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Fanless System
FEB-1251
Always at the forefront of innovation
User Manual
1

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Summary of Contents for BESTEK FEB-1251

  • Page 1 Fanless System FEB-1251 Always at the forefront of innovation User Manual...
  • Page 2: Copyright

    Copyright 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.
  • Page 3: Warranty

    Warranty 1. Warranty does not cover damages or failures that are raised 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 subject to physical abuse, improper installation, modification, accidents or unauthorized repair of the product.
  • Page 4: Safety Measures

    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.
  • Page 5: Table Of Contents

    Table of Content Copyright ..................................2 Trademarks ..................................2 FCC and DOC Statement On Class A ..........................2 Warranty ..................................3 Static Electricity Precautions ............................3 Safety Measures ................................4 Before Using the System Board ............................. 4 Table of Content ................................5 Chapter 1 General Information 1.1 Main Feature ................................
  • Page 6: Chapter 1 General Information

    Chapter 1 General Information...
  • Page 7: Main Feature

    1.1 Main Feature Processor Performance FEB-1251 is a fanless embedded wall mount system that is pre-installed with Intel® Cedarview D2550 Dual- Core 1.86GHz processor bundled with integrated graphic and one SO-DIMM slot supporting up to maximum 4GB DDR3-800/1066. All-In-One & Compact Design The system boasts a considerably compact size of just 185x131x54mm, with one DVI-I, one HDMI, dual gigabit RJ45 network, four COM ports, six USB 2.0, and one CFast, all available on the built-in embedded...
  • Page 8: Specifications

    1.2 Specifications Construction Form Factor Proprietary Wall Mount Chassis Material Aluminum Dimension (W x D x H) 185 (W) x 131 (D) x 54 (H) mm Color Silver & Red Certification CE/FCC ™ System Processor Intel® Atom Cedarview D2550 Dual-Core Processor Memory 1x DDR3 SO-DIMM Slot up to 4GB Power...
  • Page 9: System Layout

    1.3 System Layout Figure 1.1: System Layout of FEB-1251...
  • Page 10: Indicators And Features

    1.4 Indicators & Features ► Front View DB9 RS-232 DB9 RS-232/422/485 DB9 RS-232/422/485 DB9 RS-232 Power Switch Antenna Cut-Out Power LED (Green) + HDD LED (Yellow) Microphone Jack Line-Out Jack 10. 1* USB 2.0 11. 1* USB 2.0 12. Antenna Cut-Out...
  • Page 11 ► Rear View 10-28Vdc Power Input DVI-I HDMI 2* USB 2.0 2* USB 2.0 LAN1 LAN2 CFast Socket...
  • Page 12: Chapter 2 Preparation

    Chapter 2 Preparation...
  • Page 13: Before You Begin

    2.1 Before You Begin A stable and clean working environment are essential. Dust and dirt can get into components and cause a malfunction. Use containers to keep small components separated. Adequate lighting and proper tools can prevent you from accidentally damaging the internal components. Most of the procedures that follow require only a few simple tools, including the following: A Philips screwdriver ...
  • Page 14: Open Up Bottom Cover

    This is the first step of all to proceed with, if you are to install (or change) a hard drive, a memory module, or a wireless module, etc. It is not necessary to open up the bottom cover if it is to add/remove/swap a CFast card, as another rear accessible cover has been designed for this purpose.
  • Page 15: Accessing Memory

    Please locate the DDR3 SODIMM slot as indicated below. To install SO-DIMM 1. Make sure the “Key” on Memory module and SO-DIMM slot are perfectly matched, and add slowly the RAM module into the SO-DIMM slot. 2. Push the RAM module downwards to seat it firmly. Make sure the RAM module is snapped perfectly by the slot, and the two handles are restored back to “close”...
  • Page 16: Accessing 2.5" Drive

    2.5 Accessing 2.5” Drive Procedures: (1) Please locate the 2.5” Drive Bay on the bottom cover as indicated below, and add the 2.5” Drive. Note the I/O side of the hard needs to be on the side away from the cover edge to reserve space for adding cables later on. (2) Flip over the cover and find the four screw holes, find the four hard drive screws enclosed in the accessary bag, and add them to secure the 2.5”...
  • Page 17: Accessing Cfast Card

    2.6 Accessing CFast Card CFast instead of CompactFlash As stated above, significant differences of CompactFlash and CFast are literally defined by their respective interfaces, though the very resemblances can merely be indistinctly differentiated. Perfect Solution for Data Drive CFast card runs on SATA interface, exactly the same way as any SATA device, only it comes with smaller form factor and is a pure flash device with no spindle at all, boasting outstanding stability and SATA performance.
  • Page 18: Installing Wireless Module & Antenna

    2.7 Installing Wireless Module & Antenna To add Wireless Module (1) Please locate the miniPCIe Slot on the embedded board. (2) Add Wireless module onto the slot, ensuring that the golden finger goes into the slot first. (3) Push the module down and secure the module with two screws.
  • Page 19 To add Wireless Antenna (1) Find the two antenna cut-out with protection covers. (2) Remove the two covers. (3) Put through the two antenna jacks. (4) Add one washer (ring) on each jack. (5) Attach the other end of the antenna onto Wireless module. (6) Connector external antenna onto antenna jack.
  • Page 20: Accessing Sim Card

    2.8 Accessing SIM Card (1) Slide to move the SIM card holder to open position, and lift up the top cover. (2) Manage to also slide the SIM card into the top cover. (3) Push down the top cover and slide to move the SIM card holder back to close position.
  • Page 21: Installing Satadom

    2.9 Installing SATADOM (1) Locate the SATA Connector and also the screw next to it. (2) Now remove this screw. (3) Find the stand-off in the accessory bag, and add this stand-off onto where the screw was seated. (4) Add your SATADOM. Note that only right-angled can be used. (5) Push SATADOM into SATA connector.
  • Page 22: Chapter 3 Operation

    Chapter 3 Operation...
  • Page 23: Turning On The System

    3.1 Turning On The System Add your cables, such as USB keyboard, USB mouse, and DVI (or HDMI) Cable as the merest devices to control the system. Leave the power cable as the last cable to be added, right on DC Inlet as indicated below with blue circle.
  • Page 24: Installing Operating System & Drivers

    3.2 Installing Operating System & Drivers Confirm the Hard Drive List The system is designed to allow booting from a variety of internal devices, including USB pen drive, SATA drive, and CompactFlash drive, etc. Given the tiny footprint and slow performance of USB pen drive, SATA drive and CompactFlash are more prevailing devices to carry operating system and can to be found in the detected drive list, in the section of IDE Configuration.
  • Page 25: Understanding Led Indicators

    3.3 Understanding LAN Indicators Activity LED The left LED is LAN Port Activity LED, with three different indication status: (1) Constant Yellow: Network is connected. (2) Blinking Yellow: Network activity is on-going. (3) Off: Network is not connected. LAN Speed LED The right LED is LAN Port Speed LED, with three different speeds: (1) Amber: 1000 Speed (2) Green: 100 Speed...
  • Page 26: Chapter 4 Bios Setup

    Chapter 4 BIOS Setup...
  • Page 27: About The Bios

    About the BIOS The BIOS (Basic Input and Output System) Setup program is a menu driven utility that enables you to make changes to the system configuration and tailor your system to suit your individual work needs. It is a ROM-based configuration utility that displays the system’s configuration status and provides you with a tool to set system parameters.
  • Page 28: Entering Setup

    4.1 Entering Setup When the system is powered on, the BIOS will initiate the Power-On-Self-T est (POST) routines. These routines perform various diagnostic checks. If an error is encountered, the error will be reported in one of two different ways: If the error occurs before the display device is initialized, a series of beeps will be transmitted.
  • Page 29: The Main Menu

    4.4 The Main Menu Figure 4-1: BIOS Setup Utility Main Menu Intel RC Version Displays the Intel Reference Code version. System Date The date format is <day>, <month>, <date>, <year>. Day displays a day, from Monday to Sunday. Month displays the month, from January to December.
  • Page 30: The Advanced Menu

    4.5 The Advanced Menu The Advanced menu allows you to configure your system for basic operation. Some entries are defaults required by the system board, while others, if enabled, will improve the performance of your system or let you set some features according to your preference. Launch LAN1/2 PXE OpROM Enables or disables the boot option for legacy network devices connected to LAN1 and LAN2.
  • Page 31 IDE Configuration SATA Controller Enable/Disable SATA Controller. Configure SATA as  IDE: This option configures the Serial ATA drives as Parallel ATA storage devices.  AHCI: This option allows the Serial ATA devices to use AHCI (Advanced Host Controller Interface). Super I/O Configuration Serial Port Enable/Disable Serial Port.
  • Page 32: The Chipset Menu

    4.6 The Chipset Menu Host Bridge IGFX - Boot Type This field is used to configure which video device will be activated during POST. This has no effect if external graphics present. The options are CRT, DVI and CRT + HDMI. Please refer to the following table for BIOS setting and Display Output combination at POST mode.
  • Page 33 South Bridge Azalia Controller This section disables Azalia or enables HD Audio. SMBus Controller This section is used to configure SMBus. High Precision Timer This section is used to configure High Precision Event Timer. Restore AC Power Loss This field is used to configure the AC power state when power is restored after power failure, the options are Power Off and Power On.
  • Page 34: The Boot Menu

    4.7 The Boot Menu Setup Prompt Timeout This section configures the number of seconds to wait for the setup activation key. Quiet Boot When Enabled, the BIOS will shorten or skip some check items during POST. This will decrease the time needed to boot the system.
  • Page 35: The Security Menu

    4.8 The Security Menu Administrator Password Sets the administrator’s password User Password Sets the user’s password...
  • Page 36: The Save & Exit Menu

    4.9 The Save & Exit Menu Save Changes and Exit To save the changes and exit the Setup utility, select this field then press <Enter>. A dialog box will appear. Confirm by selecting Yes. You can also press <F4> to save and exit Setup. Discard Changes and Exit To exit the Setup utility without saving the changes, select this field then press <Enter>.
  • Page 37 Save as User Defaults To use the current configurations as user default settings for the BIOS, select this field then press <Enter>. A dialog box will appear. Confirm by selecting Yes. Restore User Defaults To restore the BIOS to user default settings, select this field then press <Enter>. A dialog box will appear. Confirm by selecting Yes.
  • Page 38: Chapter 5 Auxiliary Information

    Chapter 5 Auxiliary Information...
  • Page 39: Gpio Programming Guide

    5.1 GPIO Programming Guide Digital I/O (Digital Input/Output) pins are provided for custom system design. This appendix provides definitions and its default setting for the Digital I/O pins in the NISE 104. The pin definition is shown is the following table: Description Description GPO24...
  • Page 40: Wdt Programming Guide

    5.2 WDT Programming Guide ITE8783F WatchDog Programming Guide =============================================== SetupWDT PROC mov dx, 2eh mov al, 087h out dx, al mov al, 01h out dx, al mov al, 55h out dx, al out dx, al ;Write operations to special address port (2E) for entering MB PnP Mode. mov al, 07h out 2eh, al mov al, 07h ;Select logical device for Watch Dog.
  • Page 41 =============================================== TimeCountWDT PROC mov al, 73h ;WDT Time-out register. out 2eh, al mov al, 03h ;Here!! Set count 3. out 2fh, al TimeCountWDT ENDP =============================================== ExitSetup PROC mov al, 02h out 2eh, al mov al, 02h out 2fh, al ExitSetup ENDP ===============================================...

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