Summary of Contents for Intergraph InterServe 80 SL
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InterServe 80 SL System Reference May 1998 DHA029000...
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Notice Information in this document is subject to change without notice and should not be considered a commitment by Intergraph Computer Systems. Intergraph Computer Systems shall not be liable for technical or editorial errors in, or omissions from, this document. Intergraph Computer Systems shall not be liable for incidental or consequential damages resulting from the furnishing or use of this document.
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Notes Read all operating instructions before using this device. Keep these instructions for future reference. Follow all warnings on the device or in the operating instructions. This device is designed and manufactured to comply with approved safety standards for information processing and business equipment.
About This Document....................ix Document Conventions....................ix Customer Support ......................x Hardware and Software Support Services ............x World Wide Web .....................x Intergraph Bulletin Board Service ..............x FAXLink......................xi Telephone ...................... xi More Support Options ................... xii 1 Accessing the Components..................1 Tools ..........................2 Avoiding Electrostatic Discharge ...................2...
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Adding Option Cards ....................35 Slot Locations ....................36 Upgrading Graphics Cards ................36 Installing Option Cards ..................37 Assigning System Resources ................37 Adding Internal SCSI Drives and Devices..............38 Device Bays ....................39 Installing Devices in the Drive Bays...............40 Adding External SCSI Drives ..................43 SCSI Cable Length Guidelines ...............43 SCSI Cable Quality Guidelines...............44 SCSI ID Guidelines..................44 SCSI Termination Guidelines for External Devices ........44...
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Hardware Monitoring and Power Management ............75 Intrusion Alert Switch....................76 Optional Hardware.......................76 Index...........................77...
Preface InterServe 80 SL System Reference describes how to service and upgrade an InterServe 80 SL system. About This Document InterServe 80 SL System Reference is organized as follows: Chapter 1, “Accessing the Components,” describes how to open and close the base unit and how to access internal components.
On these pages, you can get news and product information, technical support information, software updates and fixes, and more. Intergraph Bulletin Board Service On the Intergraph Bulletin Board Service (IBBS), you can get technical support information, software updates and fixes, and more. To connect to the IBBS: 1.
In the United States, call 1-800-633-7248 between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. Central Time, Monday through Friday (except holidays). Outside the United States, contact your local Intergraph Computer Systems subsidiary or distributor. Have the following information available when you call: Your service number, which identifies your site to Intergraph Computer Systems.
Visit the Support pages on the World Wide Web at http://www.intergraph.com/ics. For hardware support questions in the United States, call 1-800-763-0242. For software support questions in the United States, call 1-800-345-4856. Outside the United States, contact your local Intergraph Computer Systems subsidiary or distributor.
This chapter describes how to access the internal components of the system so you can service and upgrade an InterServe 80 SL system. It lists tools and describes methods for avoiding electrostatic discharge, removing and attaching cover panels, and accessing components.
Unplug the unit from AC power before servicing any electronic component inside the chassis. Remember that the InterServe 80 SL is always on when connected to AC power. Touch the bare metal of the base unit to ensure the base unit and your body are at the same electric potential.
System Illustrations The illustrations show various external and internal views of the system. The front, right view below shows the system with all covers in place.
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The front, left view below shows major parts of the system without covers, cables, system board and option cards.
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The back, left view below shows the chassis with all major components removed.
Opening and Closing the Base Unit When opening the base unit for service or upgrades, remove the top cover first, then remove the left side panel. For most service procedures, you will need to remove both top cover and left side panel. See Chapter 2, “Servicing the System,” for additional details. CAUTION Do not use the bottom portion of the face panel or the lip at the top back of the base unit as a hand hold when moving the system.
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To close the base unit: 1. Place the side panel on the chassis so that all tabs on the back of the chassis insert into their slots. NOTE When installing the left side panel, ensure that the security tab aligns with its corresponding slot on the panel.
Servicing the System This chapter describes how to replace the standard parts inside the InterServe 80 SL. Obey all warning and caution labels while replacing parts. WARNING Disconnect the system from AC power before servicing internal components! Failure to remove AC power may result in equipment damage or personal injury.
Base Unit Components The following figure shows the base unit components: Top Cover Hinge Rails (Beneath Top Cover) Side Panel (Each Side) Door Assembly Face Panel Side Cowling (Each Side) To replace the hinge or door, you must first remove the top cover. To replace the face panel, you must remove the top cover and the door.
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Stop tabs Guide slot (1 each side) Hinge Door Stop tabs Locking tabs 4. Pull the door toward you and pry the hinge and door apart until one side of the door releases from its locking tab. 5. Repeat steps 3 and 4 for the other side of the door hinge. 6.
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To replace the hinge rails: 1. Remove the door as described in steps 2 through 6 above. 2. Slide the hinge toward the front of the chassis until it stops. 3. Use a flat-blade screwdriver and pry each of the stop tabs on the hinge until the hinge releases from the rails.
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(3 each side) (3 each side) Switch mount Light pipe locking tabs Standoff posts (4 each side) 5. Pull the face panel away from the chassis slightly to ensure all tabs are released. 6. Grasp the left side of the face panel and pivot it left to expose the standby switch and cable.
4. Grasp one side of the panel, press the release tabs, and lift the panel off the plastic. 5. Turn the side panel over and press the new plastic onto the panel until the tabs engage. 6. Turn the side panel over and install the screw. 7.
3. From inside the chassis, push the back of the floppy drive until the bezel clears the front of the chassis, and slide the device out. 4. Slide the new floppy drive into the chassis and align the mounting holes. 5.
6. Do one of the following on the new CD-ROM: Set the EIDE master/slave jumper to the same position (Master) as the old drive if you are replacing an EIDE drive. Set the SCSI ID jumper to the same address as the old drive if you are replacing a SCSI drive.
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5. Do all of the following: Note the SCSI ID jumper settings on the old drive. Set the SCSI ID on the new drive to the same ID as the old drive. Disable termination on the new drive. See Chapter 6, “Peripherals,” for details on these tasks. 6.
Internal Bay Disk Drives To replace an internal bay disk drive: 1. Disconnect the SCSI cable and power cable from the disk drive. 2. Remove the two screws that secure the drive bracket assembly to the left side of the chassis.
8. Insert the alignment tabs into the appropriate slots in the chassis. Screw holes for front mounting tabs 9. Install the two screws that secure the drive bracket assembly front mounting tabs to the chassis. 10. Install the screw that secures the drive bracket assembly to the right side of the chassis. 11.
Power Supply See Chapter 4, “System Hardware,” for details on the power supply. To replace the power supply: 1. Unplug the AC power cord from the back of the unit. 2. Note the location of all power cable connectors on the system board and peripheral devices.
12. Plug the AC power cord into its connector on the back of the chassis. Processor Modules InterServe 80 SL systems are compatible with 266, 300, 333, 350, and 400 MHz Pentium II processors. See the system board diagram in Chapter 5, “System Board,” for connector and socket locations.
To replace an active processor module: 1. Disconnect the processor’s cooling fan power cable from the processor fan power connector on the system board. 2. Press the locking tabs on the top corners of the processor module inward, towards each other, until they click into the release position.
Retension Modules Pentium II processors are secured to the system board using retension modules. See the system board diagram in Chapter 5, “System Board,” for connector and socket locations. NOTE You do not need to replace a retension module to replace a processor module. Retension module To replace a retension module: 1.
DIMMs See the section, “Adding Memory,” in Chapter 3, for important details on handling DIMMs. The DIMM sockets are located near the top front corner of the system board. See the system board diagrams in Chapter 5, “System Board,” for connector and socket locations. To replace a DIMM: 1.
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CAUTION Do not overtighten the screws to the Fastex fasteners. If you do, the fasteners may distort or the screw holes may become stripped. While the system board is out, it is possible for the Fastex fasteners to become dislodged. Hole in right side of chassis Fastex fastener To remove the system board:...
3. Mount the DPRM to the system board with the plastic rivets. The DPRM is keyed to the processor slots to ensure correct orientation. 4. Tighten all fasteners that secure the system board and DPRM to the chassis. You may need to adjust the Fastex fasteners slightly on the right side of the chassis.
Chassis Fan See Chapter 4, “System Hardware,” for details on the chassis fan. NOTE Arrows on the chassis fan indicate airflow direction and rotation. Ensure that you install the new chassis fan with the airflow direction arrow pointing toward the inside of the chassis. To replace the chassis fan: 1.
After you install the new battery, you must reset the date and time and reconfigure the BIOS. See the InterServe 80 SL System Setup for details on updating and configuring the BIOS. WARNING There is a danger of explosion if the battery is incorrectly replaced.
To replace the battery: 1. Remove any option cards that restrict access to the battery. See “Option Cards” in this chapter for details. 2. Note the positive orientation of the battery. Carefully remove the discharged battery by grasping it firmly and pulling it out of the socket. 3.
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Power LED (black/white wires) Top of chassis Disk activity LED (black/orange wires) 4. Squeeze the mounting tabs on the light pipe inward and push the light pipe through its mounting hole. 5. From inside the chassis, remove the light pipe. 6.
Use an antistatic wrist strap for all upgrading procedures to avoid the possibility of electrostatic discharge. CAUTION System memory modules from Intergraph Computer Systems are certified for use with Intergraph computers at extremes of temperature and system load to ensure reliable performance. System memory modules available from other vendors may not function properly or reliably in your Intergraph computer.
Adding Memory You can add system memory to the computer by adding or replacing Dual Inline Memory Modules (DIMMs). Memory upgrade kits from Intergraph Computer Systems contain one DIMM and a disposable antistatic wrist strap. To avoid damaging DIMMs and voiding the warranty, take the following precautions: Do not touch the gold-plated finger contacts.
Memory Configurations The following tables shows possible memory configurations. Each bank contains one socket. Memory size Configuration (ECC) 32 MB 4 MB x 72 64 MB 8 MB x 72 128 MB 16 MB x 72 256 MB 32 MB x 72 registered NOTE The 32 MB x 72 registered DIMM cannot be mixed with any other type of DIMM.
After completing the hardware upgrade, you must also upgrade to a multi-processor version of Windows NT. You can upgrade the operating system in the following ways: You can purchase the Intergraph upgrade kit mentioned previously. The kit contains all the hardware, software, and documentation required to perform the upgrade.
NOTE All PCI option cards sold by Intergraph Computer Systems fully comply with the Peripheral Component Interconnect Specification, 2.1. Non-compliant PCI cards mechanically comply with the Peripheral Component Interconnect Specification 2.1 , but do not contain configuration registers that allow the...
PCI Slot (shared) ISA Slot (shared) NOTE The shared PCI slot does not support bus-mastering PCI cards. Upgrading Graphics Cards Several graphics cards, for example the Matrox G100, are available for InterServe 80 SL. See Chapter 7, “System Specifications,” for details.
See Chapter 5, “Configuring the BIOS” in the InterServe 80 SL System Setup, for details on assigning system resources and configuring the BIOS for option cards. See Chapter 8, “Using System Resources,” in the InterServe 80 SL System Setup, for a list of available system address resources (DMA, I/O, memory) and related details.
Adding Internal SCSI Drives and Devices The system features the following peripheral bays: One 3.5-inch x 1-inch external bay for floppy disk drive. One 5.25-inch x 1.6-inch external bay for CD-ROM drive. Two 5.25-inch x 1.6-inch external bays for hard disk drives or other devices. Three 3.5-inch x 1-inch or two 3.5-inch x 1.6-inch internal bays for system or optional disk drives.
Device Bays You can add optional mass storage devices to the internal and external bays. The following figure shows device bays 1 through 7. The EIDE CD-ROM, floppy drive, and system drive are standard. Other devices are available as options. NOTE You can install a total of three 3.5-inch x 1.0-inch drives or a total of two 3.5-inch x 1.6-inch drives in the internal drive bay.
Installing Devices in the Drive Bays NOTE Two internal bay drive brackets are installed in the chassis for mounting drive mechanisms. To install a drive in the external drive bay: 1. Remove the two screws that secure the external bay disk drive tray to the chassis. External bay mounting screws 2.
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Drive Mounting Guide Drive Tray Access Hole (2) 6. Do one of the following: Slide the tray assembly with standard disk drive into the chassis, align the mounting holes, and install the screws Slide the 1.6-inch device into the chassis, align the mounting holes, and install the screws 7.
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5. Do all of the following: Set the SCSI ID on the new drive to an unused ID number. Disable termination on the new drive. See Chapter 6, “Peripherals,” for details on these tasks. 6. Attach the bracket to the new drive. Drive Alignment tabs Front mounting...
8. Install the two screws that secure the drive bracket assembly front mounting tabs to the chassis. 9. Install the screw that secures the drive bracket assembly to the right side of the chassis. 10. Install the right cover. 11. Connect the SCSI cable and the power cable to the new drive. Adding External SCSI Drives You can add single-ended external SCSI drives to the system by connecting them to the Ultra SCSI port on the back of the system.
SCSI Cable Quality Guidelines To ensure data integrity and optimum performance, do the following: Use only Intergraph Computer Systems SCSI cables. Cables from other vendors may not provide adequate shielding. Use the shortest cables possible to connect SCSI devices to the system and to each other.
3. Set the SCSI ID of the device to an unused number. See “SCSI ID Guidelines” above for details. 4. Do one of the following: If the device is the last or only device on the SCSI chain, enable SCSI termination. If the device is the first device or is between the first and last device on the SCSI chain, disable SCSI termination.
System Hardware This chapter contains technical information about the hardware included in an InterServe 80 SL system. Hardware Overview ......................48 Functional Diagram ......................49 Power Supply Cable Routing and Pinouts............. 50 Power Supply Specifications................. 51 Cooling Fan Specifications................... 52...
Hardware Overview If your system includes any of the following hardware, refer to the documentation delivered with the hardware for additional information: Monitors Two-Channel RAID controller Networking card InterSite Server Monitor card Uninterruptible power supply The following figure shows the major parts and assemblies inside the server. Power Supply with Fan CD-ROM Drive...
Functional Diagram The following diagram shows the power and data signals of the base unit components. Power AC In Data Power and Data System Board Power Supply (CPWS155) (MSMT511) Intruder Alert Disk Drive (5.25”) Keyboard Disk Drive (5.25”) Mouse Monitor CD-ROM Drive AC In Serial...
Power Supply Cable Routing and Pinouts The following table lists the cable connectors from the power supply that connect to the system board and other devices. Connector Device Notes J27 on System board P2, P3, P5 Disk Drive/CD-ROM MCBL172A Chassis Fan Via cable MCBL173A Floppy Disk Drive P1 Pinout...
Power Supply Specifications The InterServe 80 SL uses a 250-watt manual-ranging supply. It switches between 90-132 VAC or 180-264 VAC, depending on the range setting. The input frequency is 47-63 Hz, single phase. At full load, the power supply has a minimum efficiency of 65 percent.
Cooling Fan Specifications The InterServe 80 SL has two 12 VDC cooling fans: one mounted in the chassis, the other inside the power supply. The fans pressurize the chassis and force warm air out from the vents. The table below summarizes fan information.
System Board This chapter shows the major features, connectors, slots and sockets of the MSMT511 system board. It provides information about cable routing, pinouts, jumpers, and external ports. Major Features......................54 Connectors, Slots, and Sockets..................55 PCI to ISA Bus Interrupt Mapping ................56 Cable Routing and Pinouts ...................56 External Ports ......................59...
Major Features The following figure shows the major features of the system board. Secondary Power DIMM slots Primary processor connector processor slot Floppy disk drive connector Primary/ Secondary EIDE connectors PCI slots J16 - J20 Lithium battery Shared PCI slot NOTE The shared PCI slot does not support bus-mastering PCI cards.
Connectors, Slots, and Sockets The following figure shows the location of connectors, slots, sockets, and other features on the system board. Mouse or Keyboard Banks 0- 3 Primary Secondary J2-5 Processor Processor Fan J30 Fan J31 USB J12 Floppy Parallel Sensor Sensor MIDI or...
PCI to ISA Bus Interrupt Mapping The ISA bridge provides the sixteen conventional ISA interrupts, plus four interrupt request pins for PCI peripheral interrupts (PIRQ0 through PIRQ3). For PC-AT architecture compatibility reasons, the PCI interrupts are routed to the ISA interrupts within the ISA bridge.
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J28 (1, 2) - MCBL128A, Power (Standby) Switch Cable Pinout Signal Wire Color Signal Wire Color +5V trickle White PWRBTN Green J28 (15, 16) - MCBL130A, Disk Activity LED Cable Pinout Signal Wire Color Signal Wire Color DiskActive Orange Ground Black J28 (18, 20) - MCBL129A, Hard Disk Drive Power On LED Cable Pinout Signal...
External Ports The following figure shows the external ports on the back of the unit. Keyboard Mouse Universal Serial Bus 1 & 2 Serial (COM 1) Serial (COM 2) Parallel Line Out Line In Microphone MIDI/Game Keyboard, Mouse The Keyboard and Mouse ports are PS/2 style, 6-pin ports. They are not interchangeable.
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Universal Serial Bus The Universal Serial Bus (USB) port connects USB devices to the computer. These devices can include printers, keyboards and other peripherals that have historically used serial, parallel, mouse, and keyboard I/O buses. USB devices, designed to be fully Plug-and- Play (PnP), feature hot attach/detach and daisy-chain capabilities.
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Parallel The Parallel port is used almost exclusively for printers, but is compatible with any peripheral device designed to interface with a standard Centronics-type parallel port. Use only shielded cables with the parallel port (DB-25). Signal Signal -Strobe -ACK - Acknowledge Data 0 Busy...
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Line In The Line In port connects audio input devices, such as a tape deck or a CD player, to the computer. Signal Ground Left Channel In Right Channel In Microphone The Microphone port connects the microphone jack of the NMB multimedia keyboard to the computer.
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MIDI/Game The MIDI/Game port connects a game joystick or a MIDI device, such as a musical keyboard or synthesizer, to the system. Signal Signal Fire button 0 Fire button 2 X-axis, X-axis, joystick 2 joystick 1 Ground MIDI out Ground Y-axis, joystick 2 Y-axis, Fire button 3...
Peripherals This chapter provides information on the cabling and configuration of the peripherals located inside the system. Peripheral Cables ......................66 EIDE Cable (MCBL252A) ................66 Internal Wide Ultra SCSI Cable (MCBL316A)..........66 Floppy Cable (MCBL194A)................67 Peripheral Configuration ....................67 Floppy Disk Drive (CDSK146)...............67 Disk Drives (FDSKxxx)..................68 EIDE CD-ROM Drive (CDSK177)..............69 40 GB 8 MM Tape Drive (CMTP169)............70...
Peripheral Cables This section informs you of peripheral cable connectors and the system bay locations to which they attach. Cable illustrations are not to scale. You can identify the cables and connectors using their spacing as reference. See “Device Bays” in Chapter 3, for details on standard peripheral locations.
Floppy Cable (MCBL194A) Connector Connects To Floppy disk drive controller on system board Floppy Disk Drive Peripheral Configuration This section provides illustrations and information on configuring common peripherals for the system. See the following for related information: Chapter 4, “System Hardware” for power cable routing and pinouts. Chapter 5, “System Board”...
Disk Drives (FDSK xxx ) You can use any of the following SCSI disk drives in the system: Capacity Part Number Part Number 7,200 9.1 GB FDSK539 CDSK154 7,200 4.3 GB FDSK538 CDSK153 10,000 9.1 GB FDSK614 CDSK221 10,000 18.2 GB FDSK609 CDSK222 The following figure shows the jumper connectors J2 and J6 on the 7,200 RPM 4.3 GB disk...
To disable SCSI termination, remove the TE jumper from connector J2. To enable parity, remove the PD jumper from connector J2. For optimum performance, remove all jumpers from J2. Use jumpers as defined in the following table to set the SCSI ID. SCSI ID SCSI ID EIDE CD-ROM Drive (CDSK177)
40 GB 8 MM Tape Drive (CMTP169) The following figure shows the back of the tape drive. Power Connector SCSI Connector Device Connector Cable Connects to Power P2, P3, P5 Power Supply SCSI MCBL253A SCSI port on option card SCSI termination is permanently disabled. Use jumpers as defined in the following table to set the SCSI ID.
System Specifications This chapter contains specifications for the InterServe 80 SL system. System Model Number....................72 Specifications.......................73 System Configuration Summary...................73 System Board.......................74 Sound Controller ......................75 Hardware Monitoring and Power Management ............75 Intrusion Alert Switch....................76 Optional Hardware.......................76...
The model number on the unit identifies the system hardware and software configuration. The following table defines the individual digits. Digit Meaning 1: Series InterServe 80 SL 2: Processor Type No processor Single Intel Pentium II, 266 MHz, 512 KB cache Single Intel Pentium II, 300 MHz, 512 KB cache...
Specifications The following specifications apply to the InterServe 80 SL. Item Specifications Dimensions 25.8 x 7.9 x 20.2 inches (65.4 x 20.0 x 50.8 cm) Weight 55 pounds (25 kg) fully configured Maintenance 36 inches (91.4 cm) front and back...
(IRQ) level, and direct memory access (DMA) request and acknowledge. Hardware Monitoring and Power Management The InterServe 80 SL features advanced hardware monitoring and power management capabilities. These capabilities help conserve energy, prolong system life, and provide for future functionality, such as remote system wakeup.
See the System Setup document and Hardware Monitor’s online Help for more information on InterSite Hardware Monitor. The top LED on the front panel indicates the following power states of the system: Power State Description Explanation Green Working System is fully usable; power conservation is on a per-device basis.
Customer support, x replacing door assembly, 10 FAXLink, xi replacing face panel, 12 hardware, x replacing hinge rails, 12 Intergraph Bulletin Board replacing side plastic cowling, Service, x more options, xii replacing top cover, 10 software, x Bay locations for peripherals, 39...
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Installing external bay disk drives, 40 Face panel internal bay disk drives, 41 replacing, 12 option cards, 37 Fans Intergraph airflow direction and rotation, BBS, x Internal bay disk drives power supply, 52 installing, 41 Fastex fasteners on system board,...
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