Intergraph InterServe 800 System Reference Manual

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InterServe 800
System Reference
April 1998
DHA027000

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Summary of Contents for Intergraph InterServe 800

  • Page 1 InterServe 800 System Reference April 1998 DHA027000...
  • Page 2 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.
  • Page 3 Notes Read all safety and operating instructions before using the equipment. Keep these instructions for future reference. Follow all warnings on the equipment or in the operating instructions. This device is designed and manufactured to comply with approved safety standards for information processing and business equipment.
  • Page 5: Table Of Contents

    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 Avoiding Electrostatic Discharge ...................2 Opening the Base Unit ....................2...
  • Page 6 Adding Peripherals ......................34 Peripheral Device Locations................35 Installing Devices in the Drive Bays...............36 Adding External SCSI Drives ..................38 SCSI Cable Length Guidelines ...............39 SCSI Cable Quality Guidelines...............39 SCSI ID Guidelines..................40 SCSI Termination Guidelines for External Devices ........40 Connecting the External SCSI Drive ..............40 Changing SCSI Host Adapter or Device Settings..........41 Disabling SCSI Sync Negotiation..............41 4 System Hardware....................43...
  • Page 7 Configuration Data ......................77 DMA Channels ....................77 Input/Output Addresses ..................77 Memory Address Map..................78 PCI to ISA Bus Interrupt Mapping ..............78 Interrupt Requests (IRQs)................79 6 Peripherals ......................81 Peripheral Cables ......................82 Internal Wide Ultra SCSI Cable (MCBL348A)..........82 Internal Narrow Ultra SCSI Cable (MCBL338A) ...........83 EIDE Cable (MCBL121A) ................83 Floppy Cable (MCBL106A)................84 Peripheral Drives ......................84...
  • Page 8 viii...
  • Page 9: Preface

    Preface InterServe 800 System Reference describes how to service and upgrade an InterServe 800 system. About This Document InterServe 800 System Reference is organized as follows: Chapter 1, “Accessing the Components,” describes how to open and close the case and how to access internal components.
  • Page 10: Customer Support

    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.
  • Page 11: Faxlink

    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.
  • Page 12: More Support Options

    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.
  • Page 13: Accessing The Components

    Accessing the Components This chapter describes how to access the internal components of the system so you can service and upgrade an InterServe 800 system. It also describes methods for avoiding electrostatic discharge and closing the base unit. WARNING Follow all warnings and cautions in the servicing instructions. If you fail to follow documented, approved procedures, personal injury and damage to equipment can result.
  • Page 14: Avoiding Electrostatic Discharge

    Avoiding Electrostatic Discharge Sensitive components inside the base unit can be damaged by static electricity. To protect against this possibility, take the following precautions when working with the system’s internal components. Touch the bare metal of the base unit to ensure the base unit and your body are at the same electric potential.
  • Page 15 AC power cord before performing any service operations. Systems configured with the 300 Watt power supply do not have a circuit breaker. 4. If the base unit is in a rack and uses Intergraph sliding shelves, slide the unit out of the rack.
  • Page 16 Right panel removed Left panel removed 7. Before performing the service or upgrade procedure, review the section “Avoiding Electrostatic Discharge.”...
  • Page 17: Closing The Base Unit

    Closing the Base Unit CAUTION After servicing or upgrading the system, always replace the panels that were removed. The panels ensure the system maintains proper air flow, so internal components do not overheat and fail. The covers also ensure that electromagnetic interference (EMI) emissions remain below the standard requirements.
  • Page 19: Replacing System Components

    Replacing System Components This chapter describes how to replace components in an InterServe 800 system. Preparing to Replace Components..................8 Floppy Disk Drive or Combo Drive..................8 RAID Disk Drives......................10 RAID Disk Drive Section (MESAN52)................12 AC Section (MESAN590)....................14 DIMMs..........................
  • Page 20: Preparing To Replace Components

    Preparing to Replace Components Obey all warning and caution labels while replacing parts. The procedures in this chapter assume you have opened the unit to access the internal components. After you have finished servicing the system, close the unit as described in Chapter 1, “Accessing the Components.” Before replacing parts, ensure the problem has been correctly identified so that you do not inadvertently replace a properly working part.
  • Page 21 Screws Bracket Floppy Disk Drive Floppy Cable Power Cable EIDE Cable Peripheral Cage 2. Disconnect the floppy cable and power cable from the drive. If the combo drive is installed (not shown), also disconnect the two ISA bus cables (not shown). Note the position of the red stripe on the floppy cable and ISA bus cables.
  • Page 22: Raid Disk Drives

    Screws Bracket 7. Secure the new drive to the bracket using the screws removed in the previous step. 8. Install the drive into the base unit, and secure it using the screws removed in step 3. 9. Connect the previously removed cables to the new drive. 10.
  • Page 23 Slot Guides Latches NOTE The drive may continue to spin for a short duration after you remove it from the system. It is best to let the drive stop spinning before removal to avoid damaging the drive. Wait at least 30 seconds from the time the LED goes out until you move the drive any more.
  • Page 24: Raid Disk Drive Section (Mesan52)

    RAID Disk Drive Section (MESAN52) The RAID disk drive section includes the disk drive cage, backplane, sensor boards and LED boards. This assembly is always replaced as one unit. To replace the RAID disk drive section: 1. Remove both side panels. 2.
  • Page 25 Screw Screw Disk Drive Section Screw Screw 7. Slowly pull the RAID disk drive section out of the base unit. 8. Verify that the jumper settings on the back of the replacement RAID disk drive section match the one being replaced. NOTE If the system uses the AMI RAID controller, the jumper connectors JP2 and JP3 must not have any jumpers installed.
  • Page 26: Ac Section (Mesan590)

    12. Insert the disk drives into the system. The drives should be installed in the same slots from which they were removed. 13. Replace the side panels. 14. Restart the system and ensure the LED for each drive lights and remains steady green. If not, refer to the System Setup for status LED information.
  • Page 27: Dimms

    7. Install the new AC section by locating the cutouts in the bottom of the housing above the tabs on the mounting plane. Slide the housing toward the back of the chassis until it rests against the back of the chassis. Secure it with the screw removed in step 5. 8.
  • Page 28: System Board (Msmt497A)

    System Board (MSMT497A) This section describes how to replace the system board MSMT497A. The replacement board comes with no processors or memory. After installation, you will remove the processors and memory from the old board and install them on the new board. See the system board diagrams in Chapter 5, “System Board,”...
  • Page 29 3. Lay the chassis down on its left side. 4. Note the locations where all cables connect to the system board. 5. Disconnect the power cables from the center of the system board. Disconnect the EIDE, floppy, and SCSI cables from the board. Disconnect any other cables from the board. 6.
  • Page 30: Power Distribution Board (Msmt498 Or Msmt499)

    Power Distribution Board (MSMT498 or MSMT499) The power distribution board assembly contains the board, a metal support bracket, and cables. If the power distribution board fails, the assembly is replaced as one unit. Power Distribution Board MSMT498 is used for redundant power supplies. Power Distribution Board MSMT499 is used for fixed power supply.
  • Page 31 2. Remove the cables and screws attached to the power distribution board as shown in the following figures. Four screws (two on each side) secure the power distribution board to the chassis. Right side Power Distribution Board Bracket Screws Left side Power Distribution Board...
  • Page 32: Lcd Board (Msmt344)

    4. Disconnect the blue and brown wires from the terminal block as shown. Take note of the location of the blue (Line) and brown (Neutral) wire locations on the terminal block. AC Ground Wires Ground Lug Terminal Block 5. Pull the power distribution board assembly out the left side of the system. 6.
  • Page 33 Screws For Floppy Disk Drive Screws For Lower Drive Tray 3. Slide the floppy drive and lower tray into the system. This allows the front panel to clear the drives when removing it. 4. Remove two screws (one each side) securing front panel to the chassis. Screw For Front Panel (inside access hole)
  • Page 34: Power Supplies

    5. Grasp the bottom of the front panel and pull up and out to remove it from the system. The LCD board is attached to the inside of the front panel. 6. Disconnect the cables attached to the LCD board. Note the location of each cable. 7.
  • Page 35 4. Remove the access panel on the left side of the chassis by removing the two screws holding it in place. This will allow access to the power distribution board and to facilitate routing cables during removal and reinstallation of the power supply. 5.
  • Page 36: Watt Power Supplies (Mpws139)

    550 Watt Power Supplies (MPWS139) The 550 Watt power supplies are hot-swappable. It is not necessary to power off the system before replacing one of these power supplies. CAUTION Do not remove a power supply until the replacement power supply is available. The fans in the failed power supply continue to operate and are necessary to maintain airflow.
  • Page 37: Cooling Fans(Cfan123)

    Cooling Fans(CFAN123) To replace the cooling fans: 1. Remove the right side panel. The following figure shows the cooling fans from the right side of the system. Bulkhead and Cables Cooling Fan (one of four) 2. Disconnect the fan power cable from the inline connector. The inline connector is mounted to the fan bulkhead.
  • Page 38: Lithium (Cmos/Clock) Battery

    After you install the new battery, you must reset the date and time and reconfigure the BIOS. See the InterServe 800 System Setup for details on updating and configuring the BIOS. WARNING There is a danger of explosion if the battery is incorrectly replaced.
  • Page 39: Upgrading The System

    Upgrading the System This chapter describes how to upgrade an InterServe 800 server by adding memory, processors, and external SCSI drives. Preparing to Upgrade the System ..................28 Adding Memory......................... 28 Adding a Processor ......................30 Adding Expansion Cards ....................31 Slot Locations ......................
  • Page 40: Preparing To Upgrade The System

    Adding Memory You can upgrade memory on the system board in 64 MB, or 128 MB increments. The maximum total memory is 512 MB. Memory upgrade kits from Intergraph Computer Systems contain one DIMM and a disposable antistatic wrist strap.
  • Page 41 Before you install memory, do the following: Inspect DIMM keying. The finger contacts on the DIMM must match the socket configuration. This ensures that you have the correct voltage and type of DIMM. Inspect DIMM contacts. The DIMM must have gold-plated fingers that match the gold- plated socket contacts.
  • Page 42: Adding A Processor

    Adding a Processor Systems with a single processor are upgradeable to a dual processor capability. You can install a processor module with heat sinks (Intergraph Computer Systems standard part) or a boxed processor module with integral fan (non-Intergraph Computer Systems part). Single- to-dual processor upgrade kits include a CPU with attached heat sink and a separate voltage regulator module (VRM).
  • Page 43: Adding Expansion Cards

    J4, located near the bottom right of the system board. (Note that your InterServe 800 is not equipped with a boxed processor fan when shipped from Intergraph Computer Systems.) 10.
  • Page 44: Slot Locations

    Slot 5 - PCI Slot 4 - PCI Slot 3 - PCI Slot 2 - PCI Slot 1 - PCI Slot 0 - AGP Upgrading Graphics Cards The following graphics cards are used in InterServe 800 systems: Intergraph G76 (standard)
  • Page 45: Installing Expansion Cards

    Other expansion cards do not include a diskette, but require that you manually program the BIOS with the configuration information. See the “Configuring the BIOS” chapter in the InterServe 800 System Setup for details on assigning system resources and configuring the BIOS for expansion cards.
  • Page 46: Adding Peripherals

    Adding Peripherals The system provides dual-channel Wide Ultra SCSI-3 support for internal and external mass storage devices. The system features the following peripheral bays: One 3.5-inch x 1-inch external bay for floppy or combo 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 disk drives or other devices.
  • Page 47: Peripheral Device Locations

    Peripheral Device Locations You can add optional mass storage devices to the internal and external drive bays. The following shows peripheral device locations 1 through 12. Devices are installed in all locations for illustration. Location 12, Floppy Drive Location 11, EIDE CD-ROM Drive Location 10 Location 9 Location 8...
  • Page 48: Installing Devices In The Drive Bays

    The following table provides the device locations and related information. Location Drive Peripheral Bay Max Bay Capacity SCSI ID Floppy drive External 3.55-inch x 1.0-inch — EIDE CD-ROM External 5.25-inch x 1.6-inch — Add-on device External 5.25-inch x 1.6-inch 9 or EIDE Add-on device External 5.25-inch x 1.6-inch...
  • Page 49 4. From inside the chassis, grasp the front of the tray and slide it out of the bay. 5. If you are installing a SCSI device, do both of the following (see Chapter 6, “Peripherals,” for details): Set the SCSI ID on the new drive to an unused ID number. Disable termination on the new drive.
  • Page 50: Adding External Scsi Drives

    8. 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 Slide the Kingston removable disk drive module into the chassis, align the mounting holes, and install the mounting screws on the left and right sides of the chassis...
  • Page 51: Scsi Cable Length Guidelines

    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.
  • Page 52: Scsi Id Guidelines

    Enable termination on the last external drive on the SCSI cable chain. This is not true for devices installed on the Wide Ultra SCSI bus inside the chassis, that SCSI cable has an active terminator installed when shipped from Intergraph Computer Systems. Disable termination on all other external drives on the SCSI cable chain.
  • Page 53: Changing Scsi Host Adapter Or Device Settings

    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 5.
  • Page 55: System Hardware

    System Hardware This chapter contains technical information about the hardware included in an InterServe 800 system. Hardware Overview ......................45 Functional Diagram ......................46 Systems with a 300 Watt Power Supply (MPWS175)..........46 Systems with 550 Watt Power Supplies (MPWS139)..........47 LCD Board (MSMT344)....................
  • Page 56 The following hardware comes standard with an InterServe 800 system: System board LCD board Power distribution board AC section (hot swap power supply configurations only) Disk drive section Power supplies (may contain only one power supply) Peripherals Cooling fans and temperature sensors...
  • Page 57: Hardware Overview

    Hardware Overview The following figure shows the major parts and assemblies inside the server. The table provides the Intergraph part numbers with a page reference to go to for more information. System Cooling Board Fan (4 each) LCD Board Floppy Disk...
  • Page 58: Functional Diagram

    Functional Diagram The following diagrams shows the power and data signals of the base unit components. Systems with a 300 Watt Power Supply (MPWS175) AC In Power Supply Power Data Power and Data System Board Power Distribution Board (MSMT498) (MSMT497A) Cooling Fan Intruder Alert...
  • Page 59: Systems With 550 Watt Power Supplies (Mpws139)

    Systems with 550 Watt Power Supplies (MPWS139) AC Box Terminal Block AC In Power Data Power and Data Power Supply Power Supply System Board Power Distribution Board (MSMT498) (MSMT497A) Cooling Fan Speaker Intruder Alert Cooling Fan Cooling Fan Cooling Fan System Keyswitch LCD Board...
  • Page 60: Lcd Board (Msmt344)

    (and the disk section, if RAID). The screen reports various status and events in a software-independent manner. The InterServe 800 power supplies feature a +5V output -- which is always on -- to report the system status even if the system is powered off.
  • Page 61: Board Layout

    Board Layout SIDE 1 CPU/RAID LCD Screen Status Select Button LEDs Beeper Menu Buttons SIDE 2 Firmware PROM FPGA NVSRAM Data MUX...
  • Page 62: Cable Connectors

    Cable Connectors J100 (Side 2) Cable Routing and Pinouts From Cable MCBL203A, system status Power distribution board (MSMT498), J1 MCBL229A, LCD Disk drive section, J2 MCBL230A, LED Disk drive section, J3 J100 MCBL208A, power on/off Keyswitch J2: MCBL203A, System Status Pinout Refer to “Power Distribution Board (MSMT498 or MSMT499)”...
  • Page 63: Power Distribution Board (Msmt498 Or Msmt499)

    J100: MCBL208A, Power On/Off Pinout Signal Color Black Reset Brown Ground Orange Power Distribution Board (MSMT498 or MSMT499) The power distribution board (MSMT498 or MSMT499) routes the signals from the power supplies to the various parts of the system. Board Layout J3 J4 J7 J8 J9 J10 J12 J13...
  • Page 64: Cable Routing And Pinouts

    Cable Routing and Pinouts Depending on the power supply (PS) used, the connections vary according to the following table. The pin functions are the same for the 4-pin power supply connectors and cables MCBL206A, MCBL050A, MCBL085A. NOTE Legend: + = 300 Watt; - = 550 Watt; * = Both Power Distribution Board Cable Routing From Conf.
  • Page 65 J1: MCBL203A, LCD Board System Status Pinout Signal Signal Signal Ground Data 6 VCC Fuse +5V Fuse Data 7 CHBAD Ground VCC Fuse CHGOOD DISPRS Menu PSBAD DISPRW Escape PSGREEN DISPENB Down FANBAD Data 0 Enter FANGREEN Data 1 Ground Data 2 System/RAID Bell...
  • Page 66 J11: MCBL319A, System Board Power Cable Pinout Signal Signal Signal +3.3V Power Good Ground +3.3V No connect Ground Ground + 12V Ground +3.3V Ground -12V Ground Ground Remote On J12: MCBL210A, Intruder Switch Pinout Signal Intruder Alert (chassis open) Ground J14: MCBL318A, System Board Power Cable Pinout Signal Signal...
  • Page 67: Ac Section (Mesan590)

    J21/J22/J24/J25: MCBL050A, RAID Power and MCBL085A, Auxiliary Drive Pinout Signal Wire Color Signal Wire Color +12V Yellow Ground Black Ground Black VCC, +5v AC Section (MESAN590) The following diagram shows the AC wiring for systems with dual 550 Watt power supplies. Brown - Line Brown - Line Green - Ground...
  • Page 68: Raid Disk Drive Section (Mesan52)

    RAID Disk Drive Section (MESAN52) Assembly Layout SAF-TE Card CH 0 Connector CH 1 Connector JP3 - SCSI ID Jumper Channel Module LED Board (MPCBD27) JP2 - Delay Jumper...
  • Page 69: Cable Routing And Pinouts

    Cable Routing and Pinouts MESAN52 RAID Disk Drive Section Cable Routing From MESAN52 Cable J2, LED Board MCBL229A LCD Board, J5 J3, LED Board MCBL230A LCD Board, J6 J14, J16, Backplane MCBL145A (or) MPWS175 P4 and P5 (Non-RAID only) MCBL050A Power Distribution Board, J26 and J27 (RAID only) J18, J19, Backplane...
  • Page 70: Channel Module

    J14, J16, J18, J19: Disk Drive Power Pinout Signal Wire Color Signal Wire Color +12V Yellow Ground Black Ground Black VCC, +5v CH0 and CH1: MCBL246A, Disk Data Cable Pinout Signal Signal Signal 1-16 Ground SCSI Data Bit 3 Fault Data Term Power SCSI Data Bit 4 Busy...
  • Page 71: Power Supplies

    Power Supplies Two power supply options are available, as follows: Single 300 Watt power supply (MPWS175) Dual 550 Watt power supplies (MPWS139) 300 Watt Power Supply (MPWS175) MPWS175 is a 300 Watt autoranging supply, that switches between 90-132 VAC or 180-264 VAC, depending on the location.
  • Page 72: Watt Power Supplies (Mpws139)

    The footnotes in the previous table are defined as follows. 1. The power supply meets or exceeds these specifications. For the noted specifications, the maximum values describe the smallest acceptable maximum load, and the minimum values describe the largest acceptable minimum load. 2.
  • Page 73: Operating Characteristics

    2. These outputs are measured differentially at the Elcon connector terminated with 0.1 f ceramic capacitor. 3. The sum of the Initial Setting Tolerance and Line/Load Regulation does not exceed 3% for the +3.3 V, +5.1 V, and +5.0 V outputs, 5% for the +12.0 V output, and 10% for the negative output voltages.
  • Page 74: Connector Pinout

    Connector Pinout The power supply has two connectors that attach to J16 and J17 on the power distribution board. Both connectors have the same pinout, as follows. Name Name Signal AC Line Ground Ground AC Ground +3.3 V Remote ON/OFF AC Neutral Current Share +3.3 V Ground...
  • Page 75: Cooling Fans And Temperature Sensors

    Cooling Fans and Temperature Sensors The server uses four main fans (CFAN123) to provide air flow through the system. The power supplies (MPWS175 and MPWS139) also each contain fans. The system fans are RPM-reporting so their status is available on the LCD screen. The fans for the 550 Watt power supply are enclosed in the power supply housing and are also RPM-reporting.
  • Page 77: System Board

    System Board This chapter illustrates major component locations on the MSMT497 (Revision A) system board. It provides information about slots and sockets, cable routing, pinouts, jumpers, external ports, and memory subsystem details and addresses. Slots and Sockets ......................66 Cable Routing and Pinouts ...................67 Jumper Connectors ......................71 External Ports ......................73 Configuration Data ......................77...
  • Page 78: Slots And Sockets

    Slots and Sockets The following diagram shows the location of the slots and sockets on the system board. Slot 7 - ISA Slot 7 - PCI Slot 6 - PCI Slot 5 - PCI Slot 4 - PCI Slot 3 - PCI Slot 2 - PCI Expansion Slot 1 - PCI...
  • Page 79: Cable Routing And Pinouts

    Cable Routing and Pinouts The following figure shows the cable connectors and other components on the system board. 2 - J54 Chassis Fan SCSI - J44 External Ultra Fan - J39 Not Used SCSI-J40 Internal Wide Ultra Chassis Intrusion - J36 Ultra SCSI - J35 P1 - J34 nternal Wide (Optional...
  • Page 80 The following table shows the cable routing from the system board connectors to the various components and peripherals. NOTE See Chapter 6, “Peripherals,” for details on data cables. From Board Connector Cable Secondary CPU Fan — Optional CPU fan Primary CPU Fan —...
  • Page 81 J5, Processor Fan Inside Duct Pinout Signal Color Signal Color Fan control input Brown Voltage+ Fan Tach White Return Black J15 and J16 - MCBL252A, EIDE Data Pinout Signal Signal Signal BRSTDRV- D01+(1) Ground D01+(14) DOAK0- D01+(7) D01+(0) Ground D01+(8) D01+(15) IRQ14 D01+(6)
  • Page 82 J40 - MCBL348A, Internal Wide Ultra SCSI cable Pinout Signal Signal Signal TERMPWR SD-(5) SBSY- TERMPWR SD-(6) SACK- SD-(12) SD-(7) SRSI- SD-(13) SDP0- SMSG- SD-(14) Ground SSEL- SD-(15) Ground SCD- SDP1- TERMPWR SREQ- SD-(0) TERMPWR SIO- SD-(1) No connection SD-(8) SD-(2) Ground SD-(9)
  • Page 83: Jumper Connectors

    Jumper Connectors The following table shows the jumper settings for CPU frequency. The jumpers are located to the right of the DIMM slots. See the system board diagram earlier in this chapter for details. NOTE The system must be running BIOS version 8870F or higher to support a 333 MHz Pentium II processor.
  • Page 84 The following figure details the jumper settings. OFF means BIOS checks for password during boot. ON means BIOS will not Password check for password. Clear - J47 OFF (default) means termination is enabled. Add a jumper to disable termination. SCSI Term - J41 J21 - ON J27 - OFF J28 - OFF...
  • Page 85: External Ports

    External Ports The following figure shows the external ports on the back of the unit. Video Out Ultra SCSI USB 1 & 2 Ethernet Wide Ultra SCSI (optional) Parallel Serial (COM 2) Serial (COM 1) Mouse Keyboard Keyboard, Mouse The Keyboard and Mouse ports are PS/2 style, 6-pin ports. They are not interchangeable.
  • Page 86 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...
  • Page 87 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.
  • Page 88 External Wide Ultra SCSI The External Wide Ultra SCSI port (standard) connects external SCSI devices, such as tape drives or hard disks, to the computer. The maximum sustainable data transfer rate is 20 MB per second. NOTE On JBOD systems, this port is not used. It is optional only on RAID systems Signal Command Data-0 Command Data-1...
  • Page 89: Configuration Data

    Configuration Data DMA Channels The system board uses Direct Memory Address (DMA) channels to exchange data without accessing the CPU. Some channels are assigned for specific use by the system, as defined below. Each DMA channel appropriates full 32-bit processing. For an ISA bus, channels 0 through 3 are 8-bit and channels 4 through 7 are 16-bit channels.
  • Page 90: Memory Address Map

    Memory Address Map The following table lists the memory address map assignments. Memory Address Size Assignment 00000000 - 0009FFFF 640K System board memory 000A0000 - 000BFFFF 128K Video memory 000C0000 - 000C7FFF Video ROM 000C8000 - 000DFFFF Available I/O Adapter ROM 000E0000 - 000EFFFF BIOS ROM and PCMCIA 000F0000 - 000FFFFF...
  • Page 91: Interrupt Requests (Irqs)

    Interrupt Requests (IRQs) System interrupt request (IRQ) assignments are defined below. Name Name System Timer Real Time Clock Keyboard SMBUS/ACPI Cascade input for IRQ8 - IRQ15 Crystal CS237B Sound Controller COM2, COM4 Spare COM1, COM3 Mouse MIDI port Floating Point Unit Floppy Controller EIDE CD-ROM Parallel Port...
  • Page 93: Peripherals

    Peripherals This chapter provides information on the cabling and configuration of common peripherals within the system. Peripheral Cables ......................82 Internal Wide Ultra SCSI Cable (MCBL348A)..........82 Internal Narrow Ultra SCSI Cable (MCBL338A) ...........83 EIDE Cable (MCBL121A) ................83 Floppy Cable (MCBL106A)................84 Peripheral Drives ......................84 EIDE CD-ROM Drive (CDSK177)..............84 SCSI CD Recorder (CDSK133)..............85 Iomega Jaz 1 GB SCSI Internal Drive (CDSK168) .........86...
  • Page 94: Peripheral Cables

    Peripheral Cables This section provides information on peripheral cables and associated connections. See the section, “Cable Routing and Pinouts,” in Chapter 5, “System Board,” for additional details. Cable illustrations are not to scale. You can identify the cables and connectors using their spacing as reference.
  • Page 95: Internal Narrow Ultra Scsi Cable (Mcbl338A)

    Internal Narrow Ultra SCSI Cable (MCBL338A) The following illustration and table show the cable connectors and the locations to which they attach. This cable is approximately 54 inches (137 cm) long. Connector Connects To J44, System Board Device at Location 9 (external bay) Device at Location 10 (external bay) External SCSI Terminator Board MSMT283...
  • Page 96: Floppy Cable (Mcbl106A)

    Floppy Cable (MCBL106A) The following illustration and table show the cable connectors and the locations to which they attach. This cable is standard and is approximately 21 inches (53.0 cm) long. Connector Connects To J18, System Board Floppy Disk Drive at location 12 Peripheral Drives This section provides illustrations and information on configuring common peripherals for the system.
  • Page 97: Scsi Cd Recorder (Cdsk133)

    SCSI CD Recorder (CDSK133) The following figure shows the back of the CD recorder. SCSI Connector Power Connector Term Power Termination Parity Enable Device Connector Cable Connects to Power MCBL145A Power Supply SCSI MCBL338A J44, System Board To disable SCSI termination, remove the Termination jumper and the Term Power jumper. Use jumpers as defined in the following table to set the SCSI ID.
  • Page 98: Iomega Jaz 1 Gb Scsi Internal Drive (Cdsk168)

    Iomega Jaz 1 GB SCSI Internal Drive (CDSK168) The following figure shows the jumpers on the bottom of the drive. Front SCSI Connector Power Connector Device Connector Cable Connects to Power MCBL145A Power Supply SCSI MCBL338A J44, System Board The drive is not terminated and requires external termination only if installed as the last device on the SCSI chain.
  • Page 99: Gb 8 Mm Tape Drive (Cmtp169)

    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 MCBL145A Power Supply SCSI MCBL338A J44, System Board SCSI termination is permanently disabled. Use jumpers as defined in the following table to set the SCSI ID.
  • Page 100: Floppy Disk Drive (Cdsk146)

    Floppy Disk Drive (CDSK146) The following figure shows the cable connectors on the back of the floppy disk drive. Power Floppy Data Connector Connector Device Connector Cable Connects to Power MCBL206A Power Supply Data MCBL106A J18, System Board Disk Drives You can use any of the following SCSI disk drives in the system: Part Number Part Number...
  • Page 101 ID 1 ID 2 ID 4 ID 8 SCSI Connector SCSI Pin 1 Power Connector Device Connector Cable Connects to Power MCBL145A Power Supply SCSI MCBL338A J35 or J40, System Board To disable SCSI termination, remove the TE jumper from connector J2. To enable parity, remove the PD jumper from connector J2.
  • Page 103: System Specifications

    System Specifications This chapter contains specifications for the InterServe 800 system. System Model Number....................92 Specifications.......................93 System Configuration Summary...................94 System Board.......................95 Sound Controller ......................95 Hardware Monitoring and Power Management ............96 Intrusion Alert Switch ..................97 Temperature Sensors ..................97 Fan Speed Monitoring ..................97...
  • Page 104: System Model Number

    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 800 2: Processor Type No processor 300 Mhz/512 KB cache Dual 300 MHz/512 KB cache...
  • Page 105: Specifications

    Specifications The following specifications apply to InterServe 800 systems. Weight 140 lb (63.4 kg) with eight drives Dimension (H x W x D) 26.5 in x 8.6 in x 30 in (67.3 cm x 21.8 cm x 76.2 cm) Maintenance Clearance Deskside: 12 inches (30.5 cm) front, 8 inches (20.3 cm) back...
  • Page 106: System Configuration Summary

    Primax 3 Button Mouse Keyboard PS/2 style Graphics Intergraph G76 video display adapter (standard; others may be used) System Disk Drive 4.3 GB or 9.1 GB 7200 RPM (Wide Ultra, SMART) CD-ROM 32X EIDE CD-ROM (standard) or 4X/2X SCSI CD Writer...
  • Page 107: System Board

    Feature Description Two Universal Serial Bus (USB) Ports One Fast-SCSI 3 (Ultra) Port (standard) One Fast Wide SCSI 3 (Wide Ultra) Port (optional for JBOD or external SCSI) Ethernet Port (RJ45 connector) Audio Ports: Microphone, Line In, Line Out Power Supply 300 Watts, auto-ranging;...
  • Page 108: Hardware Monitoring And Power Management

    5/15 Hardware Monitoring and Power Management The InterServe 800 features advanced hardware monitoring and power management capabilities. These capabilities help to save energy, prolong system life, and provide for future functionality, such as remote system wakeup. The InterSite Hardware Monitor...
  • Page 109: Intrusion Alert Switch

    Intrusion Alert Switch The intrusion alert switch is mounted behind the right edge of the hard drive bay door. This microswitch is the only replaceable component in the hardware monitoring system. There are also monitors built-in to the power distribution board that detect removal of either side panel.
  • Page 111: A Firmware And Bios Procedures

    Use the procedures in this appendix when the disk section needs firmware replacement or the RAID controller needs BIOS replacement. CAUTION The following procedures may be performed only by Intergraph Field Service personnel. Installing RAID Disk Drive Section (MESAN52) Firmware To install RAID disk drive section firmware: 1.
  • Page 112: Installing Raid Controller Bios

    Installing RAID Controller BIOS The following procedure may be performed only by Intergraph Field Service personnel. NOTE This procedure does not affect the system’s main BIOS, which is installed on the I/O expansion board. The System Setup contains instructions for replacing the system’s main BIOS.
  • Page 113: Index

    Index BIOS procedures, 99 Board layout 300 Watt power supply LCD board (MSMT344), 49 (MPWS175), 46, 59 power distribution board replacing, 22 (MSMT498 or MSMT499), 40 GB 8 MM tape drive (CMTP169), 87 Cable length for external SCSI drives, 39 550 Watt power supplies quality for external SCSI (MPWS139), 47, 60...
  • Page 114 Crystal CS4237B sound controller, EIDE Controller, 95 Customer support, x Electrical FAXLink, xi base unit, 93 hardware, x Electrostatic discharge Intergraph Bulletin Board avoiding, 2 Service, x Environmental impact more options, xii base unit, 93 Telephone, xi Ethernet Word Wide Web, x...
  • Page 115 93 RAID controller BIOS, 100 Memory RAID disk drive section adding, 28 firmware, 99 Memory address map, 78 Intergraph MESAN52 (RAID Disk drive Bulletin Board Service, x section) Internal bay disk drives assembly layout, 56 installing, 38 MESAN590 (AC section), 55...
  • Page 116 Monitoring PCI-to-ISA bridge, 95 voltages and system states, 96 Peripheral cables Mouse EIDE cable (MCBL121A), 83 port pinout, 73 Floppy cable (MCBL106A), MPWS139 (550 Watt power supply), 60 internal narrow Ultra SCSI AC OK signal, 62 cable (MCBL338A), 83 connector pinouts, 62 internal wide Ultra SCSI cable DC OK signal, 62 (MCBL348A), 82...
  • Page 117 550 Watt power distribution board replacing, 24 (MSMT498 or MSMT499), Power supplies (MPWS139), 45, system board (MSMT497A), connector pinout, 62 DC outputs, 60 system components, 7 description, 60 Room recommendations operating characteristics, 61 base unit, 93 Power supply (MPWS175) DC output specifications, 59 Preparing to replace components, 8 SAF-TE card Preparing to upgrade the system,...
  • Page 118 Slots and sockets diagram of slots and sockets, system board, 66 Software external ports (diagram), 73 support services, x jumper connectors, 71 Sound controller, 95 replacing, 16 features, 95 slots and sockets, 66 Specifications, 93 sound controller system, 91 specifications, 95 Support customer, x System...

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