SBC-659P Half- size Intel FC-370 Pentium III CPU Card with Intel 815E chipset, Dual LAN, Audio, Dual COMs, LCD & 4 USB.
Copyright Notice This document is copyrighted, 2001. All rights are reserved. The original manufacturer reserves the right to make improvements to the products described in this manual at any time without notice. No part of this manual may be reproduced, copied, translated, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the original manufacturer. Information provided in this manual is intended to be accurate and reliable.
Acknowledgments All other product names or trademarks are properties of their respective owners. AMD is a trademark of Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. AMI is a trademark of American Megatrends, Inc. Award is a trademark of Award Software International, Inc. IBM, PC/AT, PS/2, and VGA are trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation. Intel and Pentium III are trademarks of Intel Corporation. Microsoft Windows® is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corp.
A Message to the Customer AAEON Customer Services Each and every AAEON product is built to the most exacting specifications to ensure reliable performance in the harsh and demanding conditions typical of industrial environments. Whether your new AAEON equipment is destined for the laboratory or the factory floor, you can be assured that your product will provide the reliability and ease of operation for which the name AAEON has come to be known. Your satisfaction is our primary concern.
Product Warranty AAEON warrants to you, the original purchaser, that each of its products will be free from defects in materials and workmanship for two years from the date of shipment. This warranty does not apply to any products which have been repaired or altered by persons other than repair personnel authorized by AAEON, or which have been subject to misuse, abuse, accident or improper installation. AAEON assumes no liability under the terms of this warranty as a consequence of such events.
Packing list Before you begin installing your card, please make sure that the following materials have been shipped: • 1 SBC-659P Half- size Single Board Computer Card • 1 Quick Installation Guide • 1 Support CD contains the followings: -- User's Manual (this manual in PDF file) -- Ethernet driver and utilities -- Chipset driver and utilities -- Audio driver and utilities • 1 floppy disk drive interface cable (34-pin, pitch 2.0mm) • 1 IDE hard disk drive cable (40-pin, pitch 2.
Notice Dear Customer, Thank you for purchasing the SBC-659P board. This user's manual is designed to help you to get the most out of the SBC-659P, please read it thoroughly before you install and use the board. The product that you have purchased comes with an two-year limited warranty, but AAEON will not be responsible for misuse of the product. Therefore, we strongly urge you to first read the manual before using the product.
Contents Chapter 1: General Information.........................................1 Introduction.......................................................2 Features .................................................................................... 3 Specifications ........................................................................... 4 Board layout ............................................................................. 7 Board dimensions ..............................................................
Audio Connector(CN9).............................................30 Ethernet Connector (CN12, CN10)..................................31 COM1(CN13), COM2(CN11) Serial Ports..............................32 Internal Keyboard Connector(CN15).................................33 Power Connector(CN16).............................................33 Parallet Port Connector(CN17).....................................34 PS/2 Keyboard and Mouse Connector(CN18)..........................35 IrDA Connector(CN19).............
Chapter 4: Drivers and Utilities ......................................77 Installation of Drivers: Notice ................................................ 78 Chipset Driver ......................................................................... 79 Ultra ATA Driver .................................................................... 80 Windows 95/98..................................................................... 81 Intel 82559 Driver for 95 or 98 Version 1. .................................
CHAPTER General Information 1 This chapter gives background information of the mainboard.
Introduction If your requirements for a single board computer consist of a half-sized footprint, dual Ethernet, PISA interface and Intel quality logic chipset, then SBC-659P is the solution. This half-sized single board computer is ideal for internet data access server. The dual Ethernet socket ensures consistent high server throughput and transparent backup connections in corporate servers. Two RJ-45 connectors controlled by two Intel 82559GD chipsets offering 10/ 100Base Ethernet interface.
Features Supports Intel Celeron/ Tualatin/Pentium III FC-370 CPUs Notice: It doesn't support 0.25 micron process CPU. Two 10/100 Base-T Fast Ethernet ( 2 intel 82559GD) Notice: It doesn't support WOL function in this version Supports H/W status monitoring Integrated AC-97 2.
Specifications Standard Half-size SBC functions • CPU: FC-370 Pentium III (Coppermine), Celeron, Tualatin and compatible CPUs (With system bus frequencies of 66/100/133MHz). • CPU socket: 370 pins Socket • BIOS: Award 2 MB Flash BIOS • Chipset: Intel 815E • I/O chipset: ITE 8712F. • Memory : Onboard one 144 pins SODIMM socket supports up to 256Mbytes SDRAM (PC-100/133 SDRAM supported). • Enhanced IDE: One IDE channel. Support Ultra DMA/ 100 mode with data transfer rate of 100MB/sec.
Power management: Supports AT/ATX power supply. I/O peripheral support power saving and doze/standby/suspend modes. APM 1.2 compliant. H/W status monitoring: Embedded in ITE 8712F supports power, supply voltages, and temperature monitoring. LED status pin header:LED status indicator for power, HDD, and LAN.
Mechanical and environmental Power supply voltage: +5V, -5V, +12V, -12V Operating temperature: 32 to 140o F (0 to 60o C) Board size: 7.3"(L) x 4.8"(W) (185mm x 122mm) Weight: 0.
Board Layout Chapter 1 General Information 7
Board Dimensions 8 SBC-659P User Manual
CHAPTER Installation 2 This chapter describes how to set up the main board hardware, including instructions on setting jumpers and connecting peripherals, switches, and indicators. Be sure to read all the safety precautions before you begin the installation procedure.
SBC-659P Safety precautions Warning! Always completely disconnect the power cord from your chassis whenever you are working on it. Do not make connections while the power is on because sensitive electronic components can be damaged by the sudden rush of power. Only experienced electronics personnel should open the PC chassis. Caution! Always ground yourself to remove any static charge before touching the CPU card. Modern electronic devices are very sensitive to static electric charges.
Installing A CPU To install the CPU, follow the instructions that came with it. If no documentation was provided, the general procedures for installing a CPU are outlined below: 1. Lubricate the pins on the CPU with lubricant for PGA devices. This makes the CPU slide in much easier and greatly reduces the chance of damaging the pins and other components. 2. Carefully align the CPU so that it is parallel to the socket.
SBC-659P Setting jumpers You configure your card to match the needs of your application by setting jumpers. A jumper is the simplest kind of electric switch. It consists of two metal pins and a small metal clip (often protected by a plastic cover) that slides over the pins to connect them. To “close” a jumper you connect the pins with the clip. To “open” a jumper you remove the clip. Sometimes a jumper will have three pins, labeled 1, 2, and 3. In this case you would connect either pins 1 and 2 or 2 and 3.
Installing SODIMM Supplementary information about DIMM Your SBC-659P can accept both regular and PC-100/133 SDRAM DIMM Module. Onboard one 144-pin SODIMM socket supports up to 256MB of memory. Single-sided modules are typically 16 or 128MB; double-sided modules are usually 32 or 256 MB. Memory Installation Procedures To install SODIMM, first make sure you are holding the SODIMM memory module at a 45 degree angle. Slowly slide the SODIMM module along the plastic guides on both ends of the socket.
SBC-659P Jumpers 14 Jumpers Function JP1(1-2) Front Panel (Power On Button) JP1(3-4) Front Panel (IDE Driver LED) JP1(5-6) Front Panel (External Speaker) JP1(7-8) Front Panel (Case Open) JP1(9-10) Front Panel (Reset) JP2 Clear CMOS JP3 FSB Frequency Select JP4 COM2 Ring/+5/+12 V Select JP5 COM2 RS-232/422/485 Select JP6 COM2 RS-232/422/485 Select SBC-659P Installation Guide BC-599/596
Connectors Connector Function CN1 DVO Output Connector CN2 External Power On Connector CN3 IDE Connector (ATA100) CN4 No used CN5 USB 2-3 Connector CN6 USB 0-1 Connector CN7 Floppy Drive Connector CN8 VGA Connector CN9 Audio Connector CN10 100 Base-Tx Ethernet Connector (Intel 82559) CN11 COM2 RS-232/422/485 Serial Port Connector CN12 100 Base-Tx Ethernet Connector (Intel 82559) CN13 COM1 RS-232 Serial Port Connector CN14 PC-104 Connector CN15 Internal Keyboard Connector , CN
SBC-659P Locating Jumpers and Connectors 16 SBC-659P Installation Guide BC-599/596
Locating of Solder Side Connectors CN22 DIMM1 Chapter2 Installation 17
SBC-659P Mechanical Drawing 18 SBC-659P Installation Guide BC-599/596
Mechanical Drawing 0 0 Chapter2 Installation 19
SBC-659P Clear CMOS (JP2) You can use JP2 to clear the CMOS data if necessary. To reset the CMOS data, place a jumper on JP2 (Clear CMOS) for just a few seconds, and then remove the jumper to the (Protect) position.
System Frequency (JP3) CPU/Auto Detect 1 3 SDRAM/Auto Detect 2 4 *Default: Auto Detect Chapter2 Installation 21
SBC-659P COM2 (Ring, +5V, +12V) JP4 +12V 2 4 6 1 3 5 +5V 2 4 6 1 3 5 Ring Default 2 4 6 1 3 22 5 SBC-659P Installation Guide BC-599/596
RS-232/422/485 COM2(JP5,JP6) Setting RS-232 JP5 1 4 Default 7 10 RS-422 JP6 3 6 9 12 1 3 5 JP5 1 4 7 10 RS-485 JP6 3 6 9 12 1 3 5 JP5 1 4 7 10 2 4 6 2 4 6 JP6 3 6 9 12 1 3 5 2 4 6 Chapter2 Installation 23
SBC-659P Digital Video Output Connector (CN1) Digital Visual Output Connector (CN1) Pin Signal Pin A1 FTCLK0 B1 A2 FTCLK1 B2 A3 CRT-HSYNC B3 A4 FTBLNK # B4 A5 FTHSYNC B5 A6 FTVSYNC B6 A7 SL_STALL B7 A8 GND B8 A9 3VFTSCL B9 A10 3VFTSDA B10 A11 3VHTPLG B11 A12 +5V B12 A13 PCIRST # B13 A14 +12V B14 A15 FPVDDEN B15 A16 GND B16 A17 PGMSEL B17 A18 SMBCLK B18 A19 SMBDATA B19 A20 +5V B20 24 SBC-659P Installation Guide Signal FTD0 FTD1 FTD2 GND FTD3 FTD4 FTD5 CRT-VSYNC FTD6 FTD7 FTD8 VEE_OK FTD9 FTD10 FTD11 +3.
External Power On Connector (CN2) External Power On Connector (CN2) Pin Signal 1 NC 2 GND 3 NC 4 GND 5 PS-ON 6 5VSB Chapter2 Installation 25
SBC-659P IDE Hard Drive Connector (CN3) IDE hard drive connector (CN3) Pin Signal Pin 1 IDE RESET 2 3 DATA 7 4 5 DATA 6 6 7 DATA 5 8 9 DATA 4 10 11 DATA 3 12 13 DATA 2 14 15 DATA 1 16 17 DATA 0 18 19 SIGNAL GND 20 21 REQ 22 23 IO WRITE 24 25 IO READ 26 27 IO READY 28 29 DACK 30 31 IRQ14 32 33 ADDR 1 34 35 ADDR 0 36 37 CS#1 38 39 IDEACTP 40 26 SBC-659P Installation Guide Signal GND DATA 8 DATA 9 DATA 10 DATA 11 DATA 12 DATA 13 DATA 14 DATA 15 N/C GND GND GND GND GND N.C.
USB connector (CN5, CN6) The SBC-659P provides four USB (Universal Serial Bus) interfaces, which give complete plug and play, hot attach/detach for up to 127 external devices. The USB interfaces comply with USB specification Rev. 1.1, and can be disabled in the system BIOS setup.
SBC-659P Floppy Drive Connector (CN7) Floppy drive connector (CN7) Pin Signal 1 GND 3 GND 5 GND 7 GND 9 GND 11 GND 13 GND 15 GND 17 GND 19 GND 21 GND 23 GND 25 GND 27 GND 29 N.C. 31 GND 33 N.C. 28 SBC-659P Installation Guide Pin 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 Signal DENSITY SELECT N.C. N.C.
VGA connector (CN8) VGA display connector (CN8) CN8 is a 15-pin, D-SUB connector used for conventional CRT displays.
SBC-659P Audio Connector (CN9) On board SBC-659P, there is a 14-pin header for audio capability. The pin definition is provided below.
Ethernet Connectors(CN12,CN10) Onboard supports two standard RJ-45 connector for Ethernet connection. The RJ-45 connector has two LED indicators. Both LED displays indicate the speed of information being processed. * The on board Intel 82559GD fast Ethernet controller supports 10Mb/s and 100Mb/s N-way auto-negotiation operation.
SBC-659P COM 1 (CN 13) & COM 2 (CN 11) Serial Ports On board offer two serial ports for serial devices connection. Pin definitions show as below. COM 1 RS-232 (CN13) Pin Signal 1 DCD1 3 TXD1 5 GND 7 RTS1 9 RI Pin 2 4 6 8 10 COM 2 RS-232/422/485 (CN11) Pin Signal Pin 1 DCD2(422TXD-/485DATA-) 2 3 TXD2(422TXD+/485DATA+) 4 5 GND 6 7 RTS2 8 9 RI 10 32 SBC-659P Installation Guide Signal RXD1 DTR1 DSR1 CTS1 N.C. Signal RXD2 (422RXD+) DTR2 (422RXD-) DSR2 CTS2 N.C.
Internal Keyboard Connector (CN15) Internal keyboard connector (CN 15) Pin Signal 1 CLK 2 Data 3 NC 4 GND 5 +5V Power connector (CN16) ATX power connector (CN16) The ATX power supply uses 20-pin connector shown below. Make sure you plug in the right direction.
SBC-659P Parallel port connector (CN17) Normally, the parallel port is used to connect the board to a printer. The SBC-659P includes an onboard parallel port, accessed through CN17, a 26-pin flat-cable connector. A traditional DB-25 connector cable is needed to install the printer to the board. The cable has a 26-pin connector on one end and a DB-25 pin connector on the other.
PS/2 keyboard and mouse connectors(CN18) On board SBC-659P, there is a standard 6-pin mini-din connector for PS/2 keyboard and mouse connector. The pin definition is provided below. Keyboard and mouse connector (CN 18) Pin Signal Pin 1 MS CLOCK 2 3 +5V 4 5 KB DATA 6 7 N/C 8 Signal KB CLOCK GND MS DATA N/C IrDA Connector (CN19) The IrDA connector (CN19) can be configured to support wireless infrared modules.
SBC-659P CPU Fan power connectors (CN20) Plug in the fan cable to the 3-pin fan connector onboard. The fan connector is marked CN20. CPU fan power connector (CN20) Pin Signal 1 GND 2 +12V 3 Fan speed sensor North bridge chip Fan Connector (CN21) Plug in the North Bridge chip fan cable to the 2-pin fan connector. CPU fan power connector (CN21)with no ACPI,APM function.
Compact Flash Connector (CN22) Compact Flash Connector (CN22) Pin Signal Pin 1 GND 26 2 DATA3 27 3 DATA4 28 4 DATA5 29 5 DATA6 30 6 DATA7 31 7 CS#1 32 8 GND 33 9 GND 34 10 GND 35 11 GND 36 12 GND 37 13 +5V 38 14 GND 39 15 GND 40 16 GND 41 17 GND 42 18 ADDR2 43 19 ADDR1 44 20 ADDR0 45 21 DATA0 46 22 DATA1 47 23 DATA2 48 24 N.C. 49 25 GND 50 Signal GND DATA11 DATA12 DATA13 DATA14 DATA15 CS#3 GND IO READ IO WRITE +5V IRQ15 +5V CSEL N.C. IDE RESET IO READY N.C.
CHAPTER 3 Award BIOS Setup This chapter describes how to configure the BIOS for the system.
Starting setup The Award BIOS is immediately activated when you first turn on the computer. The BIOS reads system configuration information in CMOS RAM and begins the process of checking out the system and configuring it through the power-on self test (POST). When these preliminaries are finished, the BIOS seeks an operating system on one of the data storage devices (hard drive, floppy drive, etc.). The BIOS launches the operating system and hands control of system operations to it.
Setup keys These keys helps you navigate in Award BIOS: Up arrow Down arrow Left arrow Right arrow Esc PgUP/+ PgDn/F1 F2 F3 F4 F5 F6 F7 F8 F9 F10 40 Move to previous item Move to next item Move to the item in the left hand Move to the item in the right hand Main Menu: Quit and not save changes into CMOS RAM Other pages: Exit current page and return to Main Menu Increase the numeric value or make changes Decrease the numeric value or make changes General help, only for Status Page Setup Menu and Option P
Getting Help Press F1 to pop up a small help window that describes the appropriate keys to use and the possible selections for the highlighted item. To exit the Help Window press Esc or the F1 key again. In Case of Problems If, after making and saving system changes with Setup, you discover that your computer no longer is able to boot, the Award BIOS supports an override to the CMOS settings that resets your system to its default configuration.
Main Setup Menu Standard CMOS Features Use this menu for basic system configuration. (Date, time, IDE, etc.) Advanced BIOS Features Use this menu to set the advanced features available on your system. Advanced Chipset Features Use this menu to change the values in the chipset registers and optimize your system’s performance. Integrated Peripherals Use this menu to specify your settings for integrated peripherals. (Primary slave, secondary slave, keyboard, mouse etc.
PnP/PCI Configuration This entry appears is your system supports PnP/PCI. PC Health Status This menu allows you to set the shutdown temperature for your system. Frequency/Voltage Control Use this menu to specify your settings for frequency/ voltage control. Load Fail-Safe Defaults Use this menu to load the BIOS default values for the minimal/ stable performance for your system to operate.
Standard CMOS Features This standard setup menu allows users to configure system components such as the date, time, hard disk drive, floppy drive, display, and memory. Online help for each field can be accessed by pressing F1. Date and Time Configuration The BIOS determines the day of the week from the other date information. This field is for information only. Press the left or right arrow key to move to the desired field (date, month, year).
The BIOS can automatically detect the specifications and optimal operating mode of almost all IDE hard drives. When you select type AUTO for a hard drive, the BIOS detects its specifications If you do not want to select drive type AUTO, other methods of selecting the drive type are available: 1.Match the specifications of your installed IDE hard drive(s) with the preprogrammed values for drive types 1 through 45. 2.Select USER and enter values into each drive parameter field. 3.
- LBA (Logical Block Addressing): During drive access, the IDE controller transforms the data address described by sector, head, and cylinder number into a physical block address, significantly improving data transfer rates. For drives with greater than 1024 cylinders. Drive A Drive B Select the correct specifications for the diskette drive(s) installed in the computer. None No diskette drive installed 360K, 5.25 in 5-1/4 inch PC-type standard drive; 360 kilobyte capacity 1.2M, 5.
Halt On During the power-on-self-test (POST), the computer stops if the BIOS detects a hardware error. You can tell the BIOS to ignore certain errors during POST and continue the boot-up process. These are the selections: No errors: POST does not stop for any errors. All errors If: the BIOS detects any nonfatal error, POST stops and prompts you to take corrective action.
Extended Memory Above the 1-MB boundary. Early IBM personal computers could not use memory above 1 MB, but current PCs and their software can use extended memory. Other Memory Between 640 KB and 1 MB; often called High memory. DOS may load, terminate-and-stay-resident (TSR) programs, such as device drivers, in this area, to free as much conventional memory as possible for applications. Lines in your CONFIG.SYS file that start with LOADHIGH, load programs into high memory.
Advanced BIOS Features The displayed configuration is based on the manufacturer's SETUP DEFAULTS settings. Virus Warning When enabled, you receive a warning message if a program (specifically, a virus) attempts to write to the boot sector or the partition table of the hard disk drive. You should then run an antivirus program. Keep in mind that this feature protects only the boot sector, not the entire hard drive.
CPU Internal Cache/External Cache Cache memory is additional memory that is much faster than conventional DRAM (system memory). CPUs from 486-type on up contain internal cache memory, and most, but not all, modern PCs have additional (external) cache memory. When the CPU requests data, the system transfers the requested data from the main DRAM into cache memory, for even faster access by the CPU. The External Cache field may not appear if your system does not have external cache memory.
Swap Floppy Drive This field is effective only in systems with two floppy drives. Selecting enabled assigns physical drive B to logical drive A, and physical drive A to logical drive B. Boot Up Floppy Seek When Enabled, the BIOS tests (seeks) floppy drives to determine whether they have 40 or 80 tracks. Only 360-KB floppy drives have 40 tracks; drives with 720 KB, 1.2 MB, and 1.44 MB capacity all have 80 tracks.
Typematic Rate Setting- Key strokes repeat at a rate determined by the keyboard controller. When enabled, the typematic rate and typematic delay can be selected. The choice: Enabled/Disabled Typematic Rate (Chars/Sec)- Sets the number of times a second to repeat a key stroke when you hold the key down. The choice: 6, 8, 10, 12, 15, 20, 24, 30 Typematic Delay (Msec)- Sets the delay time after the key is held down before it begins to repeat the keystroke.
HDD S.M.A.R.T Capability Hard disk drives have built in problem detection capability (Self-Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology). If a foreseen problem is about to take place, the computer will give a you a warning signal. The choice: Enable, Disable Report No FDD For WIN 95- Report no FDD for Win 95 or not.
Advanced Chipset Features SDRAM CAS Latency Time When synchronous DRAM is installed, the number of clock cycles of CAS latency depends on the DRAM timing. Do not reset this field from the default value specified by the system designer. SDRAM Cycle Time Tras/Trc Select the number of SCLKs for an access cycle. The choices: 5/7, 7/9 disable. SDRAM RAS-to-CAS Delay This field lets you insert a timing delay between the CAS and RAS strobe signals, used when DRAM is written to, read from, or refreshed.
SDRAM RAS Precharge Time If an insufficient number of cycles is allowed for the RAS to accumulate its charge before DRAM refresh, the refresh may be incomplete and the DRAM may fail to retain date. Fast gives faster performance; slow gives more stable performance. This field applies only when synchronous DRAM is installed in the system. System BIOS Cacheable Selecting Enabled allows caching of the system BIOS ROM at F0000hFFFFFh, resulting in better system performance.
AGP Graphics Aperture Size Select the size of Accelerated Graphics Port (AGP) aperture. The aperture is a portion of the PCI memory address range dedicated for graphics memory address space. Host cycles that hit the aperture range are forwarded to the AGP without any translation. The choices: 32M, 64M. Display Cache Frequency You can use this item to selct the frequency of the display cache.
RAS-to-CAS Override Select the display cache clock periods control. The choice:Fast,Slow RAS#Timing This item controls RAS#active to Protegra, and refresh to RAS# active delay(in local memory clocks), RAS#Percharge Timing This item controls RAS#precharge(in local memory clocks). The choice: Fast,Slow.
Integrated Peripherals On-Chip Primary PCI IDE The system chipset contains a PCI IDE interface with support for two IDE channels. Select Enabled to activate the primary and/or secondary IDE interface. Select Disabled to deactivate this interface, if you install a primary and/or secondary add-in IDE interface. On-Chip Secondary PCI IDE The chipset contains a PCI IDE interface with support for two IDE channels. Select Enabled to activate the secondary IDE interface.
IDE Primary/Secondary Master/Slave UDMA Ultra DMA/33 implementation is possible only if your IDE hard drive supports it and the operating environment includes a DMA driver (Windows 95 OSR2 or a third-party IDE bus master driver). If your hard drive and your system software both support Ultra DMA/33, select Auto to enable BIOS support. The choices: Auto, disable USB Controller Select Enabled if your system contains a Universal Serial Bus controller and you have USB peripherals.
KB Power on Password The system will ask for a password, after entering the correct password the keyboard can then be used. Hot Key Power On Simply pressing on the pre-selected keyboard key the system will power on. Onboard FDC Controller Select Enabled if your system has a floppy disk controller (FDC) installed on the system board and you wish to use it. If you install an add-in FDC or the system has no floppy drive, select Disabled in this field.
Onboard Serial Ports (1, 2) Normally, the main board’s I/O chips will occupy a certain portion of memory space. For each I/O device the computer provides an I/O address. The more devices attached the more address needed to organize the memory storage areas. If all the I/O devices were run through the same address, your devices would come to a near halt. By providing the end user with four serial ports this allows devices to run more efficiently if needed.
Watch Dog Timer You can enable the system watchdog timer, a hardware timer that generates either an NMI or a reset when the software that it monitors does not respond as expected each time the watch dog polls it ( select the time period in a separate field ) The choice: Disabled, 10 sec, 20 sec, 30 sec, 40 sec, 1 min, 2 min, 4 min.
Power Management Setup ACPI Function This item allows you to enable/disable the Advanced Configuration and Power Management (ACPI).
Power Management This category allows you to select the type ( or degree ) of power saving and is directly related to the following modes: 1. HDD Power Down 2. Doze Mode 3. Suspend Mode Disable (Default) No power management. Disable all four modes. Min. Power Saving Minimum power managemen. Doze mode = 1 hour. Standby mode = 1 hour. Suspend mode = 1 hour. HDD Power Down =15 minutes. Max.Power Saving Maximum power management- - O NLY AVAI LABLE FO R SL CPU' S. Dose mode = 1 min., Standby mode = 1 min.
Video Off In Suspend After the selected period of system inactivity, the chipset enters a hardware suspend mode, stopping the CPU clock and possibly causing other system devices to enter power management modes. In this case the video hardware can be selected to shut off after a period of system inactivity. This determines the manner in which the monitor is blanked. Suspend Type Select the suspend type. The choice: PWRON suspend, Stop Grant MODEM use IRQ This determines the IRQ in which the MODEM can use.
Power On By Ring An input signal on the serial Ring Indicator (RI) line (in other words, an incoming call on the modem) boots the system from a soft off state. Resume By Alarm This option is used to Enable/Disable USB keyboard wake up with suspend to RAM. The choices: Enable, disable Date Alarm You can choose which month the system will boot up. Set to 0 to boot everyday. Time Alarm You can choose what hour, minute and second the system will boot up.
PnP/PCI Configurations PnP OS installed This item allows you to determine install PNP OS or not. The choice: Yes,No Reset Configuration Data Normally, you leave this field disabled. Select enabled to reset Extended System Configuration Data (ESCD) when you exit Setup if you have installed a new add-on and the system reconfiguration has caused such a serious conflict that the operating system can not boot.
Resources Controlled By 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. If you set this field to “manual” choose specific resources by going into each of the sub menu that follows this field ( a sub menu is proceeded by a “>”. The choices: Auto, Manual.
PC Health Status Shutdown Temperature Your system can be configured to shutdown once reaching a certain temperature. To protect your system from overheating or damage, select a certain temperature level in the PC Health Status menu.
Frequency/Voltage Control Auto Detect DIMM/PCI CLK This item allows you to enable/disable auto detect DIMM/PCI clock. The choices: Enable/Disable Spread Spectrum This allows you to enable/disable the spread spectrum modulate. When the system clock generator pulses, the extreme values of the pulse generate excess EMI. Enabling pulse spectrum spread modulation changes the extreme pulse spikes to flat curves thus reducing EMI.
Load Fail-Safe Defaults Load Fail-Safe Defaults When you press on this item you get a confirmation dialog box with a message similar to: Load Fail-Safe Default (Y/N)? Pressing “Y” loads the BIOS default values for the most stable, minimal performance system operations.
Load Optimized Default Load Optimized Default When you press on this item you get a confirmation dialog box with a message similar to: Load Optimized Defaults (Y/N)? Pressing “Y” loads the default values that are factory settings for optimal performance system operations 72 SBC-659P User Manual
Set Supervisor Password When you select this function, a message appears at the center of the screen: ENTER PASSWORD: Type the password, up to eight characters, and press Enter. Typing a password clears any previously entered password from CMOS memory. Now the message changes: CONFIRM PASSWORD: Again, type the password and press Enter. To abort the process at any time, press Esc.
Set User Password When you select this function, a message appears at the center of the screen: ENTER PASSWORD: Type the password, up to eight characters, and press Enter. Typing a password clears any previously entered password from CMOS memory. Now the message changes: CONFIRM PASSWORD: Again, type the password and press Enter. To abort the process at any time, press Esc.
Save to CMOS and EXIT Save to CMOS and EXIT Pressing on this item asks for confirmation: Save to CMOS and Exit (Y/N)? Pressing “Y” stores the selections made in the menus in CMOS, a special section of memory that stays on after you turn your system off. The next time you boot your computer, the BIOS configures your system according to the Setup selections stored in CMOS. After saving the values the system is restarted again.
Exit without Saving Exit Without Saving Pressing on this item asks for confirmation: Quit Without Saving (Y/N)? This allows you to exit Setup without storing in CMOS any change. The previous selections remain in effect. This exits the Setup utility and restarts your computer.
CHAPTER 4 DRIVERS INSTALLATION This SBC-659P is equipped with an audio, VGA and Dual LAN interface. This chapter provides instructions for installing the software drivers on these pheripherals.
Installing Drivers Notice: Attention First if using operating systems such as Windows 95/98/2000 ® a chipset driver must be installed before VGA, LAN or Audio drivers are installed. Second if using Windows 95/98/2000® operating systems an Ultra ATA storage driver must also be installed after the chipset driver.
Installing Chipset Driver for Windows 95/98/ 2000® The chipset driver must be installed in order to proceed to LAN, VGA and AUDIO drivers. ==>Place the Driver CDROM into your CDROM drive. Pull up the CDROM file on your screen.
Installing Ultra ATA Storage Driver for Windows 95/98/ 2000® The Ultra ATA Storage Driver must be installed in order to use Windows 95/98/2000 ® operating systems. ==>Place the Driver CDROM into your CDROM drive. Pull up the CDROM file on your screen.
Installing Intel 82559 for Windows 95 or 98 Ver. 1.0® ==>Place the Driver CDROM into your CDROM drive. ==>Click on Start button ==>Click on Settings button ==>Click on Control Panel button ==>Click on System button ==>Click on Device Manager button ==>Click on PCI Ethernet Controller ==>Click on Remove ==>Click on OK ==>Click on Refresh ==>Click on Next ==>Select the Optional: Other Location.....
Installing VGA for Windows 95/98® ==>Place the Driver CDROM into your CDROM drive. Pull up the CDROM file on your screen.. ==>Click on Intel folder ==>Click on 810_815 folder ==>Click on Win9X folder ==>Click on Graphics folder ==>Click on Set Up folder ==>Click on Next ==>Click on yes ==>Now the shut down computer for restart Window should be visible, follow the command and the chipset driver has be installed. Caution:Installing VGA driver may under Windows 95 may apper following error message.
Installing Audio for Windows 95/98® ==>Place the Driver CDROM into your CDROM drive. Pull up the CDROM file on your screen.. ==>Click on Sound folder ==>Click on Alc 200 folder ==>Click on Win98 folder ==>Click on V1.80 folder ==>Click on WDM_1 folder ==>Next you will be asked to save this WDM file in a certain location. C drive, D drive, My docuements etc. ==>Click on Unzip ==>Click on OK ==>Now find the WDM file that you have just saved. C drive, D drive etc.
Installing Security Driver for Windows NT® Please perform this procedure first ==>Place the Driver CDROM into your CDROM drive. Pull up the CDROM file on your screen.. ==>Click on Chipset folder ==>Click on Intel folder ==>Click on Security folder ==>Click on Setup folder ==>Click on Next ==>Click on Yes ==>Click on Next ==>Click on Next ==>Now the shut down computer for restart Window should be visible, follow the command and the Security driver has be installed.
Installing Ultra ATA Storage Driver for Windows NT® The Ultra ATA Storage Driver must be installed in order to use Windows NT ® operating systems. ==>Place the Driver CDROM into your CDROM drive. Pull up the CDROM file on your screen.
Installing VGA for Windows NT® ==>Place the Driver CDROM into your CDROM drive. Pull up the CDROM file on your screen.. ==>Click on VGA folder ==>Click on Intel folder ==>Click on 810_815 folder ==>Click on NT4 folder ==>Click on Graphics folder ==>Click on Set Up folder ==>Click on Next ==>Click on yes ==>Now the shut down computer for restart Window should be visible, follow the command and the chipset driver has be installed.
Installing Audio for Windows NT® ==>Place the Driver CDROM into your CDROM drive. Pull up the CDROM file on your screen.. ==>Click on Sound folder ==>Click on Alc 200 folder ==>Click on WinNT folder ==>Click on V1.80 folder ==>Click on WDM_1 ==>Next you will be asked to save this WDM file in a certain location. C drive, D drive, My docuements etc. ==>Click on Unzip ==>Click on OK ==>Now find the WDM file that you have just saved. C drive, D drive etc.
Installing Intel 82559 for Windows NT® ==>Place the Driver CDROM into your CDROM drive. ==>Click on Start button ==>Click on Settings button ==>Click on Control Panel button ==>Click on Network ==>Click on yes ==>Click on next ==>Click on Select from list.......
Installing VGA for Windows 2000® ==>Place the Driver CDROM into your CDROM drive. Pull up the CDROM file on your screen.. ==>Click on VGA folder ==>Click on Intel folder ==>Click on 810_815 folder ==>Click on Win2000 folder ==>Click on 815 folder ==>Click on Set Up folder ==>Click on Next ==>Click on yes ==>Click on Next ==>Click on yes ==>Now the shut down computer for restart Window should be visible, follow the command and the chipset driver has be installed.
Installing Audio for Windows 2000® ==>Place the Driver CDROM into your CDROM drive. Pull up the CDROM file on your screen.. ==>Click on Sound folder ==>Click on Alc 200 folder ==>Click on Win2000 folder ==>Click on V1.80 folder ==>Click on WDM_1 folder ==>Click on Unzip ==>Next you will be asked to save this WDM file in a certain location. C drive, D drive, My docuements etc. ==>Now find the WDM file that you have just saved. C drive, D drive etc.