-001 First version of the Intel® Desktop Board D975XBX2 Product Guide September 2006
-002 Update to the Intel® Desktop Board D975XBX2 Product Guide October 2006
-003 Update to the Intel® Desktop Board D975XBX2 Product Guide November 2006
-004 Update to the Intel® Desktop Board D975XBX2 Product Guide January 2007
-005 Update to the Intel® Desktop Board D975XBX2 Product Guide October 2007
If an FCC declaration of conformity marking is present on the board, the following statement applies:
FCC Declaration of Conformity
This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions:
(1) this device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference
received, including interference that may cause undesired operation.
For questions related to the EMC performance of this product, contact:
Intel Corporation, 5200 N.E. Elam Young Parkway, Hillsboro, OR 97124
1-800-628-8686
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 in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency
energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, 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 to an outlet on a circuit other than the one to which the receiver is connected.
Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.
Any changes or modifications to the equipment not expressly approved by Intel Corporation could void the
user’s authority to operate the equipment.
Tested to comply with FCC standards for home or office use.
Canadian Department of Communications Compliance Statement
This digital apparatus does not exceed the Class B limits for radio noise emissions from digital apparatus set
out in the Radio Interference Regulations of the Canadian Department of Communications.
Le présent appareil numérique német pas de bruits radioélectriques dépassant les limites applicables aux
appareils numériques de la classe B prescrites dans le Réglement sur le broullage radioélectrique édicté par
le ministére des Communications du Canada.
Disclaimer
Information in this document is provided in connection with Intel® products. No license, express or implied,
by estoppel or
in Intel’s Terms and Conditions of Sale for such products, Intel assumes no liability whatsoever, and Intel
disclaims any express or implied warranty, relating to sale and/or use of Intel products including liability or
warranties relating to fitness for a particular purpose, merchantability, or infringement of any patent,
copyright or other intellectual property right. Intel products are not intended for use in medical, life saving,
or life sustaining applications. Intel may make changes to specifications and product descriptions at any
time, without notice.
Desktop Board D975XBX2 may contain design defects or errors known as errata which may cause the
product to deviate from published specifications. Current characterized errata are available on request.
Contact your local Intel sales office or your distributor to obtain the latest specifications and before placing
your product order.
Copies of documents which have an ordering number and are referenced in this document, or other Intel
literature, may be obtained from Intel Corporation by going to the World Wide Web site at:
http://www.intel.com/ or by calling 1-800-548-4725.
Intel, Pentium, and Celeron are registered trademarks of Intel Corporation in the United States and other
countries.
otherwise, to any intellectual property rights is granted by this document. Except as provided
Preface
This Product Guide gives information about board layout, component installation, BIOS
updates, and regulatory requirements for Intel
®
Desktop Board D975XBX2.
Intended Audience
The Product Guide is intended only for technically qualified personnel.
Use Only for Intended Applications
All Intel desktop boards are evaluated as Information Technology Equipment (I.T.E.)
for use in personal computers (PCs) for installation in homes, offices, schools,
computer rooms, and similar locations. The suitability of this product for other PC or
embedded non-PC applications or other environments, such as medical, industrial,
alarm systems, test equipment, etc. may not be supported without further evaluation
by Intel.
Document Layout
The chapters in this Product Guide are arranged as follows:
1 Desktop Board Features: a summary of product features
2 Installing and Replacing Desktop Board Components: instructions on how to install
the desktop board and other hardware components
3 BIOS: instructions on how to update the BIOS
4 Configuring for RAID: information about configuring your system for RAID
A Error Messages and Indicators: information about BIOS error messages and beep
codes
B Regulatory Compliance: safety and EMC regulations, product certification
Conventions
The following conventions are used in this manual:
CAUTION
Cautions warn the user about how to prevent damage to hardware or loss of data.
NOTE
Notes call attention to important information.
iii
Intel Desktop Board D975XBX2 Product Guide
Terminology
The table below gives descriptions to some common terms used in the product guide.
The desktop board supports the following operating systems:
• Microsoft Windows Vista* Ultimate
• Microsoft Windows Vista Enterprise
• Microsoft Windows Vista Business
• Microsoft Windows Vista Home Premium
• Microsoft Windows Vista Home Basic
• Microsoft Windows Vista Ultimate 64-bit edition
• Microsoft Windows Vista Enterprise 64-bit edition
• Microsoft Windows Vista Business 64-bit edition
• Microsoft Windows Vista Home Premium 64-bit edition
• Microsoft Windows Vista Home Basic 64-bit edition
• Microsoft Windows* XP Media Center Edition 2005
• Microsoft Windows XP Professional
• Microsoft Windows XP Professional x64 Edition
• Microsoft Windows XP Home
• Microsoft Windows 2000
Desktop Board Features
11
Intel Desktop Board D975XBX2 Product Guide
Desktop Board Components
Figure 1 shows the approximate location of the major components on Desktop Board
D975XBX2.
Figure 1. Desktop Board D975XBX2 Components
12
Table 2. Desktop Board D975XBX2 Components
Label Description
A Auxiliary rear chassis fan header (4-pin)
B PCI bus add-in card connector 2 (SMBus routed)
C PCI Express x16 connector 3 (electrical x4)
D PCI bus add-in card connector 1
E PCI Express x16 connector 2 (electrical x8)
F Front panel audio header
G Primary PCI Express x16 connector 1 (electrical x16 or x8)
H Rear chassis fan header (3-pin)
I Alternate power connector (1x4)
J Back panel connectors
K 12 V power connector (2x4)
L Secondary chassis fan header (3-pin)
M Processor socket (LGA775)
N DDR 2 DIMM 0 sockets
O Processor fan header (4-pin)
P DDR 2 DIMM 1 sockets
Q Main power connector (2x12)
R Diskette drive connector
S BIOS configuration jumper
T Chassis intrusion header
U Onboard power button
V Battery
W IDE connector (right angle connector)
X 3.0-Gigabit/s Serial ATA connectors 0, 1, 2, and 3 (black)
Y Front chassis fan header (3-pin)
Z Alternate front panel power LED header (1x3)
AA USB 2.0 headers (two ports per header)
BB IEEE 1394a header
CC 3.0-Gigabit/s Serial ATA connectors 5, 6, and 7 (blue)
DD
EE Front panel header
FF Speaker
3.0-Gigabit/s Serial ATA connector 4, compatible with external Serial ATA
adapter (red)
Desktop Board Features
Related Links
Go to the following links for more information about:
Failure to use the appropriate power supply (below) and/or not connecting the 12 V
(2x4) power connector to the desktop board may result in damage to the board or the
system may not function properly.
The desktop board D975XBX2 supports an Intel
Processors are not included with the desktop board and must be purchased separately.
The processor connects to the Intel desktop board through the LGA775 socket.
The supported processors list for Desktop Board D975XBX2 is located on the web at:
Go to the following links or pages for more information about:
• Instructions on installing or upgrading the processor, page 30 in Chapter 2
• The location of the po
wer connectors, page 50 in Chapter 2
®
processor in the LGA775 package.
Main Memory
NOTE
To be fully compliant with all applicable Intel® SDRAM memory specifications, the
desktop board should be populated with DIMMs that support the Serial Presence
Detect (SPD) data structure. If your memory modules do not support SPD, you will
see a notification to this effect on the screen at power up. The BIOS will attempt to
configure the memory controller for normal operation.
The desktop board supports dual or single channel memory configurations defined
below:
•Four 240-pin Double Data Rate 2 (DDR2) SDRAM Dual Inline Memory Module
(DIMMs) connectors with gold-plated contacts.
•Support for:
Unbuffered, non-registered single or double-sided DIMMs
ECC and non-ECC DDR2 800/667/533 MHz memory
Serial Presence Detect (SPD) memory only
Memory configuration listed below:
• Up to 2.0 GB utilizing 256 Mb technology
• Up to 4.0 GB utilizing 512 Mb or 1 Gb technology
• Up to 8.0 GB utilizing 1 Gb technology
14
Desktop Board Features
NOTE
Regardless of the DIMM type used, the memory frequency will either be equal to or
less than the processor system bus frequency. For example, if DDR2 667 memory is
used with a 533 MHz system bus frequency processor, the memory will operate at
533 MHz. Table 3 lists the resulting operating memory frequencies based on the
combinatio
Two LEDs are built into the RJ-45 LAN connector located on the back panel (see
Figure 2). These LEDs indicate the
Figure 2. LAN Connector LEDs
Table 4 describes the LED states when the board is powered up and the
10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet LAN subsystem is operating.
status of the LAN.
Table 4. RJ-45 10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet LAN Connector LEDs
LED LED Color LED State Indicates
A Off LAN link is not established
Blinking LAN activity is occurring
B
17
Green
N/A Off 10 Mb/s data rate
Green On 100 Mb/s data rate
Yellow On 1000 Mb/s data rate
On LAN link is established
Intel Desktop Board D975XBX2 Product Guide
Hi-Speed USB 2.0 Support
NOTE
Computer systems that have an unshielded cable attached to a USB port might not
meet FCC Class B requirements, even if no device or a low-speed USB device is
attached to the cable. Use a shielded cable that meets the requirements for a
full-speed USB device.
The desktop board supports up to eight USB 2.0 ports via ICH7; four ports routed to
the back panel and four routed to two internal USB 2.0 headers. USB 2.0 ports are
backward compatible with USB 1.1 devices. USB 1.1 devices will function normally at
USB 1.1 speeds.
USB 2.0 support requires both an operating system and drivers that fully support
USB 2.0 transfer rates. Disabling Hi-Speed USB in the BIOS reverts all USB 2.0 ports
to USB 1.1 operation. This may be required to accommodate operating systems that
do not support USB 2.0.
Enhanced IDE Interface
The ICH7 IDE interface handles the exchange of information between the processor
and peripheral devices like hard disks, CD-ROM drives, and Iomega Zip* drives inside
the computer. The interface supports:
• Up to two IDE devices (such as hard drives)
• ATAPI-style devices (such as CD-ROM drives)
• Older PIO Mode devices
• Ultra DMA-33 and ATA-66/100 protocols
Serial ATA
The desktop board supports eight Serial ATA channels, connecting one device per
channel in either a RAID or a non-RAID configuration.
Expandability
For system expansion, the desktop board supports the following:
•One PCI Express x16 card as an electrical x16 card or two PCI Express x16 cards
as electrical x8 cards
• One PCI Express x16 card as an electrical x4 card
• Two PCI bus add-in cards
Related Links
For information about installing a PCI Express x16 card, see page 38 in Chapter 2.
18
Desktop Board Features
BIOS
The BIOS provides the Power-On Self-Test (POST), the BIOS Setup program, the PCI
and IDE auto-configuration utilities, and the video BIOS.
See Chapter 3 on page 59 for more information about the BIOS.
Serial ATA and IDE Auto Configuration
If you connect a Serial ATA or IDE device (such as a hard drive) to your desktop
board, the auto-configuration utility in the BIOS automatically detects and configures
the device for your computer. You do not need to run the BIOS Setup program after
installing a Serial ATA or IDE device. You can override the auto-configuration options
by specifying manual configuration in the BIOS Setup program.
When booting from a Serial ATA device, the device connected to Serial ATA connector
0 is the first boot device and the device connected to Serial ATA connector 3 is the last
boot device by default.
PCI and PCI Express* Auto Configuration
If you install a PCI/PCI Express add-in card in your desktop board, the PCI/PCI
Express auto-configuration utility in the BIOS automatically detects and configures the
resources (IRQs, DMA channels, and I/O space) for that add-in card. You do not need
to run the BIOS Setup program after you install a PCI/PCI Express add-in card.
Security Passwords
The BIOS includes security features that restrict whether the BIOS Setup program can
be accessed and who can boot the computer. A supervisor password and a user
password can be set for the BIOS Setup and for booting the computer, with the
following restrictions:
•The supervisor password gives unrestricted access to view and change all Setup
options. If only the supervisor password is set, pressing <Enter> at the password
prompt of Setup gives the user restricted access to Setup.
•If both the supervisor and user passwords are set, you must enter either the
supervisor password or the user password to access Setup. Setup options are then
available for viewing and changing depending on whether the supervisor or user
password was entered.
•Setting a user password restricts who can boot the computer. The password
prompt is displayed before the computer is booted. If only the supervisor
password is set, the computer boots without asking for a password. If both
passwords are set, you can enter either password to boot the computer.
Related Links:
For instructions on resetting the password, see Clearing Passwords on page 53.
19
Intel Desktop Board D975XBX2 Product Guide
Chassis Intrusion
The desktop board supports a chassis security feature that detects if the chassis cover
has been removed. The security feature uses a mechanical switch on the chassis that
can be connected to the chassis intrusion header on the desktop board. See Figure 29
on page 51 for the location of the chassis intrusion header.
Power Management Features
Power management is implemented at several levels, including:
• Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI)
• Hardware support:
― Fan connectors
― Fan Speed Control
― Suspend to RAM (Instantly Available PC technology)
― Resume on Ring
― Wake from USB
― Wake from PS/2 keyboard/mouse
― PME# wakeup support
― Onboard power button
ACPI
ACPI gives the operating system direct control over the power management and Plug
and Play functions of a computer. The use of ACPI with the desktop board requires an
operating system that provides full ACPI support.
Fan Connectors
Desktop Board D975XBX2 has four chassis fan connectors (three 3-pin and one 4-pin),
and one processor fan connector (4-pin).
Fan Speed Control (Intel® Precision Cooling Technology)
Intel Precision Cooling Technology automatically adjusts the processor fan speed based
on the processor temperature and adjusts the chassis fan speeds depending on the
system temperature. System fan noise may be reduced by operating controlled
chassis and processor fans at the minimum necessary speeds.
The processor and chassis fan speed control features can be disabled independently
through the desktop board BIOS. Disabling the processor fan speed control will result
in the fan operating at full speed if it is not a self-controlled fan. It is recommended
that processor fan speed control remain enabled (default BIOS setting) when using the
processor fan heat sink included with Intel
fan speed control results in chassis fans always operating at full speed. The chassis
fan speed control feature should be disabled if a self-controlled chassis fan is attached
to any controlled chassis fan header.
®
boxed processors. Disabling the chassis
The overall system noise reduction will vary based on system configuration and
environment.
20
Desktop Board Features
Suspend to RAM (Instantly Available PC Technology)
CAUTION
For Instantly Available PC technology, the 5 V standby line for the power supply must
be capable of delivering adequate +5 V standby current. Failure to provide adequate
standby current when using this feature can damage the power supply and/or affect
ACPI S3 sleep state functionality.
CAUTION
Power supplies used with this desktop board must be able to provide enough standby
current to support the standard Instantly Available (ACPI S3 sleep state) configuration.
If the standby current necessary to support multiple wake events from the PCI and/or
USB buses exceeds power supply capacity, the desktop board may lose register
settings stored in memory.
Instantly Available PC technology enables the board to enter the ACPI S3 (Suspend-toRAM) sleep state. While in the S3 sleep state, the computer will appear to be off.
When signaled by a wake-up device or event, the system quickly returns to its last
known awake state.
The desktop board’s standby power indicator, shown in Figure 3, is lit when there is
standb
connectors, even when the computer appears to be off.
If the system has a dual-colored power LED on the front panel, the sleep state is
indicated by the LED turning amber.
Related Links
For more information on standby current requirements for the desktop board, go to
the link below, select the desktop board name, and then select Technical
Documentation:
y power to the system. This includes the memory modules and PCI bus
Figure 3. Location of Standby Power Indicator
http://developer.intel.com/design/motherbd/
21
Intel Desktop Board D975XBX2 Product Guide
Resume on Ring
The operation of Resume on Ring can be summarized as follows:
• Resumes operation from either ACPI S1 or ACPI S3 state
• Requires only one call to access the computer
• Detects incoming call similarly for external and internal modems
• Requires modem interrupt be unmasked for correct operation
Wake from USB
NOTE
Wake from USB requires the use of a USB peripheral that supports Wake from USB.
USB bus activity wakes the computer from an ACPI S1 or S3 state.
Wake from PS/2* Keyboard/Mouse
PS/2 keyboard/mouse activity wakes the computer from an ACPI S1 or S3 state.
PME# Wakeup Support
When the PME# signal on the PCI bus is asserted, the computer wakes from an ACPI
S1, S3, or S5 state.
22
Desktop Board Features
Onboard Power Button
CAUTION
Electrostatic discharge (ESD) can damage components. Perform the procedure
described in this section only at an ESD workstation using an antistatic wrist strap and
a conductive foam pad. 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
computer chassis.
A power button on the desktop board (see Figure 4) can be used to turn the computer
on or of
power before making changes to the system configuration, or for testing purposes.
The power button on the front panel is recommended for all other instances of turning
the computer on or off. To turn off the computer using the onboard power button,
keep the button pressed down for three seconds.
f. This button is intended for use at integration facilities to remove standby
Figure 4. Location of Onboard Power Button
Speaker
A speaker is mounted on the desktop board. The speaker provides audible error code
(beep code) information during the Power-On Self-Test (POST).
Battery
A battery on the desktop board keeps the values in CMOS RAM and the clock current
when the computer is turned off. See Chapter 2 starting on page 25 for instructions
on ho
w to replace the battery.
Real-Time Clock
The desktop board has a time-of-day clock and 100-year calendar. The battery on the
desktop board keeps the clock current when the computer is turned off.
23
Intel Desktop Board D975XBX2 Product Guide
24
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