This publication contains information that is protected by copyright.
No part of it may be reproduced in any form or by any means or
used to make any transformation/adaptation without the prior written permission from the copyright holders.
This publication is provided for informational purposes only. The
manufacturer makes no representations or warranties with respect to
the contents or use of this manual and specifically disclaims any express or implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for any particular purpose. The user will assume the entire risk of the use or the
results of the use of this document. Further, the manufacturer reserves the right to revise this publication and make changes to its
contents at any time, without obligation to notify any person or entity of such revisions or changes.
Product names or trademarks appearing in this manual are for
identification purpose only and are the properties of the
respective owners.
FCC and DOC Statement on Class B
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the
limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC
rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection
against harmful interference when the equipment is operated in a
residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual, may cause harmful interference
to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that
interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this
equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television
reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off
and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference
by one or more of the following measures:
•Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
•Increase the separation between the equipment and the receiver.
•Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from
that to which the receiver is connected.
•Consult the dealer or an experienced radio TV technician for
help.
Notice:
1.The changes or modifications not expressly approved by the
party responsible for compliance could void the user's authority
to operate the equipment.
2.Shielded interface cables must be used in order to comply with
the emission limits.
Table of Contents
About this Manual................................................................................
Appendix A - Watchdog Timer.............................................................
Appendix B - System Error Messages...............................................
Appendix C - Troubleshooting..........................................................
Appendix D - NLITE and AHCI Installation Guide......................
60
60
102
103
105
125
130
132
134
138
About this Manual
An electronic file of this manual is included in the CD. To view the
user’s manual in the CD, inser t the CD into a CD-ROM drive. The
autorun screen (Main Board Utility CD) will appear. Click “User’s
Manual” on the main menu.
Warranty
1.Warranty does not cover damages or failures that arised from
misuse of the product, inability to use the product, unauthorized
replacement or alteration of components and product specifications.
2.The warranty is void if the product has been subjected to physical abuse, improper installation, modification, accidents or unauthorized repair of the product.
3.Unless otherwise instructed in this user’s manual, the user may
not, under any circumstances, attempt to perform service, adjustments or repairs on the product, whether in or out of warranty.
It must be returned to the purchase point, factory or authorized
service agency for all such work.
4.We will not be liable for any indirect, special, incidental or
consequencial damages to the product that has been modified
or altered.
1
Introduction
Static Electricity Precautions
It is quite easy to inadvertently damage your PC, system board,
components or devices even before installing them in your system
unit. Static electrical discharge can damage computer components
without causing any signs of physical damage. You must take extra
care in handling them to ensure against electrostatic build-up.
1.To prevent electrostatic build-up, leave the system board in its
anti-static bag until you are ready to install it.
2.Wear an antistatic wrist strap.
3.Do all preparation work on a static-free surface.
4.Hold the device only by its edges. Be careful not to touch any of
the components, contacts or connections.
5.Avoid touching the pins or contacts on all modules and connectors. Hold modules or connectors by their ends.
Important:
Electrostatic discharge (ESD) can damage your processor,
disk drive and other components. Perform the upgrade instruction procedures described at an ESD workstation
only. If such a station is not available, you can provide
some ESD protection by wearing an antistatic wrist strap
and attaching it to a metal part of the system chassis. If a
wrist strap is unavailable, establish and maintain contact
with the system chassis throughout any procedures requiring ESD protection.
Safety Measures
To avoid damage to the system:
•Use the correct AC input voltage range
To reduce the risk of electric shock:
•Unplug the power cord before removing the system chassis
cover for installation or servicing. After installation or servicing,
cover the system chassis before plugging the power cord.
..
.
..
Battery:
•Danger of explosion if battery incorrectly replaced.
•Replace only with the same or equivalent type recommend
the manufacturer.
•Dispose of used batteries according to local ordinance.
by
6
About the Package
The system board package contains the following items. If any of
these items are missing or damaged, please contact your dealer or
sales representative for assistance.
;The system board
;A user’s manual
;One IDE cable
;Two USB port cables
;Two Serial ATA data cables
;Two Serial ATA power cables
;One “Main Board Utility” CD
;One I/O shield
;One QR (Quick Reference)
Introduction
1
The system board and accessories in the package may not come
similar to the information listed above. This may differ in accordance
to the sales region or models in which it was sold. For more information about the standard package in your region, please contact
your dealer or sales representative.
Before Using the System Board
Before using the system board, prepare basic system components.
If you are installing the system board in a new system, you will need
at least the following internal components.
•A CPU
•Memory module
•Storage devices such as hard disk drive, CD-ROM, etc.
You will also need external system peripherals you intend to use
which will normally include at least a keyboard, a mouse and a video
display monitor.
• 1333*/1066/800MHz FSB
*Available on CPUs that support 1333MHz FSB
®
• Intel
chipset
- Intel® Q35 Express chipset
- Intel® ICH9R I/O Controller Hub (BL600-DR)
Intel® ICH9 I/O Controller Hub (BL600-D)
• Four 240-pin DDR2 DIMM sockets
• Supports dual channel (128-bit wide) memor y interface
• Supports 667MHz and 800MHz DDR2 SDRAM
• Supports maximum of 8GB system memory using 512Mbit or
1Gbit technology for x8 and x16 devices
*ECC DDR2 DIMMs are not supported
• Award BIOS
• 8Mbit flash memory
• Suppor ts ACPI specification and OS Directed Power
Management
• Suppor ts ACPI STR (Suspend to RAM) function
• Wake-On-Events include:
- Wake-On-PS/2 Keyboard/Mouse
- Wake-On-USB Keyboard/Mouse
- Wake-On-LAN and Wake-On-Ring
- RTC timer to power-on the system
• System power management supported
• Microsoft®/Intel®APM 1.2 compliant
• Soft Power supported - ACPI v1.0a specification
• AC power failure recovery
• Monitors CPU/system/AUX temperature and overheat alarm
• Monitors CPU(V)/5V/1.5V/dimm(V)/12V/VBAT(V)/3.3V/ V3.3sb(V)
voltages and failure alarm
• Monitors CPU/system/2nd fan speed and failure alarm
• Read back capability that displays temperature, voltage and fan
speed
• Watchdog timer function
8
Introduction
1
Audio
Graphics
LAN
Serial ATA
• Realtek ALC885 8-channel HD Audio Codec
• High-performance DACs with 106dB dynamic range (A-Weight),
ADCs with 101dB dynamic range (A-Weight)
• Integrated Intel GMA3100
- Up to 384MB maximum video memory
- 2048x1536 at 75 Hz maximum resolution
- Suppor ts DVI port through Serial Digital Video Out (SDVO)
interface
- Dual screen display through CRT and DVI-I (DVI-D signal only)
ports
• Two Realtek RTL8111DL PCI Express Gigabit controllers
• Suppor ts 10Mbps, 100Mbps and 1Gbps data transmission
• IEEE 802.3 (10/100Mbps) and IEEE 802.3ab (1Gbps) compliant
• Supports Serial ATA interfaces which are compliant with SATA
1.0 specification
• BL600-DR
- Supports up to 6 SATA devices
- SATA speed up to 3Gb/s
- RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 0+1 and RAID 5
• BL600-D
- Supports up to 4 SATA devices
- SATA speed up to 3Gb/s
IDE
Rear Panel I/O
Ports
• JMicron JMB368 PCI Express to PATA host controller
• Supports up to 2 UltraDMA 33/66/100Mbps IDE devices
• 1 mini-DIN-6 PS/2 mouse port
• 1 mini-DIN-6 PS/2 keyboard port
• 1 DB-15 VGA port
• 1 DVI-I port (DVI-D signal only)
• 2 RJ45 LAN por ts
• 6 USB 2.0/1.1 ports
• 6 audio jacks for center/subwoofer, rear R/L, side R/L, line-in, lineout (front R/L) and mic-in
9
1
Introduction
I/O Connectors
Expansion Slots
Temperature
Humidity
PCB
• 3 connectors for 6 additional external USB 2.0/1.1 ports
• 2 connectors for external serial ports
• 1 DIO connector
• 1 parallel connector
• 1 front audio connector for line-out and mic-in jacks
• 1 CD-in internal audio connector
• 1 S/PDIF-in/out connector
• 1 connector for IrDA interface
• 6 Serial ATA connectors (BL600-DR)
4 Serial ATA connectors (BL600-D)
• 1 40-pin IDE connector
• 1 floppy connector
• 1 24-pin ATX power connector
• 1 8-pin 12V power connector
• 1 chassis open connector
• 1 front panel connector
• 3 fan connectors
• 1 PCI Express x16 slot
• 5 PCI slots
o
•0
C to 60oC
• 10% to 90%
• 4 layers, ATX form factor
• 30.5cm (12") x 24.4cm (9.6")
10
Features
Introduction
1
watchdog timer
the set time interval. If the system hangs or fails to function, it will
reset at the set time interval so that your system will continue to
operate.
DDR2
GB per second and beyond. That is twice the speed of the conventional DDR without increasing its power consumption. DDR2
SDRAM modules work at 1.8V supply compared to 2.6V memory
voltage for DDR modules. DDR2 also incorporates new innovations
such as the On-Die Termination (ODT) as well as larger 4-bit prefetch against DDR which fetches 2 bits per clock cycle.
graphics
ports analog CRT and DVI-I interfaces.
DDR2 is a higher performance DDR technology
whose data transfer rate delivers bandwidth of 4.3
The graphics flexibility of the built-in Intel GMA3100
delivers exceptional 3D graphics performance. It sup-
The Watchdog Timer function allows your
application to regularly “clear” the system at
DVI
panel LCD monitors and modern video graphics cards. Data is
transmitted using the TMDS (Transition Minimized Differential
Signaling) protocol, providing a digital signal from the PC’s graphics
subsystem to the display.
7.1 + 2 channel
audio
channel audio output for advanced 7.1-channel super surround
sound audio system. ALC885 also supports S/PDIF output, allowing
digital connections with DVD systems or other audio/video
multimedia.
DVI (Digital Visual Interface) is a form of video interface technology made to maximize the quality of flat
The onboard Realtek ALC885 is a High
Definition audio codec and the 6 audio
jacks at the rear I/O panel provides 8-
11
1
Introduction
S/PDIF
having to be converted first to an analog format. This prevents the
quality of the audio signal from degrading whenever it is converted
to analog. S/PDIF is usually found on digital audio equipment such as
a DAT machine or audio processing device. The S/PDIF connector on
the system board sends surround sound and 3D audio signal outputs to amplifiers and speakers and to digital recording devices like
CD recorders.
ide
SERIAL ATA
3Gbps, it improves hard drive performance faster than the standard
parallel ATA whose data transfer rate is 100MB/s. The BL600-DR
board allows configuring RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 0+1 and RAID 5 on
Serial ATA drives connected to SATA ports 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5.
S/PDIF is a standard audio file transfer format that
transfers digital audio signals to a device without
The JMicron JMB368 chip supports up to two
UltraDMA 100Mbps IDE devices.
Serial ATA is a storage interface that is compliant
with SATA 1.0 specification. With speed of up to
gigabit lan
irda
and peripheral devices. The IRDA (Infrared Data Association) specification supports data transfers of 115K baud at a distance of 1
meter.
USB
while USB 2.0 supports 480Mb/second bandwidth providing a
marked improvement in device transfer speeds between your computer and a wide range of simultaneously accessible external Plug
and Play peripherals.
pci express
enhancing the capability of a x16 PCI Express lane to provide 4
Gigabytes per second transfer rate.
The two Realtek PCI Express Gigabit LAN controllers suppor t up to 1Gbps data transmission.
The system board is equipped with an IrDA connector for wireless connectivity between your computer
The system board supports USB 2.0 and USB 1.1
ports. USB 1.1 supports 12Mb/second bandwidth
The PCI Express architecture provides a high
performance graphics infrastructure by
12
Introduction
1
wake-on-ring
wake-up/power-on to respond to calls coming from an external modem or respond to calls from a modem PCI card that uses the PCI
PME (Power Management Event) signal to remotely wake up the
PC.
Important:
The 5V_standby power source of your power supply must support ≥720mA.
wake-on-lan
It is supported via the onboard LAN port or via a PCI LAN card
that uses the PCI PME (Power Management Event) signal. However,
if your system is in the Suspend mode, you can power-on the system
only through an IRQ or DMA interrupt.
Important:
The 5V_standby power source of your power supply must support ≥720mA.
This feature allows the system that is in the
Suspend mode or Soft Power Off mode to
This feature allows the network to remotely
wake up a Soft Power Down (Soft-Off) PC.
wake-on-PS/2
tem.
Important:
The 5V_standby power source of your power supply must support ≥720mA.
wake-on-USB
from the S3 (STR - Suspend To RAM) state.
Important:
If you are using the Wake-On-USB Keyboard/Mouse function for
2 USB ports, the 5V_standby power source of your power supply must support ≥1.5A. For 3 or more USB ports, the
5V_standby power source of your power supply must support
≥
2A.
This function allows you to use the PS/2 keyboard or PS/2 mouse to power-on the sys-
This function allows you to use a USB keyboard or USB mouse to wake up a system
13
1
Introduction
rtc timer
and time.
ACPI STR
fication. ACPI has energy saving features that enables PCs to implement Power Management and Plug-and-Play with operating systems
that support OS Direct Power Management. Currently, only Win-
®®
®
®®
dows
the Power Management Setup will allow you to use the Suspend to
RAM function.
With the Suspend to RAM function enabled, you can power-off the
system at once by pressing the power button or selecting “Standby”
when you shut down Windows
through the sometimes tiresome process of closing files, applications
and operating system. This is because the system is capable of storing all programs and data files during the entire operating session
into RAM (Random Access Memory) when it powers-off. The operating session will resume exactly where you left off the next time you
power-on the system.
2000/XP supports the ACPI function. ACPI when enabled in
The RTC installed on the system board allows your
system to automatically power-on on the set date
The system board is designed to meet the ACPI
(Advanced Configuration and Power Interface) speci-
®®
®
®®
2000/XP without having to go
Important:
The 5V_standby power source of your power supply must support ≥720mA.
Power failure
recovery
automatically.
When power returns after an AC power failure, you may choose to either power-on the
system manually or let the system power-on
14
Hardware Installation
Chapter 2 - Hardware Installation
System Board Layout
2
USB 6/7/8/9/10/11
power select (JP3)
Mouse
KB
USB 10
USB 11
Top:VGA
Bottom: DV -II
LAN 1
USB 8
USB 9
LAN 2
USB 6
USB 7
Center/Subwoofer
Rear R/L
Side R/L
Line-in
Line-out
Mic-in
CD-in
1
Audio
codec
PS/2 power
select (JP1)
1
1
Chrontel
CH7307C
Realtek
RTL8111DL
Realtek
RTL8111DL
+12V power
5
8
1
4
PCIE x16 / DVI
1
11
21
1
CPU fan
select (JP8)
Battery
ATX p ow er
24
12
Socket 775
1
13
1
Power-on
select (JP6)
Intel
Q35
1
IDE
10
20
30
PCIE1
PCI 1
1
DDR2-1
Clear CMOS (JP5)
DDR2-2
DDR2-3
DDR2-4
JMB368
1
FDD
System fan
1
1
1
2nd fan
SATA 1
SATA 3
SATA 5
Standby
Power LED
1
Front panel
SATA 0
1
SATA 2
11
SATA 4
1
1
1
1
1
1
I/O
chip
1
S/PDIF
IrDA
COM 2
Front audio
1
COM 1
PCI 2
Intel
ICH9R
PCI 3
PCI 4
SPI Flash BIOS
PCI 5
Parallel
1
DIO
1
USB 8-7
1
Chassis open
1
1
USB 2-1
USB 0/1/2/3/4/5
power select (JP2)
1
USB 5-4
The BL600-DR board (shown above) uses the ICH9R southbridge and
supports 6 SATA ports. On a BL600-D board, it uses ICH9 southbridge
and supports 4 SATA ports only (SATA 0/1/4/5).
Note:
The DVI-I port supports DVI-D signal only.
15
2
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Hardware Installation
Warning:
Electrostatic discharge (ESD) can damage your system board, processor, disk drives, add-in boards, and other components. Perform the
upgrade instruction procedures described at an ESD workstation only.
If such a station is not available, you can provide some ESD protection by wearing an antistatic wrist strap and attaching it to a metal
part of the system chassis. If a wrist strap is unavailable, establish
and maintain contact with the system chassis throughout any procedures requiring ESD protection.
System Memory
DDR2-1
DDR2-2
DDR2-3
DDR2-4
Channel A
Channel B
The system board supports 240-pin DDR2 DIMM sockets. The four
DDR2 DIMM sockets on the system board are divided into 2 channels:
Channel A - DDR2-1 and DDR2-2
Channel B - DDR2-3 and DDR2-4
16
Hardware Installation
The system board supports the following memory interface.
Single Channel (SC)
Data will be accessed in chunks of 64 bits (8B) from the memory
channels.
Dual Channel (DC)
Data will be accessed in chunks of 128 bits from the memory channels. Dual channel provides better system performance because it
doubles the data transfer rate.
2
Single Channel
Dual Channel
BIOS Setting
Configure the system memory in the Advanced Chipset Features
submenu of the BIOS.
•DIMMs are on the same channel.
•DIMMs in a channel can be identical or
completely different. However, we highly recommend using identical DIMMs.
•Not all slots need to be populated.
•DIMMs of the same memory configura-
tion are on different channels.
17
2
Hardware Installation
Installing the DIM Module
Note:
The system board used in the following illustrations may not
resemble the actual board. These illustrations are for reference
only.
1.Make sure the PC and all other peripheral devices connected to
it has been powered down.
2.Disconnect all power cords and cables.
3.Locate the DDR2 socket on the system board.
4.Push the “ejector tabs” which are at the ends of the socket to
the side.
Ejector
tab
DDR2 sockets
5.Note how the module is keyed to the socket.
Notch
Ejector
tab
18
Key
Hardware Installation
6.Grasping the module by its edges, position the module above
the socket with the “notch” in the module aligned with the “key”
on the socket. The keying mechanism ensures the module can be
plugged into the socket in only one way.
7.Seat the module vertically, pressing it down firmly until it is completely seated in the socket.
2
8.The ejector tabs at the ends of the socket will automatically
snap into the locked position to hold the module in place.
19
2
Hardware Installation
CPU
Overview
The system board is equipped with a surface mount LGA 775 socket. This
socket is exclusively designed for installing a LGA 775 packaged Intel
CPU.
Important:
1. Before you proceed, make sure (1) the LGA775 socket1. Before you proceed, make sure (1) the LGA775 socket
1. Before you proceed, make sure (1) the LGA775 socket
1. Before you proceed, make sure (1) the LGA775 socket1. Before you proceed, make sure (1) the LGA775 socket
comes with a protective cap, (2) the cap is not dam-comes with a protective cap, (2) the cap is not dam-
comes with a protective cap, (2) the cap is not dam-
comes with a protective cap, (2) the cap is not dam-comes with a protective cap, (2) the cap is not damaged and (3) the socket’s contact pins are not bent. Ifaged and (3) the socket’s contact pins are not bent. If
aged and (3) the socket’s contact pins are not bent. If
aged and (3) the socket’s contact pins are not bent. Ifaged and (3) the socket’s contact pins are not bent. If
the cap is missing or the cap and/or contact pins arethe cap is missing or the cap and/or contact pins are
the cap is missing or the cap and/or contact pins are
the cap is missing or the cap and/or contact pins arethe cap is missing or the cap and/or contact pins are
damaged,damaged,
damaged,
damaged,damaged,
2. Make sure to keep the protective cap. RMA requests2. Make sure to keep the protective cap. RMA requests
2. Make sure to keep the protective cap. RMA requests
2. Make sure to keep the protective cap. RMA requests2. Make sure to keep the protective cap. RMA requests
will be accepted and processed only if the LGA775will be accepted and processed only if the LGA775
will be accepted and processed only if the LGA775
will be accepted and processed only if the LGA775will be accepted and processed only if the LGA775
socket comes with the protective cap.socket comes with the protective cap.
socket comes with the protective cap.
socket comes with the protective cap.socket comes with the protective cap.
contact your dealer immediately contact your dealer immediately
contact your dealer immediately
contact your dealer immediately contact your dealer immediately
..
.
..
Installing the CPU
1.Make sure the PC and all other peripheral devices connected to it has
been powered down.
2.Disconnect all power cords and cables.
3. Locate the LGA 775
CPU socket on the
system board.
Important:
The CPU socket must
not come in contact with
anything other than the
CPU. Avoid unnecessary
exposure. Remove the
protective cap only when
you are about to install
the CPU.
20
Hardware Installation
2
4. The CPU socket comes
with a cover that is
attached with a removable protective cap. The
cap is used to protect
the CPU socket against
dust and harmful par ticles. Remove the protective cap only when you
are about to install the
CPU.
5. Lift the protective cap
from the location
pointed below to detach
the cap from the cover.
Cover
Protective cap
Lever
Lift this part up
6. Unlock the socket by
pushing the lever down,
moving it away from the
side tab of the socket,
then lifting it up.
7.Now lift the cover.
Lever
lifted
Ta b
Cover
21
2
Hardware Installation
8.Position the CPU above
the socket. The gold
mark on the CPU must
align with pin 1 of the
CPU socket.
Important:
Handle the CPU by its
edges and avoid touching the pins.
Pin 1 of
the socket
9.Insert the CPU into the
socket until it is seated
in place. The CPU will fit
in only one orientation
and can easily be inserted without exerting
any force.
Important:
Do not force the CPU
into the socket. Forcing
the CPU into the socket
may bend the pins and
damage the CPU.
Gold mark
22
10. Once the CPU is in
place, move the cover
down.
11. Push the lever down to
lock the socket. The
lever should hook onto
the side tab to indicate
that the CPU is completely secured in the
socket.
Installing the Fan and Heat Sink
Hardware Installation
2
Cover
Lever
The CPU must be kept cool by using a CPU fan with heat sink.
Without sufficient air circulation across the CPU and heat sink, the
CPU will overheat damaging both the CPU and system board.
Note:
•Use only certified fan and heat sink.
•The fan and heat sink package usually contains the fan and
heat sink assembly, and an installation guide. If the installation procedure in the installation guide differs from the one
in this section, please follow the installation guide in the
package.
1. Before you install the fan / heat sink, you must apply a thermal
paste onto the top of the CPU. The thermal paste is usually
supplied when you purchase the CPU or fan heat sink assembly.
Do not spread the paste all over the surface. When you later
place the heat sink on top of the CPU, the compound will disperse evenly.
Do not apply the paste if the fan / heat sink already has a patch
of thermal paste on its underside. Peel the strip that covers the
paste before you place the fan / heat sink on top of the CPU.
23
2
Hardware Installation
2. Place the heat sink on
top of the CPU. The 4
studs around the heat
sink which are used to
secure the heat sink
onto the system board
must match the 4
mounting holes around
the socket.
Position each stud so
that the groove faces
the heat sink then push
it down firmly until it
clicks into place.
Groove
Mounting hole
Mounting hole
Fan
Heat sink
Stud
Note:
You will not be able to secure the fan and heat sink assembly in place
if the groove is not facing the heat sink.
3. Connect the CPU fan’s cable connector to the CPU fan connector on
the system board.
24
Jumper Settings
Clear CMOS Data
Hardware Installation
2
312312
JP5
If you encounter the following,
a) CMOS data becomes corrupted.
b) You forgot the supervisor or user password.
you can reconfigure the system with the default values stored in the
ROM BIOS.
To load the default values stored in the ROM BIOS, please follow
the steps below.
1.Power-off the system and unplug the power cord.
1-2 On: Normal
X
(default)
2-3 On:
Clear CMOS Data
2.Set JP5 pins 2 and 3 to On. Wait for a few seconds and set JP5
back to its default setting, pins 1 and 2 On.
3.Now plug the power cord and power-on the system.
25
2
Hardware Installation
PS/2 Power Select
JP1
312312
X
1-2 On: 5V
(default)
JP1 is used to select the power of the PS/2 keyboard/mouse port.
Selecting 5V_standby will allow you to use the PS/2 keyboard or
PS/2 mouse to wake up the system.
2-3 On:
5V_standby
BIOS Setting
Configure the PS/2 keyboard/mouse wake up function in the Integrated Peripherals submenu (“Super IO Device” section) of the BIOS.
Refer to chapter 3 for more information.
Important:
The 5V_standby power source of your power supply must support ≥720mA.
26
USB Power Select
Hardware Installation
2
USB 6/7/8/9/10/11
(JP3)
312312
X
1-2 On: 5V
(default)
USB 0/1/2/3/4/5
(JP2)
X
1-2 On: 5V
(default)
312
JP2 and JP3 are used to select the power of the USB ports. Selecting 5V_standby will allow you to use the USB keyboard or USB
mouse to wake up the system.
2-3 On:
5V_standby
312
2-3 On:
5V_standby
BIOS Setting
“USB KB Wake-Up From S3” in the Power Management Setup
submenu of the BIOS must be set to Enabled. Refer to chapter 3
for more information.
Important:
If you are using the Wake-On-USB Keyboard/Mouse function for
2 USB ports, the 5V_standby power source of your power supply must support ≥1.5A. For 3 or more USB ports, the
5V_standby power source of your power supply must support
≥
2A.
27
2
Hardware Installation
PCIE x16 / DVI Select
10
20
30
10
20
30
JP8
X
1
11
21
1-10, 11-20 On:
DVI (default)
1
11
21
11-20, 21-30 On:
PCIE x16
The system board allows connecting a device to either the DVI port
at the rear panel or to the PCI Express x16 card. However, you
cannot use devices connected to both the DVI port and PCI Express x16 card at the same time. Use JP8 to select between using
PCIE x16 and DVI.
28
Power-on Select
Hardware Installation
2
JP6
X
1-2 On:
Power-on via
power button
(default)
1
2
3
Power-on via
AC power
1
2
3
2-3 On:
JP6 is used to select the method of powering on the system. If you
want the system to power-on whenever AC power comes in, set
JP6 pins 2 and 3 to On. If you want to use the power button, set
pins 1 and 2 to On.
29
2
Hardware Installation
Rear Panel I/O Ports
PS/2
Mouse
VGA
LAN 1LAN 2
Center/
Subwoofer
Rear R/L
Line-in
USB 11
PS/2 K/BDVI-I
USB 10
USB 8/9
The rear panel I/O ports consist of the following:
•PS/2 mouse port
•PS/2 keyboard port
•USB ports
•VGA por t
•DVI-I port (DVI-D signal only)
•2 LAN ports
•Center/Subwoofer port
•Rear R/L port
•Side R/L port
•Line-in jack
•Line-out jack
•Mic-in jack
USB 6/7
Line-out
Mic-in
Side R/L
30
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