Connector PCI1 3 Peripheral Component Interconnecto Slots Ultra ATA HDD Connectors JAUD1 Front Panel Audio Connector IDE1 Primary IDE Connector IDE2 Secondary IDE Connector SYSFAN 1 System Fan Connector CD1 CD In Connector SATA1 2 Serial ATA HDD Connectors LAN Jumper Front Panel Connectors Accelerated Graphics Port Slot Jumper Setting amp TI T FI als U Br Sis JBAT1 EJ i 1 2 Normal 0 3 2 3 Clear CMOS JBIOS1 BIOS Flash Locked BIOS Flash Unlocked JLAN1 3 Enable 1 0 CBA 3 Disable JAUD1 5 mum 6 Emo If you do not want to connect to the front audio header pins 5 amp 6 9 amp 10 have to be jumpered in order to have signal output directed to the rear audio ports Otherwise the Line Out connector on the back panel will not function NOTE Default Settings 105 Chapter 5 Main Board Layout Bottom Top mouse keyboard 000000000000900000000 000000 00000000000000000000000000 OANQ0Q00A000NO0ANOQ0DND0000 0Q00090000000000000000000000 82t LIMOS
76. itch connector front panel connectors and system fan connector from the main board Removing the CPU Fan Sink CPU and System Fan 1 Disconnect the CPU fan connector from the main board 2 Remove the two latches on both side of the fan sink 3 Remove the CPU fan sink from the main board 4 Pull the socket lever up to 90 degree and then pull out the CPU from the socket 5 Put the socket lever back to the original position 72 Chapter 3 6 Remove the four screws holding the system fan 7 Take out the system fan Removing the Power Supply and Main Board 1 Remove the four screws holding the power supply on the rear side 2 Detach the power supply from the housing carefully 3 Remove the eight screws holding the main board as the picture shows 4 Detach the main board from the lower case carefully C SSeS Hew n om We I ep Removing the Upper Cover and Daughter Board Module 1 Remove the two screws holding the upper cover as the picture Shows 2 Cut the cable clamp with the tweezers Chapter 3 73 3 Detach the upper cover from the housing carefully 4 Remove the four screws holding the daughter board plate 5 Remove the daughter board plate 6 Remove the daughter board top cover as the picture Shows 7 Cut the cable clamp holding the two front USB cables and front panel audio cable 8 Remove the daughter board module from the upper cover 9 Remove t
77. items are tested during POST but is for the most part transparent to the user The Power On Self Test POST is a BIOS procedure that boots the system initializes and diagnoses the system components and controls the operation of the power on password option If POST discovers errors in system operations at power on it displays error messages on screen generates a check point code at port 80h or even halts the system if the error is fatal The main components on the main board that must be diagnosed and or initialized by POST to ensure system functionality are as follows Q Microprocessor with built in numeric co processor and cache memory subsystem Direct Memory Access DMA controller Interrupt system Three programmable timers ROM subsystem RAM subsystem CMOS RAM subsystem and real time clock calendar with battery backup Onboard parallel interface controller Embedded hard disk interface and one diskette drive interface Keyboard and auxiliary device controllers 1 44M floppy controller I O ports 3 One parallel port DODDO 2 O O UL Q One PS 2 compatible mouse port QO One PS 2 compatible keyboard port NOTE When Post executes a task it uses a series of preset numbers called check points to be latched at port 80h indicating the stages it is currently running This latch can be read and shown on a debug board The following table describes the BIOS common tasks carried out by POST Each task is denoted by an unigue check poi
78. lected Instant Off the soft power switch on the front panel can be used to control power On Suspend and Off If the switch is pressed less than 4 sec during power On the system will go into Suspend mode If the switch is pressed longer than 4 sec the system will be turned Off The other setting is Instant Off where the soft power switch is only used to control On and Off there is no need to press 4 sec and there is no Suspend Disabled 1 Min 2 Min 4 Min 8 CPU THRM Throttling The item allows YOU to specify the CPU speed From 12 5 to 87 5 at 12 5 at percentage to which it will slow down when ncrement the CPU reaches the predetermined overheat temperature Wake Up by PCI PME These fields specify whether the system willbe Disabled awakened from power saving modes when Enabled activity or input signal of the specified hardware peripheral or component is detected FAN CONTROL This setting is used to enable disable the fan Enabled speed control function Disabled Power On by Ring When Enabled any fax modem activity wakes Enabled up the system from suspend mode Disabled USB KB Wake up from S3 This setting allows you to enter Any Key Disabled max 8 numbers to wake up the system from Enabled S3 state Resume by Alarm Use this option to set the date and time for your Disabled computer to boot up Enabled Date of month Alarm Indicate month when Set Resume by Alarm to system will boot up Set it t
79. me or color This message indicates the switch is set to a different setting than indicated in Setup Determine which setting is correct and then either turn off the system and change the jumper or enter Setup and change the Video selection Press ESC to skip memory test The user may press Esc to skip the full memory test Floppy disk s fail Cannot find or initialize the floppy drive controller or the drive Make sure the controller is installed correctly if no floppy drives are installed be sure the Diskette Drive selection in Setup is set to NONE or AUTO HARD DISK initializing Please wait a moment Some hard drives require extra time to initialize HARD DISK INSTALL FAILURE Cannot find or initialize the hard drive controller or the drive Make sure the controller is installed correctly If no hard drives are installed be sure the Hard Drive Selection in Setup is set to NONE Hard disk s diagnosis fail The system may run specific disk diagnostic routines This message appears if one or more hard disks return an error when the diagnostics run Keyboard Error Or No Keyboard Present Cannot initialize the keyboard Make sure the keyboard is attached correctly and no keys are pressed during POST To purposely configure the system without a keyboard set the error halt condition in Setup to HALT ON ALL BUT KEYBOARD The BIOS then ignores the missing keyboard during POST Keyboard is locked out Unlock the key This message usually in
80. ments For example if there are two drives in a RAID O array with a 64KB stripe size and the RAID controller gets a command to write a single 128KB file the file is broken down into two 64KB stripes Next one of the two stripes is sent to disk 1 and the other to disk 2 simultaneously This completes the write process Naturally this decreases the time reguired to write a file since more than one disk is working to store the information In our example above the time associated with writing our 128KB file turns out to be the time reguired to write a single 64KB file since this is what is what occurs simultaneously on both disks in the array The speed of reading a file back is also increased with a sufficiently large file Let s use our 128KB file on a two disk RAID O array with a 64KB stripe size for example again After the data is stored on both drives in the array it can be read back by reading the two 64KB files from each drive at the same time Thus once again the time reguired to read back our 128KB file is actually only the time reguired to read a single 64KB file In some situations when a file is smaller than the stripe the file is not broken up and instead is written to the array as is This results in no speed improvement over a non RAID O setup because the drives on the array are not working together when reading or writing At the same time an extremely small stripe size makes a drive do more work than it can handle and can signif
81. ndor amp Model Name Panasonic JU 256A048P Mitsumi D353M3D R694005 NEC FD1231T STD R2 Floppy Disk Specifications Media Recognition 1 44 MB 160 300 2 5V Power requirement max Startup peak 290mA W Floppy disk drive controller resident bus Support FDD format 360KB 720KB 1 2MB 1 44MB 2 88MB 3 mode Parallel Port Parallel port controller Embedded in SMSC LPC47M192 Number of parallel ports Parallel port function control Optional ECP DMA channel in BIOS Setup Optional parallel port I O address via BIOS Setup Optional parallel port IRQ via BIOS Setup Serial Port Serial port controller Embedded in SMSC LPC47M192 e L Number of serial port 2 Serial ports location COM1 COM 2 Reserve for header Connector type 15 pin connector 1 with pin reserve Optional serial port I O address via BIOS Setup 2F8 2FF 3F8 3FF Chapter 1 USB Port Universal UHCI USB 1 1 Universal EHCI USB 2 0 USB Class Support legacy keyboard for legacy mode Main Board Major Chips North Bridge Intel 865G 865GV Intel 865G865GV S Keyboard controller Built in Intel ICHSR ICH5 RTC Built in Intel ICH5R ICH5 Environmental Requirements Non operating 20 to 60 C Storage package Operating 15 to 80 RH non condensing Non operating 15 to 80 RH non condensing Unpacked Non operating 15 to 80 RH non condensing Storage package Operating 5 16 2 Hz 0 38mm peak to peak 16 2 250 Hz 0 2G
82. nimum Power Management Suspend Mode 1 Hour Max Saving Maximum Power Management Suspend Mode 1 Min User Define Allows end users to configure each mode separately Video Off Method This determines the manner in which the DPMS monitor is blanked V H SYNC Blank V H SYNC Blank This selection will cause Blank Screen the system to turn off the vertical and horizontal synchronization ports and write blanks to the video buffer Blank Screen This option only writes blanks to the video buffer DPMS Initial display power management signaling Video Off In Suspend This option enables the monitor to be turned off Yes during the suspend mode No Suspend Type This item allows you to select he suspend type Stop Grant for system power management PwrOn Suspend MODEM Use IRQ This determines the IRQ in which the MODEM 13 4 5 7 9 10 11 NA can use Activity of the selected IRQ always awakens the system Chapter 2 Suspend Mode If system activity is not detected for the length of time specified in this field all devices except Min 12 Min 20 Min 30 Min 40 CPU will be shut off Min 1 Hour HDD Power Down If HDD activity is not detected for the length of Disabled time specified in this field the hard disk drive 1 Min through15 Min will be powered down while all other devices remain active Soft Off by PWR BTTN This is a specification of ACPI and supported Delay 4 sec by hardware When Delay 4 sec is se
83. nt number For other unigue check point numbers that are not listed in the table refer to the corresponding product service guide Post Checkpoints List The list may vary accordingly depending on your BIOS Test CMOS R W functionality Early chipset initialization Disable shadow RAM Disable L2 cache socket 7 or below Program basic chipset registers 91 Chapter 4 Detect memory Auto detection of DRAM size type and ECC Auto detection of L2 cache socket 7 or below 2 Enable keyboard interface 2 Clear CMOS error flag 2 Initialize 8042 self test Reserved I 9h Ah 1 Disable PS 2 mouse interface optional Reserved O 2 Auto detect ports for keyboard amp mouse followed by a port amp interface swap optional 3 Reset keyboard for Winbond 977 series Super I O chips Use walking 1 s algorithm to check out interface in CMOS circuitry Also set real time clock Bh Reserved Reserved o e e O 3 Dh Eh Test FOOOh segment shadow to see whether it is R W able or not If test fails keep beeping the speaker Reserved O Fh 10h Reserved Auto detect flash type to load appropriate flash R W codes into the run time area in F000 for ESCD amp DMI support Reserved 12h power status and then check for override 13h 14h Reserved Program chipset default values into chipset Chipset default values are MODBINable by OEM customers 15h 16h 17h Reserved 18h Detect C
84. o O if you want to Enabled then press to boot everyday show the range of Date and Time Time hh mm ss Alarm Indicate the hour Alarm minute and second when system will boot up Primary IDE 0 1 The global timer is the hardware timer that Disabled Secondary IDE 0 1 counts down to the power saving modes If the Enabled FDD COM LPT Port monitoring of the listed hardware peripherals or PCI PIROJA D components is enabled the activity of the spec ified peripherals or components will awaken the system or reload the original count of global timer when they are accessed NOTE In ACPI mode Valid S5 and S4 In APM mode Valid shutdown Chapter 2 42 PnP PCI Configurations PNP OG Installed PnP PCI Configurations Phoenix AwardBLOS CMOS Setup Utility Reset Configuration Data Disabled Resources Controlled By utol ESCO I IRQ Resources DHA Resources Press Enter Press Enter PCI YGA Palette Snoop Disabled INT Pin 1 Assignment Auto INT Pin Assignment Auto INT Pin 3 Assignment Auto INT Pin 4 Assignment Auto INT Pin 5 Assignment Auto INT Pin 6 ssignment Auto INT Pin Assignment Auto INT Pin 8 Assignment Auto Menu Level e Select Yes if you are using a Plug and Play capable operating system Select No if you need the BIOS to configure non boot devices fTl Move Enter Select PU PD Value Fe ESC Ex1t Fl General Help Fo Previous Values Optimized Defaults The table below desc
85. ollowing table describes the parameters found in this menu ACPI Function Enabled Disable ACPI Function Enabled Disabled ACPI Suspend Type This item specifies the power saving modes for S1 POS ACPI function Options are S3 STR S1 POS The S1 sleep mode is a low power state In this state no system context is lost CPU or chipset and hardware maintains all system context S3 STR The S3 sleep mode is a lower power state where the information of system configuration and open applications files is saved to main memory that remains powered while most other hardware components turn off to save energy The information stored in memory will be used to restore the system when a wake up event occurs Run VGABIOS if S3 Resume When ACPI Suspend Mode is set to S3 or Auto Yes No S1 amp S3 users can select the options in this field Selecting Yes allows BIOS to call VGABIOS to initialize the VGA card when system wakes up resumes from S3 sleep state The system resume time is shortened when you disable the function but system will need an AGP driver to initialize the VGA card Therefore if the AGP driver of the card does not support the initialization feature the display may work abnormally or not function after resuming form S3 Power Management This item is used to select the degree or type User Define of power saving and is related to these modes Min Saving Suspend Mode and HDD Power Down Max Saving Min Saving Mi
86. ondly the speed of a RAID O setup is only as fast as the slowest drive in the array Because chunks of data are being written to the disks at the same time if one drive is slower than the rest the others must sit and wait for the slowest drive to finish It is for these reasons that it is suggested that identical drives be used on a RAID O setup What RAID O boils down to is speed and little more The fact of the matter is that RAID O is not redundant at all just fast But for many users this is all that is important Chapter 2 62 63 RAID 1 RAID 1 works by writing identical sets of information to two drives in an array When the controller is sent a 64KB file to be written to a two disk RAID 1 array the controller sends identical copies of this 64KB file to both disks in the array Reads are the same as on a single drive the controller reguests the file from one of the two drives The special feature of RAID 1 is its fault tolerance If either of the two drives in the array fails no data is lost If when a drive fails the RAID controller simply uses the information off of the drive that is still available When a new drive is added to the array to fix the failed one a mirroring occurs in which the data from the good drive is written to the new drive to recreate the array again As one could suspect RAID 1 offers very little in terms of performance When requesting data from a drive some RAID controllers take information from the dri
87. ow to open the housing cover when you need to install additional components inside the system unit CAUTION Before you proceed make sure that you have turned off the system and all peripherals connected to it Removing the Housing 1 Remove the three screws holding the upper cover 2 Slide the left cover out and then gently pull it outward to detach it from the housing Removing the FDD ODD HDD 1 Lift up the FDD HDD ODD frame carefully 2 3 Disconnect the ODD cable and ODD power cable from the ODD 82 Chapter 3 W VJ Y Jo j K F 4 5 Pull the ODD lock and then detach the ODD from the frame 6 Pull the FDD lock and then detach the FDD from the frame 7 Press the right and left HDD holders and then detach the HDD carefully 8 Remove the left ODD holder 9 Remove the left FDD holder 10 Remove the left and right HDD holders Chapter 3 83 wn SAN N TTI GA IT W Gom m Sener Removing the Internal Cables Connectors and Memory 1 Remove the air duck as the video shows 2 3 Disconnect the main power connector from the main board 4 Disconnectthe 12 voltage power connector from the main board 5 Press the leavers on the both sides of the DIMM socket outward to release the DIMM and then gently pull the DIMM out to remove it 84 Chapter 3 Removing the Internal Cables Connectors 1 Disconnect the front panel audio connector from the main board
88. ows you to configure your floppy drive B None 360 KB 5 25 inch 1 2 MB 5 25 inch 720 KB 3 5 inch 1 44 MB 3 5 inch 2 88 MB 3 5 inch This item specifies the type of video card in use The default setting is VGA EGA Since current PCs use VGA only this function is almost useless and may be disregarded in the future Halt On This parameter enables you to control the system stops All But Keyboard in case of Power on self test POST errors All Errors No Errors All But Diskette All But Disk Key Refers to the portion of memory that is available to standard DOS programs DOS systems have an address space of 1 MB but the top 384 KB called high memory is reserved for system use This leaves 640 KB of conventional memory Everything above 1 MB is either extended or expanded memory Extended Memory Memory above and beyond the standard 1 MB megabyte of base memory that DOS supports Extended memory is only available in PCs with an Intel 80286 or later microprocessor Extended memory is not configured in any special manner and is therefore unavailable to most DOS programs However MS Windows and OS 2 can use extended memory Total Memory Total base and extended memory and I O ROM 384KB available to the system Chapter 2 IDE Channel 0 Master Slave and IDE Channel 1 Master Slave Setup The following screen appears if you select any of the IDE drive parameters The following table describes the parameters found in this menu
89. r main board s serial number System BIOS Version Specifies the main version of your BIOS utility SMBIOS version The System Management Interface SM BIOS allows you to check your system hardware components without actually opening your system Hardware checking is done via software during start up This parameter specifies the version of the SMBIOS utility installed in your system System BIOS ID Displays the system identification number BIOS release Date Displays the release date of the BIOS utility Chapter 2 28 Standard CMOS Features Select Standard CMOS Features from the main menu to configure the drives installed in your system The following screen shows the Disk Drives menu Phoenix AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility Standard CMOS Features 1 2003 Menu Level ai Date mm dd vy Time hh mm ss Hed Oct 12 13 42 IDE Channel Master 29 IDE Channel Slave IDE Channel 1 Master IDE Channel 1 Slave Change the day month vear and century Drive Drive B Video Halt On Base Memory Extended Memory Total Memory Tl Move Enter Select Fo Previous Values 1 44M 3 5 1n None EGA YGA Al But Keyboard 64 0K 20320K SESTT N PU PD Value F1 Save Ev The following table describes the parameters found in this menu Parameter IDE Channel 0 Master IDE Channel 0 Slave IDE Channel 1 Master ESC Ex1t Optimized Defaults Fl General Help
90. ribes each PnP PCI configuration parameter Settings in boldface are the default and suggested settings Parameter PNP OS Installed Reset Configuration Data Resources Controlled By 43 When set to Yes BIOS will only initialize the PnP cards used for booting VGA IDE SCSI The rest of the cards will be initialized by the PnP operating system like Windows 98 When set to No BIOS will initialize all the PnP cards So select Yes if your operating system is Plug amp Play aware Select Enabled to reset Extended System Configuration Data ESCD when you exit Setup if you have installed a new add on and the system configuration has caused such a serious conflict that the OS cannot boot The Award Plug and Play BIOS has the capacity to automatically configure all of the boot and Plug and Play compatible devices However this capability means absolutely nothing unless you are using a Plug and Play operating system such as Windows 95 98 If you set this field to manual choose specific resources by going into each of the sub menu that follows this field Options Disabled Enabled Auto ESCD Manual Chapter 2 IRQ Resources DMA Resources PCI VGA Palette Snoop INT Pin 1 8 Assignment Chapter 2 The items are adjustable only when Resources Controlled By is set to Manual Press lt Enter gt and you will enter the sub menu of the items Legacy ISA for devices compliant with the original PC AT bus
91. s Display problem not listed above including blank or illegible monitor Audio software program invokes but no sound 1 Speaker power connection cable 1 Forthe External Modem make sure Power on By Ring in BIOS Setup or Power Management is set to Enabled For the PCI modem make sure Wake up by PCI card is set to Enabled If PCI modem card is used reinsert the modem card to PCI slot 2 3 In Win 98 ensure the telephone application is configured firmly or replace the modem card correctly for your modem and set to receive messages and or fax 1 Ensure the modem card is installed properly 1 Ensure the modem voice in cable from modem adapter card to Load default settings if screen is readable main board Remove all non factory installed cards Main board Monitor signal connection cable Monitor Video adapter card Main board Monitor signal connection cable Monitor Main board Monitor Load default settings if screen is readable Main board Video and Monitor Chapter 4 Parallel Serial Ports Execute Load BIOS Default Settings in BIOS Setup to confirm ports presence before diagnosing any parallel serial ports problems Serial or parallel port loop back test failed Make sure that the LPT or COM you test is the same as the setting in BIOS Setup Loop back Main board Printing failed Ensure the printer driver is properly installed Refer
92. s front and rear However you can not use both of them at the same time The default setting for your system enables the microphone in port in front and disables the one at the back Chapter 1 Rear Panel for Veriton 5600GT 5600V Microphone in jack rear Lime Audio out Line out jack Light blue Audio in Line in jack Q N N CRT LCD monitor port Burgundy Parallel printer port Teal or Turguoise Serial port Black USB ports w OD Chapter 1 10 mr So pm Power cora socket NOTE The system has two microphone in ports front and rear However you can not use both of them at the same time The default setting for your system enables the microphone in port in front and disables the one at the back NOTE The CRT monitor port is automatically disabled when an add on AGP VGA card is installed into the system for Intel 865G chipset Connect the monitor to the VGA port instead Chapter 1 Front Panel for Veriton 7600GTR 7600GT 7600V The computer s front panel consists of the following oe 0
93. t playing the audio track or video file Press again to pause Stop button E press to stop playing the audio track or video file Forward button gt gt press to skip forward to the next track or file and start playing Backward button press to skip backward to the previous track or file and start playing Allow you to do the following Volume up button VOL press to increase audio volume Volume down button VOL press to decrease audio vol ume Mute button W toggle sound on off 16 Chapter 1 Scroll Lock Key When activated the screen moves one line up or down when you press ET the up arrow or down arrow respectively Take note that 52 may not work with some applications Num Lock Key When activated the keypad is set to numeric mode i e the keys function as a calculator complete with arithmetic operators such as and RA Cursor keys Also called arrow keys let you move the cursor around the screen They serve the same function as the arrow keys on the numeric keypad when the EA is toggled off Application key Opens the applications context menu same function as clicking the right button of the mouse Windows logo key Start button Combinations with this key perform special functions such as Ay Windows Tab Activates the next Taskbar button Ay Windows E Explore My Computer Windows F Find Document Windows M Minimize All SHIFT Windows M Undo Minimize
94. ter 1 Cache Memory First Level Cache Configurations Cache function control Enable Disable by BIOS Setup Advanced options Second Level Cache Configurations Below information is only applicable to system with installed Pentium 4 processor L2 Cache RAM size Pentium IV processor 512 KB for Northwood L2 Cache RAM speed The same with the processor core clock frequency L2 Cache function control Enable Disable by BIOS Setup Video Interface Video controller resident bus AGP bus Video interface support 8x 4x AGP Data Transfer for Intel 865G chipset The AGP buffers operate only 0 8V 1 5V mode 3 3V not supported Audio Interface Compatibility AC 97 2 1 compliant Sound Blaster Pro compatible Mixed digital and analog high performance chip Enhanced stereo full duplex operation High performance PCI audio accelerator High Ouality ESFM music synthesizer MPU 401 UART mode interface for wavetable synthesizers and MIDI devices Integrated game port Meets PC 97 PC98 and WHOL specifications Supported On audio I O board Front Panel Access IDE Interface IDE controller Intel ICH5R ICH5 IDE controller resident bus PCI bus Number of IDE channel 2 on board 40 pin hard disk drive connector Support IDE interface E IDE up to PIO mode 4 and Ultra DMA33 Ultra DMA66 Ultra DMA100 and Ultra DMA133 ANSIS ATA rev3 0 ATAPI specification Support bootable CD ROM Yes Chapter 1 19 20 Floppy disk drive Interface Ve
95. to the printer service manual Printer Printer cable Main board Some or all keys on keyboard do not work Pressing power switch does not turn off Ensure the Soft off by PWR BTTN in BIOS Setup of system Only unplugging the power cord Power Management is not set to Instant off from electrical outlet can turn off the system Power switch cable assembly Pressing power switch does not turn on the Ensure the power override switch situated at the back of the system machine just above the connector for the power cable is not set to OFF Power switch cable assembly Executing software shutdown from Load default settings Windows98 Start menu does not turn off the Reload software from Recovery CD system Only pressing power switch can turn off the system No system power or power supply fan is not 1 Power Supply running 2 Main board Other Problems Any other problems 1 Undetermined Problems Chapter 4 102 Undetermined Problems If an error message is present go to POST Error Messages List on page 118 If you did not receive any messages if the symptom is listed in or Error Symptoms List on page 120 If you still cannot solve the problem continue with this check 103 le AE JE es 37 Check the power supply voltages If the voltages are correct continue with the following steps Power off the system unit Perform the following checks one by one until you have isolated the problem FRU
96. tomatically disabled when an add on AGP VGA card is installed into the system Connect the monitor to the VGA port instead Chapter 1 System Block Diagram n Na Diagrami 2 Phase PWM 4X 8X 64bit DDR AGP 1 5V Connector Analo i 4 DDR Di Springdale 0 DIMM Out SABIE DDR Modules All dll 4 Channel 2 gt 1 1 a En ih o o o cr cr cr m N W ll PCI BUS UltraDMA 33 66 100 ur anNH IDE Primary PCI BUS IDE Secondary ICHSR IEEE1394 PCI BUS ul gt TSB43AB23 USB Port 1 USB Port 2 USB USB Port 3 A LAN G BCM4401 5705 USB Port 4 LPC SIO USB Port 5 SMSC 47M192 USB Port 6 USB Port 7 AC 97 Link NZ Flash Keyboard Floopy Parallel Serial AC 97 Codec Mouse Serial ATA Serial ATA 0 K Serial ATA 1 Chapter 1 15 Keyboard The keyboard has full sized keys that include separate cursor keys two Windows keys and twelve function keys Web browser A launches the browser application that came bundled with your system E mail lt launches the e mail application that came bun dled with your system Search X opens a search window Multimedia keys Allow you to do the following Play Pause button b I press to star
97. uch as memory size CPU type hard disk type etc otherwise BIOS will keep the previous CMOS settings Selecting this option displays the following dialog box Phoenix AwardBLOS CMOS Setup Utility Product Information PC Health Status Standard CMOS Features Frequency Voltage Control Advanced BIOS Features Load Optimized Defaults Advanced Chipset Features set Supervisor Password Integrated Periph Power Management Load Optimized Defaults Y N PnP PCL Configura Esc Quit F9 Menu in BIOS T 1 Select Item F10 Save amp Exit Setup Load Optimized Defaults Choosing Yes enables BIOS to automatically detect the hardware changes that you have made in your system This option also allows you to restore the default settings Choosing No returns you to the main menu without loading the default settings 47 Chapter 2 System Security The Setup program has a number of security features to prevent unauthorized access to the system and its data Set Supervisor Password To set a password 1 At the prompt type your password Your password can be up to 8 alphanumeric characters When you type the characters they appear as asterisks on the password screen box After typing the password press Enter At the next prompt re type your password and press enter again to confirm the new password After the password entry the screen automatically reverts to the main screen Phoenix AwardBLOS CMO
98. ustomer machines IMPORTANT Please note that Acer Corporation sells only the parts listed in the following table Please be reminded that though some parts are disassembled in Chapter 3 for demonstration purpose Acer Corporation does not provide these parts NOTE To scrap or to return the defective parts you should follow the local government ordinance or regulations on how best to dispose it or follow the rules set by your regional Acer office on how to return it NOTE The number indicates the location shown on exploded diagram or NS indicates Not shown on it Chapter 6 108 Veriton 7600GTR 7600GT 7600V Exploded Diagram Chapter 6 109 Veriton 5600GT 5600V Exploded Diagram Chapter 6 110 Veriton 3600GT 3600V Exploded Diagram ya SN a p s 0 SES N VIS DESCRIPTION DESCRIPTION 1 FII DOR 20551 009 SPS SPL FSP 2000 VT 44394 003 3 CIROM BUTTON 20549 007 16 MOTHER BOARD 5 POVER LENS 20551 021 18 FOOT STAND L 20549 018 6 POVER BUTTON 20549 023 RUBHER TOOT 3M049 003 7 POWER SWITCH BOARD 4531 002 20 FOOT STAND 3 20551 019 8 FRONT COVER 20551 003 21 TOOT STAND 2 20551 018 9 FID 148066 001 22 S USB EMI SHIELD 2J019 004 10 CD ROM TSS 23 REPOVER SVITOH HOLDER 20549 020 11
99. ve Run Setup messages the battery may be bad In this case the system cannot retain configuration values in CMOS Before you run Setup make sure that you have saved all open files The system reboots immediately after you exit Setup Chapter 2 26 Entering Setup To enter Setup press the key DEL during the POST Power on self test NOTE You must press simultaneously while the system is booting The Setup Utility main menu then appears Phoenix AwardBLOS CMOS Setup Utility Product Information PC Health Status Standard CHOS Features Frequency Voltage Control Advanced BIOS Features load Optimized Defaults Advanced Chipset Features set Supervisor Password Integrated Peripherals Power Management Setup Save amp Exit Setup PnP PCL Configurations Exit Without Saving Esc Quit F9 Menu in BIOS T 1 Select Item F10 Save amp Exit Setup The above screen is the BIOS Utility Basic Level screen It allows you to view and change only the basic configuration of your system The command line at the bottom of the menu tells you how to move within a screen and from one screen to another Q To select an option move the highlight bar by pressing 1 4 lt or gt then press enter L To change a parameter setting press Po ur or Pc on until the desired setting is found or press enter to pop out the screen with available items for selection a Press ESC to return to the main menu I
100. ve that is not busy or closer to the desired information theoretically resulting in faster data access When writing on the other hand there is some overhead when compared to a single drive as the controller must duplicate the file it is sent and then pass it along to the drives In a RAID 1 setup identical drives are best in order to prevent lost space Since the same data is being written to two drives the size of the RAID 1 array is equal to the size of the smallest drive in the array For example if a 20GB drive and a 30GB drive are used in a RAID 1 setup the array would only be 20GB with the 10 extra gigabytes on the 30GB drive going to waste The performance difference between two drives is also an issue here since a faster drive would have to wait for a slower drive before it could write more information RAID 1 is a good solution for those looking for security over speed Although not the slowest of the common RAID types RAID 1 can be slower than a single drive in some cases more on that in the benchmarks What RAID 1 does provide is a very safe environment where failure of a single drive does not eguate to any down time Chapter 2 Machine Disassembly and Replacement This chapter contains step by step procedures on how to disassemble the Veriton 7600GTR GT V 5600GT V and 3600GT V desktop computer for maintenance and troubleshooting To disassemble the computer you need the following tools m O 0 O O Wrist ground
101. ver you need them In the Technical Information section you can download information on all of Acer s Notebook Desktop and Server models including Service guides User s manuals Training materials Bios updates Software utilities O 0 O O OL Spare parts lists a TABs Technical Announcement Bulletin For these purposes we have included an Acrobat File to facilitate the problem free downloading of our technical material Also contained on this website are Q Detailed information on Acer s International Traveller s Warranty ITW 2 Returned material authorization procedures OH An overview of all the support services we offer accompanied by a list of telephone fax and email contacts for all your technical gueries We are always looking for ways to optimize and improve our services so if you have any suggestions or comments please do not hesitate to communicate these to us Appendix C 126 127 Appendix C
102. work Diskette IDE drive connection cables Diskette IDE disk drives See Undetermined Problems Main board NOTE Ensure the diskette drive is auto setting in BIOS Setup and its read write head is clean before diagnosing any diskette drive problems If only one drive is installed please make sure the drive is connected to master connector or the drive is set to master Media and drive are mismatched Ensure the diskette drive is configured correctly in the Disk Drives of BIOS Setup Ensure the diskette drive is correctly formatted Diskette drive connection cable Diskette drive Main board Diskette drive does not work Ensure the diskette drive is not set to None in the Disk Drives of BIOS Setup Diskette drive power Diskette drive connection cable Diskette drive Main board Diskette Diskette drive cable Diskette drive Main board Diskette drive read write error 20072802 R 99 Chapter 4 Diskette drive LED comes on for more than 2 minutes when reading data Diskette drive LED fails to light and the drive is unable to access for more than 2 minutes Diskette drive test failed Diskette Diskette drive connection cable Diskette drive Main board Diskette Diskette drive power Diskette drive connection cable Diskette drive Main board Diskette Diskette drive Diskette drive cable Main board 2 2 00 gt 2180 0 Hard Disk Drive NOTE Ensure hard disk
103. y P ATA Controller P ATA Controller Disable Disable Primary Primary es W 7 W Ww gt 54 55 Native Mode m m In this mode system BIOS will search all available IRQs to use for HDD New OS that support switch to Native Mode WinXP Windows NET Server can set SATA and PATA to Native Mode Comprehend both Legacy and or Native Modes Maximum 6 ATA devices to connect 4 for P ATA amp 2 for S ATA Primary or Secondary Secondary or Primary Secondary NOTE Proper support BIOS provides a BIOS setup option for Native Mode or Legacy Mode user selection Chapter 2 RAID BIOS Configuration The Intel RAID Option ROM should be integrated with the system BIOS on all motherboards with a supported Intel chipset Please use lt tr lt I gt keys to enter the Intel R RAID for Serial ATA status screen which should appear early in system boot up during the POST Power On Self Test Using the Intel RAID Option ROM 1 Creating Deleting and Resetting RAID Volumes The Serial ATA RAID volume may be configured using the RAID Configuration utility stored within the Intel RAID Option ROM During the Power On Self Test POST the following message will appear for a few seconds Note The Driver Model Serial and Size in the following example might be different from your system Intel R RAID for Serial ATA RAID BIOS v3 0 0 2307 Copyright C 2003 Intel
104. y fail to retain data This item applies only when synchronous DRAM is installed in the system System BIOS Cacheable Selecting Enabled allows caching of the system Enabled BIOS ROM at FOOOOh FFFFFh resulting in better Disabled system performance However if any program writes to this memory area a system error may result Video BIOS Cacheable Selecting Enabled allows caching of the video BIOS Disabled ROM at C0000h to C7FFFh resulting in better Enabled video performance However if any program writes to this memory area a system error may result Memory Hole at 15M 16M In order to improve performance certain space in Disabled memory can be reserved for ISA peripherals This Enabled memory must be mapped into the memory space below 16MB When this area is reserved it cannot be cached Delay Prior to Thermal When the CPU temperature reaches a factory 4 Min 8Min 16 Min 32 Min preset level a thermal monitoring mechanism will be enabled following the appropriate timing delay specified in this field With the thermal monitoring enabled clock modulation controlled by the processor s internal thermal sensor is also activated to keep the processor within allowable temperature limit AGP Aperture Size MB This setting controls just how much system RAM 4 8 16 32 64 128 and 256 can be allocated to AGP for video purposes The aperture is a portion of the PCI memory address range dedicated to graphics memory address space
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