Jetway V623DMR1A User Manual

V623DMP/V623DMW
USER'S MANUAL
M/B For Socket 370 Pentium III Processor
NO. G03-V623DMP
Rev:1.0
Release date: October 2003
Trademark:
* Specifications and Information contained in this documentation are furnished for information use only, and are
subject to change at any time without notice, and should not be construed as a commitment by manufacturer.
USER’S NOTICE ..........................................................................................................ii
MANUAL REVISION INFORMATION..........................................................................ii
THERMAL SOLUTIONS................................................................................................ii
CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION OF MOTHERBOARD
1-1 FEATURE OF MOTHERBOARD.......................................................................... 1
1-2 SPECIFICATION ..................................................................................................... 2
1-3 PERFORMANCE LIST ...........................................................................................3
1-4 LAYOUT DIAGRAM & JUMPER SETTING ......................................................4
CHAPTER 2 HARDWARE INSTALLATION
2-1 HARDWARE INSTALLATION STEPS ................................................................6
2-2 CHECKING MOTHERBOARD'S JUMPER SETTING......................................6
2-3 INSTALL CPU ..........................................................................................................7
2-3-1 GLOSSARY ...................................................................................................7
2-3-2 SETTING CPU BUS CLOCK & MEMORY CLOCK JUMPER ............9
2-3-3 INSTALL CPU............................................................................................... 9
2-3-4 OVERCLOCK RUNNING ...........................................................................9
2-4 INSTALL MEMORY ............................................................................................... 10
2-5 EXPANSION CARDS............................................................................................... 11
2-5-1 PROCEDURE FOR EXPANSION CARD INSTALLATION ..................11
2-5-2 ASSIGNING IRQ FOR EXPANSION CARD ............................................11
2-5-3 INTERRUPT REQUEST TABLE FOR THIS MOTHERBOARD.......... 12
2-6 CONNECTORS, HEADERS.................................................................................... 13
2-6-1 CONNECTORS .............................................................................................13
2-6-2 HEADERS ......................................................................................................15
2-7 STARTING UP YOUR COMPUTER..................................................................... 18
CHAPTER 3 INTRODUCING BIOS
3-1 ENTERING SETUP.................................................................................................. 19
3-2 GETTING HELP....................................................................................................... 20
3-3 THE MAIN MENU ...................................................................................................20
3-4 STANDARD CMOS FEATURES............................................................................ 22
3-5 ADVANCED BIOS FEATURES .............................................................................23
3-6 ADVANCED CHIPSET FEATURES ..................................................................... 25
3-6-1 DRAM TIMING SETTING.......................................................................... 26
3-6-2 AGP TIMING SETTINGS ...........................................................................27
3-6-3 PCI TIMING SETTINGS............................................................................. 27
3-7 INTEGRATED PERIPHERALS............................................................................. 27
3-7-1 ON-CHIP IDE FUNCTION.......................................................................... 28
3-7-2 ON-CHIP DEVICE FUNCTION .................................................................29
3-7-3 ON-CHIP SIO FUNCTION.......................................................................... 30
3-8 POWER MANAGEMENT SETUP .........................................................................31
3-8-1 WAKE UP EVENTS .....................................................................................32
3-9 PNP/PCI CONFIGURATION SETUP ................................................................... 33
3-10 PC HEALTH STATUS............................................................................................ 34
3-11 MISCELLANEOUS CONTROL............................................................................34
3-12 LOAD STANDARD/OPTIMIZED DEFAULTS ..................................................35
3-13 SET SUPERVISOR/USER PASSWORD ..............................................................35
CHAPTER 4 DRIVER & FREE PROGRAM INSTALLATION
MAGIC INSTALL SUPPORTS WINDOWS 95/98/98SE/NT4.0/2000 .........................36
4-1 VIA 4 IN 1 4-2 VGA 4-3 SOUND 4-4 LAN 4-5 MAGIC BIOS 4-6 USB2.0 4-7 PC-CILLIN
4-8 HOW TO DISABLE ON-BOARD SOUND............................................................45
4-9 HOW TO UPDATE BIOS ........................................................................................45
TABLE OF CONTENT
INSTALL VIA SERVICE PACK 4 IN 1 DRIVER INSTALL VIA VGA DRIVER INSTALL CMI AUDIO CONTROLLER DRIVER INSTALL RTL810X LAN CONTROLLER DRIVER INSTALL BIOS LIVE UPDATE UTILITY INSTALL VIA USB2.0 DEVICE DRIVER
INSTALL PC-CILLIN 2002 ANTI-VIRUS PROGRAM
............................................................38
...............................37
..........................39
.........................................41
.........................................43
.........................41
.....................43
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USER’S NOTICE
COPYRIGHT OF THIS MANUAL BELONGS TO THE MANUFACTURER. NO PART OF THIS MANUAL,
INCLUDING THE PRODUCTS AND SOFTWARE DESCRIBED IN IT MAY BE REPRODUCED,
TRANSMITTED OR TRANSLATED INTO ANY LANGUAGE IN ANY FORM OR BY ANY MEANS WITHOUT
WRITTEN PERMISSION OF THE MANUFACTURER.
THIS MANUAL CONTAINS ALL INFORMATION REQUIRED TO USE THIS MOTHER-BOARD AND WE DO
ASSURE THIS MANUAL MEETS USER’S REQUIREMENT BUT WILL CHANGE, CORRECT ANY TIME
WITHOUT NOTICE. MANUFACTURER PROVIDES THIS MANUAL “AS IS” WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY
KIND, AND WILL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY INDIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTIAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL
DAMAGES (INCLUDING DAMANGES FOR LOSS OF PROFIT, LOSS OF BUSINESS, LOSS OF USE OF DATA,
INTERRUPTION OF BUSINESS AND THE LIKE).
PRODUCTS AND CORPORATE NAMES APPEARING IN THIS MANUAL MAY OR MAY NOT BE
REGISTERED TRADEMARKS OR COPYRIGHTS OF THEIR RESPECTIVE COMPANIES, AND THEY ARE
USED ONLY FOR IDENTIFICATION OR EXPLANATION AND TO THE OWNER’S BENEFIT, WITHOUT
INTENT TO INFRINGE.
Manual Revision Information
Reversion Revision History Date
1.0 First Release October 2003
Item Checklist
Motherboard
Cable for IDE/Floppy
CD for motherboard utilities
Cable for USB Port 3/4 (Option)
User’s Manual
Cable for COM2 Serial Port (Option)
Cable for S-Video TV-Out (Option for V623DMW)
Intel Processor Family Thermal Solutions
As processor technology pushes to faster speeds and higher performance, thermal management becomes increasingly crucial when building computer systems. Maintaining the proper thermal environment is key to reliable, long-term system operation. The overall goal in providing the proper thermal environment is keeping the processor below its specified maximum case temperature. Heatsinks induce improved processor heat dissipation through increased surface area and concentrated airflow from attached fans. In addition, interface materials allow effective transfers of heat from the processor to the heatsink. For optimum heat transfer, Intel recommends the use of thermal grease and mounting clips to attach the heatsink to the processor.
When selecting a thermal solution for your system, please refer to the website below for collection of heatsinks evaluated and recommended by Intel for use with Intel processors. Vendor list for heatsink and fan of Pentium® !!! processor, please visit
http://developer.intel.com/design/Pentiumiii/components/index.htm Vendor list for heatsink and fan of Intel® Celeron™ processor, please visit http://developer.intel.com/design/celeron/components/index.htm
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Chapter 1
Introduction of V623DMP/V623DMW Motherboard
1-1 Feature of motherboard
The V623DMP/V623DMW motherboard is design for use Intel’s new generation Pentium processors, which utilize the Socket 370 design and the memory size expandable to 2GB.
This motherboard uses the newest VIA VT8623 (CLE266) SMA (Share Memory Architecture) North bridge chipset and VT8235 south bridge chipset. These motherboards support Intel Tualatin, Coppermine, Celeron and VIA C3 processors whose 133MHz front side bus & 133MHz memory interface delivers a clear upgrade path to the future generation of 133MHz processors and DDR266 DRAM memory. It offers ULTRA DMA 133MB/sec (ATA 133) to provide speedier HDD throughout that boosts overall system performance.
For V623DMP/V623DMW, with integrated 3D Graphic Acceleration, makes this board lower cost alternative to a video card. V623DMP/V623DMW motherboard also integrated PCI LAN Controller supports 10/100 BASE-T Transfer rate for those whom require faster LAN function for net work. V623DMW embedded VIA VT1622A TV Encoder provide S-Video/ Composite connector support NTSC/PAL system signal output.
This board also integrated PCI 6-Channel Audio Controller on board support 6-channel Audio function, which is fully compatible with Sound Blaster Pro that gives you the best sound quality and compatibility. With 2 USB controller as well as capability of expanding to 6 USB connectors compliant to USB2.0 provided 480Mb/sec data transfer rate, which guarantees this board to meet future USB demand. Moreover, these motherboards had built-in hardware monitor function that capable of monitor and protect your computer.
This motherboard provides high performance & meets future specification demand. It is really wise choice for your computer.
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1-2 Specification
Spec Description
Micro ATX form factor 4 layers PCB size: 24.4x19.0cm
Design
Chipset
Clock Generator
CPU Socket
Memory Socket
Expansion Slot Integrate VGA
TV-Out (for V623DMW)
Integrate IDE
Integrate LAN
Audio
BIOS Multi I/O
VIA VT8623 SMA (Share Memory Architecture) North Bridge
VIA VT8235 South Bridge
ICS 950908 Clock Generator
Support 66/100/133MHz system Bus Clock (CPU Bus Clock)
Support CPU Frequency step by step setting in BIOS Setup
Support 100/133 MHz system Memory clock
Support 33MHz PCI Bus clock
Support Pentium III/Tualatin up to 1.2GHz processor
Support Celeron™ up to 1.4GHz processor
Support 66, 100 and 133MHz CPU Bus clock
Reserves support for future Intel P3 processor
Support VIA C3 processors (no support Samuel1 CPU)
184-pin DDRDIMM socket x2
Support DDR200/DDR266 DDR memory
Expandable to 2GB(512Mb x8/x16 DRAM technology)
32-bit PCI slot x4 PCI-2.2 compliant
Integrate 2D/3D graphic Engines
8/16/32/64MB frame buffer using system memory
Internal AGP 8x performance
Support 24-bit 250MHz RAMDAC
VIA VT1622A TV Encoder
Provided S-Video/Composite output for NTSC/PAL system
2 channel of Bus Master IDE port supporting ULTRA DMA
33/66/100/133 mode devices
Integrated RTL8100C PCI LAN Controller
Support 10/100 BASE-T Transfer rate
CMI 8738-6CH PCI Audio controller integrated
Support 6-channel audio function, fully compliant to Sound
Blaster Pro
Audio driver and utility included
Award 2Mb Flash ROM
PS/2 keyboard and PS/2 mouse connectors
Floppy disk drive connector x1
Parallel port x1, Serial port x2
USB 2.0 connector x2
USB 2.0 headers x4 (connecting cable option)
Audio connector (Line-in, Line-out, MIC, Game Port)
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1-3 Performance List
The following performance data list is the testing result of some popular benchmark testing programs. These data are just referred by users, and there is no responsibility for different testing data values gotten by users (the different Hardware & Software configuration will result in different benchmark testing results.)
CPU: DRAM: Hard Disk Driver: On Board VGA: BIOS:
Windows XP Professional
OS:
Intel Pentium III 1.13GHz FC-PGA 512MB DDR266 SDRAM x1 (NANYA NT5DS32MAT-7K)
IBM IC35L040AVVN07-0 (ATA 100)
Share Memory (1024x768xHi-Color)
Award Optimal default
Performance Test Report
1.13GHz
3D Mark 2001SE 855 3D Mark 2003 25 3D Winbench 2000 (32/32bit) 24.1 PC Mark 2002 CPU/Memory/HDD 3444/1419/920 Content Creation Winstone 2002 23.1 Content Creation Winstone 2003 23.6 Business Winstone 2002 21.5 Winbench 99: Business Disk Winmark99 9430 Hi-end Disk Winmark99 32300 Business Graphic Winmark 187 Hi-end Graphic Winmark 622 SYS Mark 2001/2002 : SISMark 2001/2002 Rating ( Internet Content Creation / Office Productivity ) SISMark 2001
SISMark 2002
SISOFT Sandra 2003 : Dhrystone ALU MIPS 3064 Whetstone FPU MFLOPS 1509 RAM Int Buffered iSSE2 MB/S 882 RAM Float Buffered iSSE2 MB/S 870 Integer SSE2 IT/S 5921 Floating-Point SSE2 IT/S 7427 QUAKE3 DEMO1 FPS 354 DEMO2 FPS 33.3 Return to Castle Wolfenstein FPS 25.9 WCPUID System / CPU Clock 133.16/1131.85
132 (132 / 132)
114 (105 / 123)
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1-4 Layout Diagram & Jumper Setting
PS/2 MOUSE
PRINTLAN
GAME/MIDI PORT
PS/2 Keyboard
USB
VIA VT1622A Chip
K/B Power ON Jumper
PS2 KB/Mouse Port
LAN Connector
COM2 Connector
TV OUT Connector
PC99 Back Panel
(JP1)
USB Port/
COM1 VGA
MIC LINE-IN
LINE-OUT
ATX Power Connector
CPU FAN
370 CPU Socket
DIMM Socket X2
Floppy Connector
VIA VT8623 Chip
ATA 100 IDE Connector
Front Panel Audio
RTL8100C PCI LAN
Controller
CD Audio
PCI Slot
PCI 6CH Audio Controller
On board Sound Chip
USB Power ON Jumper
Jumper (JP7)
SPDIF Connector
Wake On LAN
(JP6)
USB Port
(USB1, USB2)
4
IR Connector
VIA VT1211 I/O Chip
2Mbit Flash ROM BIOS
SFAN
VIA VT8235 Chip
Clear CMOS (JP5)
Speaker Connector
Power LED Connector Front Panel Connector
Jumpers
Jumper Name Description Page
JP1 Keyboard Power ON Function Setting 3-pin Block p.6 JP6 USB Power On Function Setting 3-pin Block p.6 JP5 CMOS RAM Clear Function Setting 3-pin Block p.7 JP7 On board Sound Chip Enabled/Disabled 3-pin Block p.7
Connectors
Connector Name Description Page
ATXPWR ATX Power Connector 20-pin Block p.13 KB/MS1 PS/2 Mouse & PS/2 Keyboard Connector 6-pin Female p.13 UL_B1 USB Port Connector 4-pin Connector p.13 LAN LAN Connector RJ45 Connector p.13 LPT Parallel Port Connector 25-pin Female p.13 COM1 Serial Port Connector 9-pin Connector p.13 VGA VGA Port Connector 15-pin Female p.13 CN2 Line-Out/Line-In/MIC Audio Connector Phone Jack p.13 FDD Floppy Driver Connector 34-pin Block p.14 IDE1 Primary IDE Connector 40-pin Block p.14 IDE2 Secondary IDE Connector 40-pin Block p.14
Headers
Header Name Description Page
COM2 COM2 Serial Port Headers 10-pin Block p.15 TV_OUT (for V623DMW) AUDIO Line-Out/MIC output Header 9-pin Block p.15 USB1/USB2 USB2.0 Port Headers 10-pin Block p.16 HD_LED Hard drive LED connector 3-pin Block p.16 RESET Reset switch lead 2-pin Block p.16 SPEAK Speaker connector 4-pin Block p.16 PWR LED Power LED Headers 2-pin Block p.16 PWR BTN Power Button Headers 2-pin Block p.16 CPUFAN, SYSFAN FAN Speed Headers 3-pin Block p.16 IR IR infrared module Headers 5-pin Block p.17 CDIN CD Audio-In Headers 4-pin Block p.17 OPTICA SPDIF In/Out (Optical In/Out) Headers 9-pin Block p.17
Expansion Sockets
Socket/Slot Name Description Page
ZIF Socket 370 CPU Socket 370-pin FC-PGA CPU Socket p.9 DDR, DDR2
PCI1~4 PCI Slot 32-bit PCI Local Bus Expansion slots p.11
S-Video/RCA Composite TV-out Header 5-pin Block p.15
DDR SDRAM Module Socket
184-pin DDR SDRAM Module Expansion Socket
p.10
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Chapter 2
Hardware installation
2-1 Hardware installation Steps
Before using your computer, you had better complete the following steps:
1. Check motherboard jumper setting
2. Install CPU and Fan
3. Install System Memory (DIMM)
4. Install Expansion cards
5. Connect IDE and Floppy cables, Front Panel /Back Panel cable
6. Connect ATX Power cable
7. Power-On and Load Standard Default
8. Reboot
9. Install Operating System
10. Install Driver and Utility
2-2 Checking Motherboard’s Jumper Setting
(1) Keyboard Power On function Enabled/Disabled (3-pin): JP1
When setting Enabled you can using keyboard by key in password to power on system.
1-2 closed K/B Power ON Disable (Default)
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JP1
2-3 closed K/B Power ON Enabled
Keyboard Power On Setting
(2) USB Power On function Enabled/Disabled (3-pin): JP6
When setting Enabled you can using USB Device to power on system.
13
JP1
JP6
JP6
JP6 1-2 closed USB Power On Disabled (Default)
13
JP6 2-3 closed USB Power On Enabled
13
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(3) CMOS RAM Clear (3-pin): JP5
A battery must be used to retain the motherboard configuration in CMOS RAM short 1-2 pins of JP5 to store the CMOS data.
To clear the CMOS, follow the procedure below:
1. Turn off the system and unplug the AC power
2. Remove ATX power cable from ATX power connector
3. Locate JP5 and short pins 2-3 for a few seconds
4. Return JP5 to its normal setting by shorting pins 1-2
5. Connect ATX power cable back to ATX power connector
Note: When should clear CMOS
1. Troubleshooting
2. Forget password
3. After over clocking system boot fail
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JP5
1-2 closed Normal (Default)
CMOS RAM Clear Setting
13
JP5
2-3 closed Clear CMOS
(4) On board Sound Chip (3-pin): JP7
13
JP7
1-2 closed Sound Disable
On Board Sound Chip Setting
2-3 closed Sound Enabled (Default)
13
JP7
2-3 Install CPU
2-3-1 Glossary
Chipset (core logic) - two or more integrated circuits which control the interfaces between the system processor, RAM, I/O devises, and adapter cards.
Processor socket - the socket used to mount the system processor on the motherboard. Slot (AGP, PCI, ISA, RAM) - the slots used to mount adapter cards and system RAM. AGP - Accelerated Graphics Port - a high speed interface for video cards; runs at 1X
(66MHz), 2X (133MHz), or 4X (266MHz).
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PCI - Peripheral Component Interconnect - a high speed interface for video cards, sound
cards, network interface cards, and modems; runs at 33MHz.
Serial Port - a low speed interface typically used for mouse and external modems. Parallel Port - a low speed interface typically used for printers. PS/2 - a low speed interface used for mouse and keyboards. USB - Universal Serial Bus - a medium speed interface typically used for mouse, keyboards,
scanners, and some digital cameras. Sound (interface) - the interface between the sound card or integrated sound connectors and speakers, MIC, game controllers, and MIDI sound devices. BIOS (Basic Input/Output System) - the program logic used to boot up a computer and establish the relationship between the various components. Driver - software, which defines the characteristics of a device for use by another device or other software. Processor - the "Central Processing Unit" (CPU); the principal integrated circuit used for doing the "computing" in "personal computer"
Front Side Bus Frequency -
The working frequency of the motherboard, which is generated
by the clock generator for CPU, DRAM and PCI BUS.
CPU L2 Cache -
The flash memory inside the CPU, normally Pentium III CPU has 256K or
above, while Celeron CPU will have 128K.
The way to recognize the specification of CPU from the packing Pentium III 370 pins FC-PGA
On the surface of the CPU as shown on the right picture, under the word of “PENTIUM III” the code is:
RB 80526 P2 866 256 RB : P2 :
PY–100MHz front side bus frequency
866 :
866MHz
256 :
Celeron FC–PGA
On the surface of the CPU as shown on the right picture, under the word of “Celeron” the code is:
566/128/66/1.5V 566 : 128 : 66 :
1.5V :
FC–PGA packing P2–133MHz front side bus frequency
CPU internal frequency, where here is
the size of L2 cache, where here is 256K
CPU internal frequency, where here is 566MHz the size of L2 cache, where here is 128K front side bus frequency, where here is 66MHz the voltage for the CPU
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2-3-2 Setting CPU Bus Clock & Memory Clock Jumper
Setting the front side bus frequency and SDRAM frequency
The motherboard uses jumper less function for the front side bus frequency and SDRAM frequency users don’t need setting any jumper when plug the CPU in motherboard
For experience user looking for over clocking possibility, please refer to sec 2-3-4.
2-3-3 Install CPU
This motherboard provides a ZIF socket 370. The CPU that comes with the motherboard should have a cooling FAN attached to prevent overheating. If this is not the case, then purchase a correct cooling FAN before you turn on your system.
WARNING!
Be sure that there is sufficient air circulation across the processor’s heatsink and CPU cooling FAN is working correctly, otherwise it may cause the processor and motherboard overheat and damage, you may install an auxiliary cooling FAN, if necessary.
To install a CPU, first turn off your system and remove its cover. Locate the ZIF socket and open it by first pulling the level sideways away from the socket then upward to a 90-degree angle. Insert the CPU with the correct orientation as shown below. The notched corner should point toward the end of the level. Because the CPU has a corner pin for two of the four corners, the CPU will only fit in the orientation as shown.
Pentium
Colden Arrow
III
CPU ZIF Socket 370
Intel
Socket 370
When you put the CPU into the ZIF socket. No forces require to insert of the CPU, then press the level to locate position slightly without any extra force.
2-3-4 Over clock Running
WARNING!
Users can choose over clock running by BIOS CMOS SETUP UTILITY. When you entered CMOS SETUP UTILITY, choose “Miscellaneous Control” you will see the screen as below then.
This section is for experienced motherboard installer only. Over clocking can result in system instability or even shortening life of the processor.
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CMOS Setup Utility – Copyright(C) 1984-2003 Award Software
Miscellaneous Control
Auto Detect DIMM/PCI Clk Enabled Spread Spectrum Disabled ** Current Host/PCI Clock is 133/133 MHz ** Host/PCI Clock at Next Boot is 133/33MHz ** Current DRAM Clock is 133MHz ** DRAM Clock at Next Boot is 133MHz +2.5V Select 2.55V
Item Help
Menu Level >
Move Enter:Select Item +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help
↑↓→←
F5:Previous Values F6:Optimized Defaults F7:Standard Defaults
WARNING!
The Design of this motherboard follows chipset and CPU vender’s design guideline. Any attempts to push beyond product specification are not recommended and you are taking your own risk to damage your system or important data. Before over clocking, you must make sure your components are able to tolerate such abnormal setting, especially CPU, memory, hard disks, and VGA cards.
2-4 Install Memory
This motherboard provides two 184-pin DUAL INLINE MEMORY MODULES (DIMM) sites for memory expansion available from minimum memory size of 64MB to maximum memory size of 2.0GB DDR SDRAM.
Valid Memory Configurations
Bank 184-Pin DIMM PCS Total Memory
Bank 0, 1 (DDR1) DDR200/DDR266
DDR SDRAM Module
Bank 2, 3 (DDR2) DDR200/DDR266
DDR SDRAM Module
Total System Memory (Max. 2.0GB) 2
Generally, installing DDR SDRAM modules to your motherboard is very easy, you can refer to figure 2-4 to see what a 184-Pin DDR200/DDR266 DDR SDRAM module looks like.
X1
X1
64MB∼1.0GB
64MB∼1.0GB
64MB∼2.0GB
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DDR2 ( BANK2+ BANK3 )
DDR1 ( BANK0+ BANK1 )
Figure 2-4
NOTE!
WARNING!
When you install DIMM module fully into the DIMM socket the eject tab should be locked into the DIMM module very firmly and fit into its indention on both sides. For the DDR SDRAM CLOCK is set at 133MHz, use only DDR266-compliant DDR Modules. When this motherboard operate at 133MHz, most system will not even boot if non-compliant modules are used because of the strict timing issues, if your SDR Modules are not DDR266-compliant, set the DDR SDRAM clock to 100MHz to ensure system stability.
2-5 Expansion Cards
WARNING!
2-5-1 Procedure For Expansion Card Installation
1. Read the documentation for your expansion card and make any necessary hardware or software setting for your expansion card such as jumpers.
2. Remove your computer’s cover and the bracket plate on the slot you intend to use.
3. Align the card’s connectors and press firmly.
4. Secure the card on the slot with the screen you remove above.
5. Replace the computer system’s cover.
6. Set up the BIOS if necessary.
7. Install the necessary software driver for your expansion card.
Turn off your power when adding or removing expansion cards or other system components. Failure to do so may cause severe damage to both your motherboard and expansion cards.
2-5-2 Assigning IRQs For Expansion Card
Some expansion cards need an IRQ to operate. Generally, an IRQ must exclusively assign to one use. In a standard design, there are 16 IRQs available but most of them are already in use.
Standard Interrupt Assignments
IRQ Priority Standard function
11
0 N/A System Timer 1 N/A Keyboard Controller 2 N/A Programmable Interrupt 3 * 8 Communications Port (COM2) 4 * 9 Communications Port (COM1) 5 * 6 Sound Card (sometimes LPT2) 6 * 11 Floppy Disk Controller 7 * 7 Printer Port (LPT1) 8 N/A System CMOS/Real Time Clock
9 * 10 ACPI Mode when enabled 10 * 3 IRQ Holder for PCI Steering 11 * 2 IRQ Holder for PCI Steering 12 * 4 PS/2 Compatible Mouse Port 13 N/A Numeric Data Processor 14 * 5 Primary IDE Channel 15 * 1 Secondary IDE Channel
* These IRQs are usually available for ISA or PCI devices.
2-5-3 Interrupt Request Table For This Motherboard
Interrupt request are shared as shown the table below:
INT A INT B INT C INT D INT E INT F INT G INT H Slot 1 Slot 2 Slot 3 Slot 4 Onboard VGA Onboard USB Onboard USB 1 Onboard USB 2 LAN
AC97/MC97
IMPORTANT!
If using PCI cards on shared slots, make sure that the drivers support “Shared IRQ” or that the cards don’t need IRQ assignments. Conflicts will arise between the two PCI groups that will make the system unstable or cards inoperable.
√ √
√ √
2-6 Connectors, Headers
2-6-1 Connectors
(1) Power Connector (20-pin block) : ATXPWR
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