Motherboard
Installation and Upgrade Guide You
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Motherboard | Motherboard Troubleshooting
Tips |
Mounting the
Motherboard onto the Casing.
- WARNING: Handle motherboards gently by the edges. Some
of the component leads under the board have sharp edges and may
cause serious injury. To prevent electrostatic discharge damage to
the components on your motherboard, do not remove the motherboard
from the static-shielded bag until you have discharged any static
electricity from your body by touching any unpainted surface on
the case of your computer.
- Most computer cases have a base with many mounting holes that
allow the motherboards to be securely attached to the case and
prevent the back of the motherboard touching the metal case and
short circuits.
- There are two ways to attach the mainboard to the base: (1)
with plastic spacers or (2) with metal bolts
- In principle, the best way to attach a motherboard is with
bolts and only if you are unable to use a bolt should you attach
the motherboard with spacers. Some cases come with a combination
of spacers and bolts. Use bolts whenever you can.
- Newer and better computer cases come with bolts built into the
base, saving you the time to screw the bolts on.
- Most detached motherboard base bolts come in either copper or
stainless steel. Two sizes of screws are used, depending on the
case manufacturer. Choose the screw size carefully. Do not use
case screws for mounting motherboards or any drives. Case screws
are designed to "lock" in the sheet metal, which may damage the
female screw holes on the bolts or drives.
- Take a careful look at the mainboard and you will see many
mounting holes. Line these holes up with the mounting screw holes
or slots on the base. For motherboard holes that line up screw
holes on the base, you can attach them with bolts. For bolt
positions, do not tighten the screws until all the screws are in.
Sometimes, you may need to move the motherboard slightly to make
the screw holes fit.
- If the motherboard holes line up with slots, attach these
positions with spacers. Take the tip of the spacers and insert it
into the slots. After doing this to all the slots, you can slide
the mainboard into position aligned with the slots.
- If the motherboard has mounting holes, but they don't line up
with the holes on the base and there are no slots to attach the
spacers, the spacer would be too tall. Just cut the "feet" on the
spacers with a wire cutter. (The spacers may be very hard, so be
careful when cutting). In this way you can still attach the
motherboard to the base without worrying about short circuits.
Standard External
Connectors.
- Several cables and plugs from the inside of the case must be
connected to the motherboard. These cables and plugs are usually
connected manually and one-by-one to connectors on the
motherboard. You need to pay attention to any connection
orientation for the cables and plugs. If any, notice the position
of the first pins of the connectors on the motherboard, which are
often marked.
- The actual position and marking of the connectors on the
motherboard vary greatly from brand to brand and from model to
model. Read your motherboard manual carefully before any
installation. Here is a list of most frequently used connections
and their purposes:
- System speaker (often 4-pin plug), for system sound
- Hardware reset connector (often 2 pin plug), for
resetting/rebooting the computer
- Keylock and power LED connector (4 or 5-pin plug), for
indicating computer on and off
- HDD LED connector (often 2-pin plug), for indicating the
usage of hard disc drives
- Power connectors for case or microprocessor fan, supplying
DC power to fans
- Power switch (often 2-pin plug), for turning the computer on
and off
- DC power input connector (One 20-pin plug for ATX for 3.3V,
+5, -5, +12, and -12V DC voltages; two 6-pin plugs for AT for
+5, -5, +12 and -12V DC voltages), supplying DC power to the
motherboard
- For ATX motherboards, serial and parallel ports are built-in
on the motherboard. For AT motherboards, you must also connect
these ports to the corresponding connectors on the motherboards.
Watch for the polarity of the plugs for the ports. Align the
colored edge of the ribbon cables to Pin 1 on the connectors.
- For ATX motherboards, PS2 mouse connectors are integrated
into the motherboard. For AT motherboards you must attach a
serial mouse to one of the serial port. Or you may have a PS2
mouse connector on the motherboard to use a PS2 mouse on an AT
motherboard.
- Some ATX motherboards come with ATX form factor connectors
(8 pins)
- Motherboards with integrated audio and/or video will come
with special cables and plugs for these onboard devices. Consult
your motherboard manual for details.
Jumper Settings
- Jumper switches on the motherboard are often used to configure
various hardware options. To avoid losing jumper caps, attach the
removed jumper caps to one of the jumper pins. Putting a jumper
cap on two jumper pins connects them.
- You must change jumper settings if you change the
microprocessor speed and type. Sometimes you need to change the
jumper settings if you change the memory type.
- Most jumper positions and pin assignment are marked on the
motherboards. The actual positions and meaning of the jumpers vary
greatly among motherboards. Read your motherboard manual carefully
before any installation. Here is a list of most of used jumpers:
- CPU type selection
- CPU microprocessor external clock selection
- CPU microprocessor internal clock speed selection
- CPU microprocessor core voltage selection
- PCI BUS clock selection
- DIMM voltage selection (3.3V vs. 5V)
- CMOS RAM discharge selection
Jumperless
motherboards
Jumperless motherboards, most often used
by QDI, ABIT and Intel, use software to configure the above hardware
options, instead of hardware jumpers. The advantage of this
technology is the convenience to change the configuration without
opening the computer or know the jumper positions.
Installing microprocessors
The
mounting mechanism for CPUs vary from one type to the other. Consult
your motherboard manual for mounting these microprocessors. These
are the main types of microprocessors that are still in the market
and are not interchangeable:
- Socket 478, for Pentium 4 and newer Celeron
- Socket 423, for older Pentium 4
- Socket A / 462, for AMD Athlon Thunderbird, Duron, and XP
- Socket 603/604, for Intel Xeon
- Socket 940, for AMD Opteron
- Socket 7, for classic Pentium and Pentium MMX, AMD K6, and
Cyrix microprocessors
- Super Socket 7, for AMD K6-2 and K6-3 microprocessors
- Socket 370, for Intel Celeron microprocessors and Pentium III
- Slot 1, for Intel Pentium II and III microprocessors
- Slot A, for AMD Athlon microprocessors
Installing memory modules
See Memory Installation
Guide for more details.
BIOS
setup
- Warning: Changing motherboards from one brand to
another sometimes requires reformatting the hard drive and
reloading the operating system. Choose your motherboard and read
the motherboard manual thoroughly before upgrading.
- BIOS is a program located on a Read-Only Memory (ROM) chip on
the motherboard. This program will not be lost when you turn the
main power to your computer off. This program is also sometimes
referred to as the boot program. It is the only channel for the
hardware circuit to communicate with the operating system. Its
main function is to manage the setup of the basic parameters for
motherboard and interface cards. These parameters include simple
ones such as time, date, hard disk drive, as well as more complex
ones such as hardware synchronization, and device operating mode.
- WARNING: Do not change any parameters inside the BIOS
unless you know what you are doing! The parameters inside the BIOS
are used to set up the hardware synchronization or the device
operating mode. If these parameters are incorrect, they may
produce error, the computer may crash, and sometimes you may even
not be able to boot the computer after it crashes. We suggest you
not to change the parameters inside the BIOS unless you are
familiar with them.
- When you start your computer, the computer is first controlled
by the BIOS program. The BIOS runs an auto-diagnostic procedure
for all the necessary hardware, configures the parameters for the
hardware synchronization, and detects all the hardware. After it
completes these tasks, BIOS gives up the control of the computer
to the program of the next level, which is the operating system.
- Since the BIOS is the only channel for hardware and software
to communicate, it will be the key factor to system stability and
optimal performance. You lose your customized BIOS setting if the
CMOS battery on your motherboard is removed or fails. Your BIOS
goes back to its original manufacturer default if that happens.
- How to set up BIOS is beyond the scope of this guideline. We
may add a section just for that. Please always consult your
motherboard's manual. Here are list of most often used functions
you can configure with BIOS:
- Standard CMOS Setup Date, hour, HDD operating mode
(Normal, LBA, Large), video card, and floppy drive.
- BIOS Features Setup These are common features: Virus
warning. CPU level 1 cache. CPU level 2 cache. CPU level 2 cache
ECC checking. Quick power-on self-test. Boot sequence. Swap
floppy drive. Boot-up floppy seek. Boot-up Numeric Keypad lock
status. IDE HDD block mode. Security options.
- Chipset Features Setup This menu is used to modify
the contents of the buffers in the chipset on the motherboard.
Since the parameters of the buffers are closely related to
hardware, the motherboard may become unstable or you may not be
able to boot up if the setup is not correct. If you don't know
the hardware well, use default values.
- Power Management Setup The difference between Green
PCs and traditional computers is that Green PCs have a power
management feature. With this feature when the computer is
powered on but inactive, the power consumption is reduced in
order to save energy. When the computer operates normally, it is
in Normal mode. In this mode, the Power Management Program will
monitor the access to video, parallel ports, serial ports, and
drives and the operating status of the keyboard, mouse and other
devices. These are referred to as Power Management Events. In
cases when none of these events occur, the system enters the
Power Saving Mode. When one of these events occurs, the system
immediately returns to normal mode and operates at its maximum
speed.
- PCI & Onboard I/O Setup In this menu, you can
change the INT# and IRQ of the PCI bus and the onboard I/O
devices, I/O port addresses and other hardware settings.
- Password Setting This option allows you to set a
password required to start the system or to access to the BIOS
setup.
- IDE Hard Disk Drive (HDD) Auto Detect After you have
installed the hard disk in an old system, you had to know the
hard drive specifications, such as the number of cylinders,
heads, and sectors, and to enter the relevant information into
the hard disk information section of BIOS. If the CMOS data were
erased and you had forgotten the hard disk specifications, it
creates a big program. Nowadays, you can use this option to
autodetect the hard disk type and specifications, and the BIOS
will automatically detect all the relevant information and place
them in the Hard Disk Data section of the Standard CMOS Setup
Menu, in order to allow you to use your hard
disk.
However, you must partition and format your hard
drive before using it! See Hard Drive Installation
Guide for more details. If you encounter any problems during installation,
please e-mail our tech support department, support@directron.us.
Please reference your order number and item. You may also call
1-713-773-9696 during our office business hours, 9-6 Monday-Friday.
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