Summary of Contents for Siemens SIMATIC RI 45 PIII Series
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Contents System Unit Motherboard Bus Board/Operator Panel/ Sound Module SIMATIC CD-ROM Drive RI 45 PIII Power Supply Connecting Cables SCSI Option Manual Index 07/99 C79000-G7076-C817 Release 01...
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Third parties using for their own purposes any other names in this document which refer to trademarks might infringe upon the rights of the trademark owners. Copyright Siemens AG 1999 All rights reserved Bereich Automatisierungs- und Antriebstechnik Siemens AG 1999...
System Unit Chapter Section Description Page Overview General Information on the Device 1.1.1 Device Models 1.1.2 Dimensions of Expansion Modules Power Requirements of the Components (Maximum Values) Removing and Installing Components 1.3.1 Changing the Air Filter (Racksystem) 1.3.2 Opening the System Unit 1.3.4 Removing and Installing Fans 1-10...
System Unit General Information on the Device 1.1.1 Device Models The RI 45 PIII is available in the following two models: Rack This model is designed to be installed in a 19” cabinet or mounting rack; it is equipped with a module retainer and an air filter. Tower This model is designed for office use;...
System Unit 1.1.2 Dimensions of Expansion Modules Information on The RI 45 PIII is designed for modules according to AT/PCI specifications. Modules The size of the modules should not exceed the dimensions indicated. If the given height is exceeded, this may cause contacting problems, functional disorders or difficulties with installation.
System Unit Power Requirements of the Components (Maximum Values) Basic System Component + 5 V – 5 V + 12 V – 12 V + 3.3 V Motherboard 0.01 A 0.1 A 0.02 A 1.5 A – – – – Front fan 0.5 A 3.5”...
Risk of damage to the unit! Note that only qualified personnel should be allowed to work on the open unit, so the warranty on the device is not affected. Authorized Siemens maintenance and repair centers offer you a specialist maintenance service. The User’s Guide contains the addresses.
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System Unit Before Opening Observe the following rules when opening the unit: the Unit Before you disconnect the power supply cable, discharge any electrostatic charge on your body. You can do this by touching metallic parts, such as screws, on the rear panel of the PC. Discharge any electrostatic charge from tools that you are using.
System Unit 1.3.1 Changing the Air Filter (Racksystem) Important The rack systems are equipped with an air filter which must be changed Information when dirty. Note the following steps while replacing the air filter: The protective cover has to be locked completely (snapped in place on the right side).
System Unit 1.3.2 Opening the System Unit Opening the First remove the screws at the top. Hold the cover at its front left and right System Unit edges, lift it up and off by sliding it back a little. Overview of the Figure 1-5 illustrates the arrangement of units in the open housing of the system Functional Units unit:...
System Unit 1.3.3 Changing processors Proceed as follows when changing processors: 1. Loosen the fastening nut on the processor bracket (one turn maximum). 2. Vertically extract the processor from the bracket. 3. Tighten the processor bracket nut. 4. Carefully insert the new processor vertically downwards until it clicks into the bracket.
System Unit 1.3.4 Removing and Installing Fans Procedure Proceed as follows to remove or install the fan: First disconnect the cables and write down their previous connections. Provided expansion modules are not installed or have previously been removed, the fan cage can be taken out. First remove the two clamps of the fan cage (see Figure 1-6) then push the top of the two side sections outward and lift the fan cage up.
System Unit 1.3.5 Removing and Installing the 3.5” Floppy Disk Drive Procedure Proceed as follows to replace the floppy disk drive: Disconnect all the cables and write down their previous connections. Release the two screws at the top of the drive support (see arrows in Figure 1-7) and pull out the drive from the back.
System Unit 1.3.6 Removing and Installing Hard Disk Drives (Back) Procedure Proceed as follows to replace or install hard drives: You can install a hard disk drive in the support located at the back of your The support is mounted with six screws (see Figure 1-8). Five of them are directly accessible at the back of the system unit.
System Unit 1.3.7 Removing and Installing the Drive Block (Front) Procedure Proceed as follows to replace the drive block: Remove the back of the Hard Disk Drives (see section 1.3.6). Loosen the screws on the bottom of the housing (without removing them completely!).
System Unit 1.3.8 Removing and Installing the Display Board First disconnect the cables and write down the previous connections. Then prise the display board out of the catches (see Figure 1-10). Catches Figure 1-10 Removing the Display Board After unscrewing (two hexagonal socket screws) the right handle and the front plate, the panel covering can be taken off.
System Unit 1.3.9 Removing and Installing Module Retainers First remove the crossbeam on which the modules are mounted. Bend the two notched spring clips slightly inwards to release the snap-in lockings. Grip the crossbeam and push it about 1 centimeter (half an inch) backward and then lift it out with the retainers.
System Unit 1.3.10 Removing and Installing Expansion Modules Disconnect all connectors. Write down previous connections. Release the screw which mounts the modules on the back of the system unit. Carefully remove the module without bending it. To install the new module, proceed in reverse order. 1.3.11 Removing and Installing the Bus Board First remove all expansion modules.
System Unit 1.3.12 Removing and Installing the CPU Board Remove module supports Remove all expansion modules and slot plates. Disconnect all cables from the CPU board and the bus board and write down their previous connections. Remove the back drive support (see chapter 1.3.6) Release the 2 screws at the back of the system unit (see arrows in Figure 1-12), then push forward the CPU board and its baseplate until it comes to a stop and lift it out.
System Unit 1.3.13 Connecting the Multipoint Interface (MPI/DP) Connecting a You can connect your IPC to a PROFIBUS-DP network via the PROFIBUS-DP optically-isolated* MPI/DP interface. The connection is established via any Network Via stationary connecting PROFIBUS components or via an MPI connecting MPI /DP Interface cable (5 m) (order no.: 6ES7001-0BF00-0AA0).
System Unit 1.3.14 Point-to-Point Connections Point-to-Point In this section, you will learn how to connect your device to a programming Connection device or programmable controller using a point-to-point connection. You can establish a point-to-point connection by connecting the RI to a programming device or a programmable controller via: A V.24 connection.
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System Unit Connecting the RI You can connect the RI to a SIMATIC S5 programmable controller via the to S5 COM1/TTY interface port. Programmable Connect your RI to a SIMATIC S5 programmable controller as follows: Controllers 1. Switch off the RI. 2.
System Unit Error Diagnostics Table 1-1 Errors/Faults in PC Operation Error/Fault Cause Remedy Power-ON LED does not light up PC is switched off Switch on the PC Power supply is not properly Check the power supply connected connections, power cable, and power plug The message “Invalid Incorrect configuration data...
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System Unit Table 1-1 Errors/Faults in PC Operation Error/Fault Cause Remedy Drive cover cannot be opened Filter cap not properly fixed Push filter cap into correct position USB-Device does not function USB interface is not supported The USB is only supported by by the operating system.
Motherboard Chapter Section Description Page Overview Components and Interfaces Processor Memory Changing the Backup Battery Block Diagram of the Motherboard Hardware Ports Assignment of Connectors and Ports 2-11 2.7.1 Assignment of the IDE Ports, X3 Secondary, 2-11 X4 Primary 2.7.2 Assignment of the EISA Riser X1 on the 2-12 motherboard...
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Motherboard Section Description Page 2.7.21 Loudspeaker, 3.5 mm plug 2-21 2.7.22 Ethernet RJ45 Connection 2-21 2.7.23 Ethernet RJ45 Connection 2-21 2.7.24 Description of the Switch Positions S2 (TTY, BIOS) 2-22 Interrupt Assignments 2-23 Hardware Adresses 2-24 2.9.1 I/O Address Assignment 2-24 2.9.2 Assignment of the Memory Addresses...
Motherboard Components and Interfaces Component/ Description Parameters Interface CPU - base Slot 1 for micro processor card, up to 550 Can be upgraded via SLOT 1 Multimedia support On-board L2 cache with 512K Memory DIMM module Data width 64 Bit + ECC up to max.
Motherboard Processor Which Processor Pentium II 450/500/550 MHz in slot 1. Type can be Used? Clock Setting S2(4) ISA Bus PCI Bus CPU Bus Freq. Freq. Freq. 8.25MHz 33MHz 66MHz 8.25MHz 33MHz 100MHz Caution If you change the CPU type, you must also update the appropriate BIOS for the CPU type.
Motherboard Memory If ECC submodules are mixed with non-ECC submodules, the memory will work without an ECC algorithm or correction. Organization Size in Mbytes Type Access Time/Freq. 8Mx64 SDRAM PC100 16Mx64 SDRAM PC100 32Mx64 SDRAM PC100 8Mx72 SDRAM with ECC PC100 16Mx72 SDRAM with ECC...
Motherboard Changing the Backup Battery Battery Power A backup battery powers the real-time clock even after the PC is switched Supply for off. In addition to the time of day, all information about the SIMATIC PC Real-Time Clock (configuration) is stored. If the backup battery fails or is removed, these data and Configuration are lost.
Motherboard Hardware Ports Position of The following figure illustrates the connector and switch positions of the Connectors and components on the motherboard. Switches X921 X901 X800 X10 COM 1 Ethernet Mouse LPT 1 X18 TTY Rec. X504 RS485 Hybrid X17 TTY Send. S2 1,2,3,4 X802 X911...
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Motherboard Ports Floppy internal Two-drive capacity 360kB, 720kB, 1.2MB, 1.44MB 3F0h-3F7h, 370h-377h, disconnectable IRQ 6, edge triggered 34-pin, standard connector Hard disks X4 internal 170h-177h, 1F0h-1F7h, disconnectable CD-ROM X3 IRQ14, IRQ15, edge triggered 120MB floppy 2*40-pin in standard connector, 4 drives are possible COM1 at rear 3F8h-3FFh, disconnectable...
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Motherboard Special Connector X630 intern Connector for CD-ROM-Line output in RI 45 PIII Tower X160 intern Reset key, speaker, status display, power supply. front electronics, X414 intern Connector for standby/operation mode switch X503 intern 10 pin socket connector for RS485 hybrid of the MPI/DP interface X504 intern 10 pin plug connector for RS485 hybrid of the MPI/DP interface...
Motherboard 2.7.2 Assignment of the EISA Riser X1 on the motherboard ISA Bus Signals PCI Bus Signals Signal Signal Signal Signal Signal Signal Signal Signal name name name name name name name name iochk# sbhe# memcs# sdone serr# (slot3) rstdrv la23 iocs16# sbo#...
Motherboard 2.7.6 Assignment of the COM 1 Port, X10 Pin No. Description Direction Pin No. Description Direction Shield Ground unassigned Transfer data Output unassigned (TxD/D1) Receive data unassigned (RxD/D2) Request to send Output unassigned (RTS/S2) Clear to send Input +TTY transfer data Output (CTS/M2) (TxD)
Motherboard 2.7.9 Assignment of the COM 2 The interface is controlled by means of a ribbon cable from the basic module (X911) to the back panel. Pin-No. Meaning Pin-No. X911 Ground Housing Ground Figure 2-5 Serial COM 2 port on the rear panel RI 45 PIII, Manual 2-16 C79000-G7076-C817-01...
Motherboard 2.7.11 Assignment of the Relay Interface, Rear Panel, X802 The interface is controlled by means of a ribbon cable from the basic module (X802) to the back panel. Pin-No. Meaning Pin-No. X802 Power Error Mid-position Contact Power Good Ground +5V with current limitation (max.
Motherboard 2.7.13 Assignment of the PS/2 Power Connector, X80 Pin No. Description Power Good -12V Ground Ground 2.7.14 Assignment of the PS/2 Power Connector, X90 Pin No. Description Ground Ground 2.7.15 Assignment of the PS/2 Power Connector, X100 Pin No. Description Ground Ground...
Motherboard 2.7.17 Assignment of the Fan Supply, X26, X30 Pin No. Description 0V Fan, switched 2.7.18 Assignment of the Standby-Operation Switch Connector X414 Pin-No. Description Switch power Ground 2.7.19 Assignment of the MPI/DP D Sub-Socket Connector, X800 Pin No. Description LTG_B RTSAS Ground optically-isolated...
Motherboard Pin-No. Meaning + Data Ground 2.7.24 Description of the Switch Positions S2 (TTY, BIOS) Switch Settings The following switch settings are for your information only. They are set in the factory and may not be changed. x means that this switch is irrelevant for the function described. BIOS Source S2 S2 (3) Function...
Motherboard Interrupt Assignments Interrupt Two integral interrupt controllers of the type 82C59 handle the 16 hardware Assignments interrupts (IRQ 0 to IRQ 15). The INT output of the slave controller is connected to the IRQ 2 input of the master controller. Interrupt 9 (IRQ 9) can be used on the bus for the assigned interrupt 2 (IRQ 2).
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Motherboard Table 2-1 I/O Address Assignment Address Assignment Remark From 0360 036F Generally not used Vacant 0376 0376 Can be switched off Second IDE channel command 0377 0377 Second IDE channel status Can be switched off 0378 037F LPT 1 Can be switched off 0380 0387...
Motherboard 2.9.2 Assignment of the Memory Addresses There are two kinds of address areas: Memory address area I/O address area. Different read/write signals (I/O WR, I/O RD, MEMR, MEMW) are used to reference these areas. The following tables provide you with an overview of the address areas used.
Motherboard Memory Decoding The Pentium II CPU has a memory address area of 64 Gbytes; 4 Gbytes of Function this can be used. The CPU has a 64-bit wide data bus, 33 address lines, and 8 bus enable lines (BE0...BE7) which code the non-existent byte address lines A0, A1 and A2.
Motherboard 2.11 Monitoring Functions 2.11.1 Overview Funktion The following individual functions are available: Temperature monitoring and over/under temperature display Watchdog Relay interfaces Monitoring module messages can be forwarded to an application. SFC program devices as well as Windows NT and Windows 98 drivers are available for this purpose.
Motherboard 2.11.3 Temperature Monitoring/Display Temperature The temperature is measured by means of two temperature detectors. One Monitoring detector monitors the processor temperature, the second internal housing temperature. The temperature is measured via a sensor and its status is indicated via a green LED for normal temperature and via a red LED for errors.
Motherboard 2.11.4 Watchdog (WD) Function The watchdog monitors the program execution. The watchdog has the task of informing the user about different reactions to a program crash. When you switch on your PC, or when you execute a cold restart (HW RESET) the watchdog remains in its quiet state, that means that it does not trigger any reaction and the RUN LEDs remain dark.
Motherboard 2.11.5 Relays Output Switching ON/OFF External units such as alarm indicators, horns and signal lights can be notified Conditions about the system condition of the PC with the relay changeover contact. In case of failure the error contact (De-energized position) is connected with the mid-position contact.
Motherboard Connection for Re- Version: D-SUB-connector, 9-pin, female lay output on the Signal back plane N.C. Power Error (Working condition) N.C. Mid-position Contact Power Good (De-energized position) +5V (fused) N.C. N.C. 2.11.6 SW Interfaces Overview The monitoring function can be called up by driver or SFC program. The inclu- ded driver and the functions of the SFC program are described in the documenta- tion.
Motherboard 2.12 Changing the Device Configuration with BIOS SETUP Changing the The device configuration of your PC is set for working with the software Device supplied with the unit. You should only change the preset values if you have Configuration modified your device in any way, or if a fault occurs when the unit is powered up.
Power-On PhoenixBIOS Release 6.0 - A5E-Number Copyright 1985-1997 Phoenix Technologies Ltd., All Rights Reserved. SIEMENS PC RI 45 Pentium III V06.A5E (version number) CPU = Pentium III 450 MHz 0000640K System RAM Passed 0064512K Extended RAM Passed 0512K Cache SRAM Passed...
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Motherboard Menu Structure The screen is divided into four parts. In the top part, you can select the menu forms [Main], [Advanced], [Security], [Power], [Exit]. In the left of the center part you can select various settings or submenus. Brief help texts appear on the right for the currently selected menu entry.
Motherboard 2.12.1 The Main Menu PhoenixBIOS Setup-Utility Boot Sequence Exit Main Advanced Security Power Version Item Specific Help System Time: [ 15:35:32 ] [ 04/05/1999 ] System Date: Shift-Tab , or Enter Diskette A: [ Disabled ] selects field. Diskette B: [ Disabled] Example: Primary Master...
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Motherboard System Time and System Time and System Date indicate the current values. Once you have System Date selected the appropriate option, you can use the [+] and [-] keys to modify Time and Date the time setting Hour:Minute:Second and the date Month/Day/Year.
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Motherboard Option “Primary / The system jumps to the following submenu when you select this type of Secondary” menu option: PhoenixBIOS Setup Utility Main Advanced Security Power Boot Sequence Version Exit Primary Master [3249MB] Item Specific Help Type: [Auto] [AUTO] (recommended) Autotypes installed Cylinders: [ 17475]...
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Motherboard Option “ Multi-Sector The number of sectors which are transmitted per interrupt are transferred in Transfers” the option “Multi-Sector Transfers.” The value depends on the drive and should only be set using the autodetect function. Disabled 2,4,8,16 sectors Option “ LBA Mode “Enabled”...
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Motherboard Option “Memory The following pop-up menu appears when you select the option “Memory Cache” cache” in the main menu: PhoenixBIOS Setup Utility Exit Main Advanced Security Power Version Boot Sequence Item Specific Help [ 15:35:32 ] System Time: [ 04/05/1999 ] System Date: Controls caching of system [ Disabled ]...
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Motherboard Option “Boot The following submenu appears when you select the option “Boot Options” Options” in the main menu: PhoenixBIOS Setup-Utility Boot Sequence Main Advanced Security Power Version Exit Boot Options Item Specific Help [Enabled] QuickBoot Mode: Allows the system to skip cer- tain tests while booting.
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Motherboard Option “Keyboard The following submenu appears if you select the option “Keyboard Features” Features” in the main menu: PhoenixBIOS Setup-Copyright 1985-95 Phoenix Technologies Ltd. Boot Sequence Main Advanced Security Power Version Exit Keyboard Features Item Specific Help [Off] Numlock: Selects Power-on state for Numlock Key Click:...
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Motherboard Option “Hardware The following submenu appears when you select the option “Hardware Options” Options” in the main menu: PhoenixBIOS Setup-Utility Main Advanced Security Power Version Exit Boot Sequence Hardware Options Item Specific Help Enable or disable the [Enabled] PCI - MPI / DP: PCI - Multi Point Interface (MPI / DP) On Board Ethernet...
Motherboard 2.12.2 The Advanced Menu Menu Structure PhoenixBIOS Setup-Utility Boot Sequence Main Advanced Security Power Version Exit Item Specific Help COM / LPT Configuration PCI Configuration Peripheral Configuration Installed O/S: [Other] Reset Configuration Data: [Yes] Floppy disk controller: [Disabled] Local Bus IDE adapter: [Primary &...
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Motherboard Memory Gap at [Disabled] The area from 15 to 16 Mbytes is not available 15 MBytes for ISA RAM [Enabled] The area from 15 to 16 Mbytes is enabled for the ISA memory. Enable Memory [ECC Scrub] One bit memory error is automatically corrected.
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Motherboard Submenu PhoenixBIOS Setup Utility PCI Configuration Main Advanced Security Power Version Exit PCI Configuration Item Specific Help Setup items for configuring PCI Device, Slot #1 the specific PCI device PCI Device, Slot #2 PCI Device, Slot #3 PCI Device, Slot #4 PCI Device, Slot #5 PCI Device, Slot #6 PCI/PNP ISA Resource Exclusion...
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Motherboard Option “PCI The following submenu appears when you select the option “PCI Devices” in Devices” the advanced menu: PhoenixBIOS Setup Utility. Advanced Security Power Main Boot Sequence Version Exit PCI Devices, Slot #1 Item Specific Help Initialize device expansion rom Option Rom Scan [Enabled] Enable Master:...
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Motherboard Submenu PCI/PNP Available means that the IRQ can be allocated to Plug and Play modules or ISA IRQ Resource given a motherboard function by the plug and play mechanism of the BIOS. Exclusion You should only use the Reserved setting if the interrupt does not have to be assigned to plug and play ISA modules in the application software.
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Motherboard Option PhoenixBIOS Setup Utility. “PCI IRQ Line” Main Advanced Security Power Boot Sequence Version Exit Item Specific Help PCI Configuration PCI Device, Slot #1 PCI devices can use PCI Device, Slot #2 hardware interrupts cal- PCI Device, Slot #3 led IRQs.
Motherboard 2.12.3 The Security Menu Overview Only system parameters in brackets can be edited. In order to prevent unauthorized use of your PC, you can define two passwords. The supervisor’s password prevents the use of the floppy disk drive by any other user. PhoenixBIOS Setup-Copyright 1992-93 Phoenix Technologies Ltd.
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Motherboard Settings [Disabled] Password is not active Supervisor Password is [Enabled Password is active. Changes the BIOS Setup can only be made after the password has been entered. A user password can be entered. When the password is entered, the field is automatically switched from [Disabled] to [Enabled] .
Motherboard 2.12.4 The Power Menu Overview This menu has the following structure: PhoenixBIOS Setup-Utility Main Security Power Version Exit Advanced Boot Sequence Item Specific Help APM: [ Enabled ] [ Disabled ] Power Savings: Maximum Power Savings conserves the greatest amount of system power. Standby Timeout: Maximum Performance conserves Suspend Timeout:...
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Motherboard Hard Disk [Disabled] Hard disks are not switched off. Timeout [10, 15, 30, 60] Minutes after which the hard disk drive is switched off, provided it is not being accessed. If you attempt to access the hard disk after it has been switched off, there will be an access delay while the disk is run up again.
Motherboard 2.12.5 The Boot Sequence Menu The order in which each bootable device is loaded during a system start (bootup) is set in this menu. PhoenixBIOS Setup Utility Advanced Security Power Boot Sequence Version Main Exit Item Specific Help -Diskette Drive Keys used to view or configure devices: Floppy Drive...
Motherboard 2.12.6 System Version Menu You should have the information in following menu readily available in case of technical questions about your system. PhoenixBIOS Setup-Utility Boot Sequence Main Advanced Security Power Version Exit Item Specific Help SIMATIC PC RI45 PIIII All items on this menu cannot BIOS Version V08.00.0141 1.04.99...
Motherboard 2.12.7 The Exit Menu Summary The setup program is always terminated using this menu. PhoenixBIOS Setup-Utility Exit Version Main Advanced Security Power Boot Frequence Item Specific Help Save Changes & Exit Exit Without Saving Changes Exit after writing all changed SETUP Set Default Values item values to CMOS.
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Motherboard Documenting your If you have made any modifications to your standard SETUP settings, you Device can enter them in the following table. You therefore have easy access to the Configuration values you have set if you have to make any hardware modifications later. System Parameter Standard Settings Your Entries...
Motherboard 2.13 Diagnostic Messages (Port 80) When the RI 45 PIII is powered up, it runs a self-test (POST = Power On Self Test). If the POST detects a fault, it outputs the sequence of beeps (beep code) assigned for the fault. Each beep code consists of 2 x 2 sequences. In addition, the individual self-test steps are output at I/O port 80h.
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Motherboard The POST Codes in order of occurrence: Display (hex) Meaning Description TP_VERIFY_REAL Test whether the CPU is in real mode TP_RESET_PIC Reset the interrupt controller TP_RESTORE_CRO Restore the controller register TP_PCI_BM_RESET Reset the PCI bus master TP_CHK_SUTDOWN Check the shutdown code TP_SET_HUGE_ES Switch the ES to special mode TP_DISABLE_NMI...
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Motherboard Display (hex) Meaning Description TP_VIDEO Initialize the video interface TP_VID_SHADOW Copy the video BIOS to RAM TP_SET_HUGE_ES Switch the ES to special mode TP_8742_TEST Test circuit 8742 TP_KB_TEST Keyboard available? TP_KEY_CLICK Switch the keyboard click on/off TP_KEYBOARD Check the keyboard TP_HOT_INT Test for unexpected interrupts TP_QUIETBOOT_START...
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Motherboard Display (hex) Meaning Description TP_TIME_OF_DAY Set the clock time and date TP_KEYLOCK_TEST Preset the keylock TP_PEM_LOCK Stop the error manager TP_PEM_DISPLAY Display any possible errors TP_ERASE_F2 Delete the F2 message TP_SCAN_FOR_F2 Check whether to activate setup TP_SETUP_CHEK Output any F1/F2 message TP_CLEAR_BOOT Cancel the self-test flag TP_ERROR_CHECK...
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Motherboard RI 45 PIII, Manual 2-62 C79000-G7076-C817-01...
Bus Board/Operator Panel/Sound Module Technical Specifications Slots 3 AT slots 1 shared ISA / PCI 5 PCI slots Ambient temperature during max. 60 C operation Dimensions L x W 226 x 173 mm Module ID on component side BBG-4 ISA / 7 PCI (Spare part order no.
Bus Board/Operator Panel/Sound Module 3.2.1 Power Supply Connection Input 6-pin power plug type Molex 8619 coded for AT power supply. Output 6-pin power plug type Molex 8619 coded for AT power supply. Plug Connector X10, X100 Description + 3.3V + 3.3V + 3.3V coding Plug Connector X7, X11 Description...
Bus Board/Operator Panel/Sound Module RI 45 PIII Operator Panel The operator panel of the IPC RI 45 is connected to the mother board via an 12-pin connection cable. The operator panel features 2 LEDs Single LED green, red, yellow, 5 x 2.5 mm rectangular Reset switch 1-pin push button Speaker...
Bus Board/Operator Panel/Sound Module Sound Card Module This module accepts the following connections: – Microphones with an impedance of less than 600 – Active stereo loudspeakers or headphones with an impedance greater than 30 Mic- Power ground Figure 3-2 Appropriate 3.5 mm Audio Plug for Active Microphone Left Right Figure 3-3...
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Bus Board/Operator Panel/Sound Module RI 45 PIII, Manual C79000-G7076-C817-01...
CD-ROM Drive Chapter Section Description Page Overview How the CD-ROM Drive Works RI 45 PIII, Manual C79000-G7076-C817-01...
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CD-ROM Drive How the CD-ROM Drive Works The CD-ROM drive is connected to the secondary IDE interface. Part Names and Functions Phones Jack This jack is used to connect a set of headphones. Please use headphones with a stereo mini-jack plug. Volume Control This control is used to adjust the headphone volume.
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CD-ROM Drive Rear of the Drive, The drive is configured as a Single. If you want to operate a second drive on this Configuration bus, you have to set either one of them as Master and the other as Slave or vice versa.
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CD-ROM Drive Emergency Eject The procedure described below can be used to remove a disc from the CD-ROM reader if the Open/Close button is disabled by software or a power failure occurs. In this case the CD tray cannot be opened automatically. 1.
Power Supply Chapter Section Description Page Overview Technical Specifications RI 45 PIII, Manual C79000-G7076-C817-01...
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Power supply Technical Specifications Voltage Voltage Max. Current Voltage Stability + 12 V 8.0 A – 12 V 0.5 A + 5 V 20 A – 5 V 0.5 A + 3.3 V 10.0 A Voltage Input voltage 120/240 VAC, 10 % Frequency 47 to 63 Hz...
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Connecting Cables Connecting Cables Overview see Figures 6-2, 6-3 and 6-4 see Figure 6-5 see Figures 6-2 and 6-3 see Figure 6-6 see Figure 6-7 ET200 connector/RS 485 MPI connector/RS 485 PG-SS/MPI/RS 485 Printer Figure 6-1 Connecting Cables RI 45 PIII, Manual C79000-G7076-C817-01...
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Connecting Cables RI - PLC Standard You can use the standard connecting cable to connect your device to a Connection Siemens programmable controller. Please read the notes in Section 1.3. Connecting cable RIxx 6ES5 734-2BD20 15-pin plug connector 25-pin plug connector (incl.
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Connecting Cables RIxx - PLC With the 25-pin plug connecting cable, you can connect your device via an Connection via adapter to a PLC, for example S5-150U (AS 511). PG 6xx Connecting Cable with 25-Pin Socket Connecting cable S5, V.24 RIxx Adapter Connector...
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Connecting Cables RIxx - PG 6xx If you want to connect your device to the PLC-S5 port of a PG 6xx Connection to programming device, you will need an adapter. In this case, the RI must be PLC-S5 Port switched to active. Please read the notes on changing over the TTY/COM 1 port to active in Section 1.3.
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Connecting Cables RI 45 PIII, Manual C79000-G7076-C817-01...
SCSI Option Overview SCSI stands for Small Computer System Interface. The SCSI controller (host adapter) acts as an interface between the internal bus (PCI bus) and devices with an SCSI interface, called SCSI devices in the rest of this document. Every SCSI device, including the SCSI controller, has an SCSI bus address which is its ID.
SCSI Option 7.1.2 Connecting SCSI Devices SCSI devices and the SCSI controller are connected via a common bus (SCSI bus). Termination (terminal resistance) must be enabled (or installed) on the SCSI devices connected at the ends of the SCSI cable. Termination must be disabled (or removed) on all other SCSI devices.
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SCSI Option 4-pin LED connector internal 8-bit 50-pin connector internal 16-bit 68-pin connector external 16-bit 68-pin connector Figure 7-1 8-bit SCSI devices have a 50-pin connector, and 16-bit SCSI devices have a 68-pin connector. You need an adapter (68-pin to 50-pin) if you want to connect 8-bit SCSI devices to the SCSI controller.
SCSI Option SCSI Setup The BIOS of the SCSI controller contains an SCSI Setup program controlled by menu commands. This program allows you to select settings for the SCSI controller and SCSI devices connected to it. When the system starts up, an SCSI BIOS message appears with a list of the SCSI devices connected.
SCSI Option 7.2.2 Exiting SCSI Setup When you press the key, the previous menu from the current menu level is displayed. If you have made changes in the current menu, you will be asked if you want to save the changes you have made. Repeatedly press the key until you have reached the first menu level (Configure/View Host Adapter Settings).
SCSI Option Meaning of the Setup Parameters 7.3.1 SCSI Bus Interface Definitions Host Adapter SCSI All SCSI devices connected to an SCSI bus, including the SCSI controller, must have different SCSI addresses. 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 15 The SCSI controller is set to the displayed SCSI address (default entry: 7) SCSI Parity The SCSI controller uses default parity checking on the SCSI bus for...
SCSI Option Boot LUN Number If your startup drive has several LUNs (Logical Unit Numbers) and the Multiple LUN Support function is enabled, you can select which LUN you want to use as the boot drive. 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 The SCSI controller boots with the LUN that is displayed (default setting: 0) 7.3.3 SCSI Device Configuration...
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SCSI Option Maximum Sync Fast SCSI devices (Ultra Wide) including the SCSI controller, support a data Transfer Rate transfer rate on the SCSI bus of up to 40 Mbytes/s with synchronous data transfer. If you select Enabled in the Support for Ultra SCSI Speed menu option, a transfer rate of 40 Mbytes/s is set automatically.
SCSI Option 7.3.4 Advanced Configuration Options Plug and Play You can use this setting to specify whether or not the ID management at the SCAM Support SCSI bus is to be carried out automatically by the host controller. (SCSI Configured Automatically protocol (SCAM)) Disabled No automatic ID management (default setting).
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SCSI Option Host Adapter BIOS If the SCSI devices can only be operated using additionally loaded drivers, you can disable the SCSI-BIOS. This saves 16 Kbytes of system memory and saves time starting the system. Warning If the SCSI BIOS is disabled, you cannot boot up from the SCSI devices connected to the SCSI bus.
SCSI Option Display Ctrl + A This setting determines whether the message Message During Press <Ctrl> <A> for SCSISelect (TM) Utility! BIOS Initialization appears when you power up the system. Even if you disable display of this message, you can still call SCSI Setup using the Ctrl + A key combination when starting the system.
SCSI Option Connecting Other SCSI Devices 7.4.1 Notes The cable supplied with the product has 3 UW SCSI connections. The cable end is plugged into the integrated SCSI drive. The controller and the cable are terminated. If you want to connect up other devices, observe the general information in Section 7.1.2.
SCSI Option Caution Do not connect SCSI devices to all three connectors of an AHA-2940 Ultra Wide host adapter! Cable with Terminator No Termination Terminated by Cable No Termination Figure 7-2 Internal Termination No Termination Termination Enabled Termination Enabled No Termination Cable with No Termination Terminator...
SCSI Option 7.4.4 SCSI Cables You should only use the integrated cable for internal extensions. Another two 16-bit SCSI devices may be connected up to this cable. The cable is terminated on the drive-side. You should only use top quality 68-pin external SCSI cables for external extensions.
SCSI Option Troubleshooting on the SCSI Controller Most problems with the SCSI controller occur when new SCSI devices are connected up to the SCSI bus (termination problems, for example). If you are having problems with the SCSI controller or SCSI devices connected to it, check the following: Do all the SCSI devices have a power supply? Are the SCSI and power supply cables correctly plugged into the SCSI...
SCSI Option 7.5.2 Other Problems and Solutions If you are booting from a SCSI hard disk drive, make sure the Drives setting (in your computer’s setup program) that corresponds to the drive is set to None or No Drives Installed, as is required for SCSI hard disk drives (for further information, refer to the documentation for your computer).
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SCSI Option RI 45 PIII, Manual 7-18 C79000-G7076-C817-01...
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Index connection, 1-19 connectors, 2-8 address areas, 2-26 CPU board air filter, changing, 1-7 installing, 1-17 assignment of connectors and ports, 2-11–2-22 removing, 1-17 AT module, 1-3 diagnostic messages, 2-58 backup battery, changing, 2-6 diagnostics, error, 1-21 battery type, 2-6 display board battery voltage, 2-6 installing, 1-14...
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Index mother board block diagram, 2-7 Gender Changer, 2-14 chapter overview, 2-1 MPI/DP interface, connecting, 1-18 hard disk drive installing, 1-12 note removing, 1-12 module, 1-3 hardware addresses, 2-24–2-27 PCI module, large, 1-3 HW ports connectors, 2-8 switches, 2-8 Slotblech, 2-32 open, system unit, 1-8 opening system unit, tools, 1-5 overview...
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Index removing system configuration, 2-33, 2-57 bus board, 1-16 system unit components, 1-5 chapter overview, 1-1 CPU board, 1-17 open, 1-8 display board, 1-14 drive block, 1-13 drives, 1-11 expansion module, 1-16 temperature display, 2-29 hard disk drive, 1-12 temperature monitoring, 2-29 protective cover, 1-7 tools, opening system unit, 1-5 retainers, 1-15...
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Index RI 45 PIII, Manual Index-4 C79000-G7076-C817-01...
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