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AAEON SBC-775

Image of AAEON SBC-775

Description

Pentium II processor-based PCI/ISA-bus CPU card

Part Number

SBC-775

Price

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Manufacturer

AAEON

Lead Time

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Category

Single Board Computers

Specifications

System Chipset

Intel 440LX

Form Factor

ATX

Datasheet

pdf file

AAEON-SBC-775-datasheet.pdf

822 KiB

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SBC-775 fi Pentium II processor-based PCI/ISA-bus CPU card Acknowledgements AWARD is a trademark of AWARD Software, Inc. AMD is a trademark of Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. IBM and PC are trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation. Intel is a trademark of Intel Corporation. MS-DOS is a trademark of Microsoft Corporation. SMC is a trademark of Standard Microsystems Corporation. NCR is a trademark of NCR Corporation. All other product names or trademarks are the properties of their respective owners. Part No. 2047775000 1 st Edition Printed in Taiwan October 1998 Initial inspection Before you begin installing your card, please make sure that the following materials have been shipped: ® • 1 SBC-775 Pentium II single board computer • 1 Pentium II CPU and cooling fan (optional) • 1 Quick Installation Guide • 1 supporting CD-ROM • 1 FDD cable • 1 EIDE HDD cables • 1 printer cable • 1 ivory cable for keyboard and mouse • 1 ATX-to-PS/2 power cable • 1 Pentium II CPU retention module If any of these items are missing or damaged, contact your distributor or sales representative immediately. We have carefully inspected the SBC-775 mechanically and electrically before shipment. It should be free of marks and scratches and in perfect working order upon receipt. As you unpack the SBC-775, check it for signs of shipping damage. (For example, damaged box, scratches, dents, etc.) If it is damaged or it fails to meet the specifications, notify our service department or your local sales representative immediately. Also notify the carrier. Retain the shipping carton and packing material for inspection by the carrier. After inspection, we will make arrangements to repair or replace the unit. Caution! Always ground yourself to remove any static charge before touching the CPU card. Modern electronic devices are very sensitive to static electric charges. Try to use a grounding wrist strap at all times. Place all electronic components on a static-dissipative surface or in a static-shielded bag when they are not in the chassis. Contents Chapter 1 Hardware Configuration ................1 Introduction ........................................................................... 2 Features.................................................................................. 3 Specifications ......................................................................... 4 System...................................................................................... 4 Memory.................................................................................... 4 Input/Output ............................................................................. 4 Industrial features ..................................................................... 5 Mechanical and environmental specifications .......................... 5 Board Layout: Main Features............................................. 6 Jumpers and Connectors..................................................... 7 Board Layout: Jumper Locations....................................... 9 Board Layout: Connector Locations ............................... 10 Safety Precautions............................................................... 11 Jumper Settings .................................................................. 12 How to set jumpers .................................................................12 CPU core frequency (J5)........................................................12 CMOS clear (J6).....................................................................13 Watchdog timer output (J8) .....................................................13 CPU clock select (J11) ...........................................................14 ® DiskOnChip 2000 Flash disk address select (J12) ................15 System Memory .................................................................. 16 Memory Installation Procedures...................................... 18 Cache Memory .................................................................... 19 Mounting the CPU and Cooling Modules ...................... 20 On-board Support Bracket ................................................ 22 Chapter 2 Connecting Peripherals ................23 Primary (CN6) and Secondary (CN7) IDE Connectors ........................................................................... 24 Floppy Drive Connector (CN13) ...................................... 24 Parallel Port Connector (CN8).......................................... 25 Keyboard & PS/2 Mouse Connector (CN12)................. 25 Serial Ports (CN9: COM1; CN10: COM2) .................... 26 Front Panel Connectors (CN2, CN3, CN4, J1 and J2)............................................. 27 Keyboard lock and power on LED (CN2) ..............................27 External speaker (CN3) ..........................................................27 IDE LED (CN4) .....................................................................27 ATX soft power switch (J1) ....................................................27 Reset (J2) ................................................................................27 ATX Power Control Connectors (J7 and J1).................. 28 ATX feature connector (J7) and soft power switch connector (J1) .....................................28 Controlling the soft power switch ............................................ 29 USB Connector (CN11)...................................................... 29 IR Connector (CN1) ........................................................... 29 External Keyboard Connector (J10) ............................... 29 External Suspend Switch Lead (SMI) (J3)...................... 30 Chapter 3 Award BIOS Setup ..........................31 Introduction ......................................................................... 32 Entering Setup..................................................................... 32 Standard CMOS Setup ....................................................... 32 BIOS Features Setup ......................................................... 33 Virus Warning .......................................................................... 33 Quick Power On Self Test ......................................................34 Boot Sequence ........................................................................34 Boot Up Floppy Seek .............................................................. 34 Boot Up NumLock Status .......................................................35 Boot Up System Speed ...........................................................35 IDE HDD Block Mode ...........................................................35 Gate A20 option ...................................................................... 35 Typematic Rate setting ............................................................35 Typematic Rate (Char/Sec) ....................................................35 Typematic Delay (msec) .........................................................36 Security Option ........................................................................ 36 OS select for DRAM>64 MB.................................................36 Video BIOS Shadow ...............................................................36 C8000 - CFFFF Shadow / DC000-DFFFF Shadow................36 CHIPSET Features Setup ................................................. 37 Power Management Setup................................................. 38 Power Management................................................................38 HDD Power Management......................................................38 IRQ Activity ............................................................................ 39 PCI Configuration Setup .................................................... 39 Load BIOS Defaults ...............................................................39 Load Setup Defaults................................................................39 Integrated Peripherals ....................................................... 40 Password Setting ................................................................. 41 IDE HDD Auto Detection ................................................. 41 Save & Exit Setup............................................................... 42 Exit Without Saving ............................................................ 42 Appendix A Programming the Watchdog Timer ........................... 43 Programming the Watchdog Timer ..................................... 44 Appendix B Pin Assignments ............................ 47 COM1/COM2 RS-232 Serial Port (CN9,CN10) ................. 48 Keyboard and Mouse Connnector (CN12) ........................ 48 External Keyboard Connector (J10) ................................... 48 ATX Feature Connector (J7) ................................................ 49 IDE Hard Drive Connector (CN6, CN7) ............................. 49 USB Connector (CN11) ........................................................ 50 CPU Fan Power Connector (CN5) ...................................... 50 Floppy Drive Connector (CN13) ......................................... 51 Parallel Port Connector (CN8) ............................................ 52 IR Connector (CN1) ............................................................. 53 HDD LED Connector (CN4)................................................ 53 Power LED and Keylock Connector (CN2) ....................... 53 External Speaker (CN3) ....................................................... 54 System I/O Ports ................................................................... 55 DMA Channel Assignments ................................................. 56 Interrupt Assignments .......................................................... 56 1st MB Memory Map ........................................................... 57 fi Appendix C DOC 2000 Installation Guide......... 59 DiskOnChip 2000 Quick Installation Guide ...................... 60 DiskOnChip 2000 installation instructions ............................... 60 Additional information and assistance ..................................... 61 1 Hardware Configuration This chapter gives background information on the SBC-775, and shows you how to configure the card to match your application and prepare it for installation into your system. Sections include: • Card specifications • Board layout • Safety precautions • Jumper settings CHAPTER Introduction The SBC-775 industrial grade CPU card uses Intel's highly ® acclaimed Pentium II processor and Intel 440LX PCI chipset. The card works with standard ISA or PCI/ISA-bus passive backplanes. The CPU provides 512 KB on-chip L2 cache, eliminating the need for external SRAM chips. It has two PCI EIDE interfaces (for up to four devices), and an FDD interface (for up to two devices). Other features include two RS-232 serial ports (16C550 UARTs with 16-byte FIFO or compatible), one enhanced parallel port (supports EPP/ECP), and support two USB (Universal Serial Bus) ports. The PCI BUS Master IDE controller supports Ultra DMA/33 operation. This provides data transfer rates of over 33 MB/sec, and allows drive capacities up to 8.4 GB. System BIOS supports boot-up from an IDE CD-ROM. A backup of CMOS data is stored in the Flash memory, which protects data even after a battery failure. Also included is a 63-level watchdog timer, which resets the CPU or generates an interrupt if a program cannot be executed normally. This enables reliable operation in unattended environments. 2 SBC-775 User’s Manual Features • Intel slot 1 architecture ® • Pentium II processor up to 333 MHz • Intel 82440LX PCIset • Three DIMM sockets for SDRAM up to 384 MB; supports ECC • Award Flash BIOS • On-board ATX power control connector to meet ACPI requirements • Two enhanced IDE ports, supporting Ultra DMA/33, PIO Mode 4 and DMA Mode 2 • Two USB ports • Two serial ports • One bidirectional parallel port, supports ECP/EPP/SPP • One floppy port and one keyboard/mouse port • PCI V2.1 compliant • PICMG 2.0 compliant • Additional metal bracket to provide board stability with Pentium II processor • CMOS backup battery life of 7 years ® • Supports M-Systems DiskOnChip 2000 Flash disk • On-board security system for monitoring CPU fan and voltage Chapter 1 Hardware Configuration 3 Specifications System ® • CPU: Intel Pentium II up to 333 MHz • BIOS: Award Flash BIOS • Green function: Supports power management operation via BIOS. Activated by keyboard or mouse activity • PCI enhanced IDE hard disk drive interface: Supports up to four IDE (AT bus) large hard disk drives (up to 8.4 GB), or other enhanced IDE devices. Supports PIO Mode 4 (16.67 MB/s data transfer rate) and Ultra DMA/33 (33 MB/s data transfer rate). BIOS enabled/disabled • Floppy disk drive interface: Supports up to two floppy disk drives, 5¼" (360 KB and 1.2 MB) and/or 3½" (720 KB, 1.44 MB, and 2.88 MB). BIOS enabled/disabled Memory • RAM: Up to 384 MB in three available 168-pin DIMM sockets. Supports SDRAM • Error correction (parity DRAM only): Modules can detect multi-bit memory errors. Correction of 1-bit memory errors Input/Output • Bus interface: PCI/ISA bus, PICMG compliant • Data bus: 64-bit • Bus speed: ISA: 8 MHz PCI: 33 MHz • DMA channels: 7 • Interrupt levels: 15 4 SBC-775 User’s Manual • Enhanced parallel port: Configurable to LPT1, LPT2, LPT3, or disabled. Standard DB-25 female connector provided. Supports EPP/ECP/SPP • Serial ports: Two RS-232 ports with 16C550 UARTs (or compatible) with 16-byte FIFO buffer. Supports speeds up to 115.2 Kbps. Ports can be individually configured to COM1, COM2, or disabled • Keyboard and PS/2 mouse connector: A 6-pin mini DIN connector is located on the mounting bracket for easy connection to a keyboard or PS/2 mouse. An on-board keyboard pin header connector is also available Industrial features • Watchdog timer: Can generate a system reset or IRQ11. The watchdog timer is programmable, with each unit equal to one second (63 levels). The program uses I/O ports hex 043h and 443h to control the watchdog timer Mechanical and environmental specifications • Operating temperature: 0 ~ 60° C (32 ~ 140° F) • Power supply voltage: +5 V, ±12 V ® • Power consumption: +5 V @ 6.0 A (for Pentium II 233 MHz) ® +5 V @ 7.5 A (for Pentium II 300 MHz) ® +5 V @ 4.5 A (for Pentium II 333 MHz) • Board size: 338 x 122 mm (13.3" x 4.8") • Board weight: 0.5 kg (1.2 lb) Chapter 1 Hardware Configuration 5 Board Layout: Main Features 6 SBC-775 User’s Manual Intel 82440LX ATX feature connector PCIset Accommodates three DIMM modules, up to EIDE Bi-directional 384 MB connectors parallel port FDD connector USB ports Metal bracket COM1 for stability COM2 Keyboard/ Mouse connector ® ® Intel Pentium II DiskOnChip 2000 processor up to 333 MHz Flash disk Jumpers and Connectors Connectors on the SBC-775 board link it to external devices such as hard disk drives and a keyboard. In addition, the board has a number of jumpers used to configure your system for your application. The tables below list the function of each of the board jumpers and connectors. Later sections in this chapter give instructions on setting jumpers. Chapter 2 gives instructions for connecting external devices to your card. Table 1-1: Jumpers Label Function J5 CPU core frequency J6 Clear CMOS J8 Watchdog output J11 Clock select ® J12 DiskOnChip 2000 address select Chapter 1 Hardware Configuration 7 Table 1-2: Connectors Number Function CN1 Infrared (IR) connector CN2 Keyboard lock CN3 External speaker CN4 IDE LED CN5 CPU fan connector CN6 Primary IDE connector CN7 Secondary IDE connector CN8 Parallel port CN9 Serial port: COM 1 CN10 Serial port: COM 2 CN11 USB port CN12 PS/2 keyboard and mouse CN13 Floppy drive connector CN14 (Reserved) J1 ATX soft power switch J2 Reset J3 External SMI J7 ATX feature connector J10 External keyboard connector RT1 (Reserved) 8 SBC-775 User’s Manual Board Layout: Jumper Locations Figure 1-1: Board layout: jumper locations Chapter 1 Hardware Configuration 9 Board Layout: Connector Locations Figure 1-2: Board layout: connecter locations 10 SBC-775 User’s Manual / PS/2 mouse Safety Precautions Warning! Always completely disconnect the power cord from your chassis whenever you work with the hardware. Do not make connections while the power is on. Sensitive electronic components can be damaged by sudden power surges. Only experienced electronics personnel should open the PC chassis. Caution! Always ground yourself to remove any static charge before touching the CPU card. Modern electronic devices are very sensitive to static electric charges. As a safety precaution, use a grounding wrist strap at all times. Place all electronic components in a static-dissipative surface or static-shielded bag when they are not in the chassis. Chapter 1 Hardware Configuration 11 Jumper Settings This section provides instructions on how to configure your card by setting jumpers. It also includes the card's default settings and your options for each jumper. How to set jumpers You configure your card to match the needs of your application by setting jumpers. A jumper is the simplest kind of electric switch. It consists of two metal pins and a small metal clip (often protected by a plastic cover) that slides over the pins to connect them. To “close” a jumper you connect the pins with the clip. To “open” a jumper you remove the clip. Sometimes a jumper consists of a set of three pins, labeled 1, 2 and 3. In this case you connect either pins 1 and 2, or 2 and 3. A pair of needle-nose pliers may be useful when setting jumpers. CPU core frequency (J5) You must configure your SBC-775 CPU card to the frequency of your ® Intel Pentium II processor by setting jumper J5. The SBC-775 is equipped to use Pentium processors with speeds of 233, 266, 300 and 333 MHz. Configure your SBC-775 as follows: Table 1-3: CPU core frequency (J5) A B C D AB C D 233 MHz open closed closed closed AB C D 266 MHz open open open open AB C D 300 MHz* open closed open open AB C D 333 MHz open open closed open * default 12 SBC-775 User’s Manual CMOS clear (J6) The SBC-775 CPU card contains a jumper that can erase CMOS data and reset the system BIOS information. Normally this jumper should be set with pins 1-2 closed. If you want to reset the CMOS data, set J6 to 2-3 closed for just a few seconds, and then move the jumper back to 1-2 closed. This procedure will reset the CMOS to its default setting. Table 1-4: CMOS clear jumper settings (J6) Function Jumper setting 1 Keep CMOS data 1-2 closed* 1 Clear CMOS data 2-3 closed * default Watchdog timer output (J8) The SBC-775 contains a watchdog timer that will reset the CPU or send a signal to IRQ11 in the event the CPU stops processing. This feature means the SBC-775 will recover from a software failure or an EMI problem. The J8 jumper settings control the outcome of what the computer will do in the event the watchdog timer is tripped. Table 1-5: Watchdog timer output (J8) Function Jumper setting 1 IRQ11 1-2 closed 1 Reset 2-3 closed* * default Chapter 1 Hardware Configuration 13 CPU bus clock select (J11) ® The CPU clock varies according to the Pentium II processor's CPU bus clock. There are two settings for the CPU clock, 66.6 MHz and 75 MHz. Table 1-6: CPU clock select jumper settings (J11) Function Jumper setting 1 66.6 MHz 1-2 closed* 1 75 MHz 2-3 closed * default Note: 75 MHz exceeds the product's specifications. 14 SBC-775 User’s Manual ® DiskOnChip 2000 Flash disk address select (J12) The SBC-775 includes a 32-pin socket for M-System's DiskOnChip 2000 Flash disk module. This revolutionary solid state disk enables critical system information to be stored within an on-board Flash disk for virtually instantaneous data access. You must specify the memory address you wish to use for your DiskOnChip 2000 Flash disk module by setting jumper (J12). Available settings are as follows: ® Table 1-7: DiskOnChip 2000 Flash disk memory address jumper settings (J12) Address 1-2 3-4 5-6 12 C800 closed closed closed 5 6 12 CC00 closed closed open 5 6 12 D000 closed open closed 5 6 12 D400 closed open open 5 6 12 D800 open closed closed 5 6 12 DC00 open closed open 5 6 12 E000 open open closed 5 6 12 Disabled* open open open 5 6 * default Chapter 1 Hardware Configuration 15 System Memory The top-left edge of the SBC-775 contains three sockets for 168-pin dual inline memory modules (DIMMs). All three sockets use 3.3 V unbuffered synchronous DRAMs (SDRAM). DIMMs are available in capacities of 16, 32, 64 or 128 MB. The sockets can be filled in any combination with DIMMs of any size, giving your SBC-775 single board computer between 16 and 384 MB of memory. Use the follow- ing table to calculate the total DRAM memory within your computer: Table 1-8: DIMM module allocation table Socket number 168-pin DIMM memory 1 (8, 16, 32, 64 or 128 MB) x 1 2 (8, 16, 32, 64 or 128 MB) x 1 3 (8, 16, 32, 64 or 128 MB) x 1 Sample calculation: DIMM memory capacity Suppose you install a 128 MB DIMM into your SBC-775's socket 1, a 32 MB DIMM into socket 2, and you leave socket 3 empty. Your total system memory is calculated as follows, and is 160 MB: Table 1-9: DIMM memory capacity sample calculation Socket number 168-pin DIMM memory Total memory 1 128 MB x 1 128 MB 2 32 MB x 1 32 MB 3- x 1 0 MB Total memory 160 MB 16 SBC-775 User’s Manual Supplementary information about DIMMs Your SBC-775 can accept four kinds of memory chips: EDO (with or without parity), and SDRAM (with or without parity). Also: • SDRAM chips are usually thinner and have higher pin density than EDO chips. • The BIOS displays EDO and SDRAM memory on the boot-up screen. • Chips with 9 chips/side support parity; chips with 8 chips/side do not support parity. • Single-sided modules are typically 16 or 64 MB; double-sided modules are usually 8, 32 or 128 MB. Note: The SBC-775 accepts EDOs both with and without parity, but this is not recommended. Chapter 1 Hardware Configuration 17 Memory Installation Procedures To install DIMMs, first make sure the two handles of the DIMM socket are in the "open" position. i.e. The handles remain outward. Slowly slide the DIMM module along the plastic guides on both ends of the socket. Then press the DIMM module right down into the socket, until you hear a click. This is when the two handles have automatically locked the memory module into the correct position of the DIMM socket. (See Figure 1-3.) To take away the memory module, just push both handles outward, and the memory module will be ejected by the mechanism in the socket. Figure 1-3: DIMM installation 18 SBC-775 User’s Manual Cache Memory ® Since the second level cache has been embedded into the Pentium II CPU, you do not have to take care of either SRAM chips or SRAM modules. The built-in second level cache in the Pentium II yields much higher performance than the external cache memories. The cache size in the Pentium II CPU is either 256 KB or 512 KB. Normally, for workstation and server application, the 256 KB version is enough. However, if your system is for heavy duty applications, the 512 KB version will help a lot. Specifically for our Pentium II based SBC, the Pentium II has another version that provides much better data security if combined with the DRAM ECC. Check with your vendor for various Pentium II models. Chapter 1 Hardware Configuration 19 Mounting the CPU and Cooling Modules ® The Pentium II is a module-type CPU which runs at high speeds, for example 233 ~ 333 MHz, so the cooling mechanism becomes critical for system reliability. There are two types of cooling methods: one with a cooling fan attached to the heat sink of the Pentium II module, the other with a huge heat sink without any cooling fan attached. Both cooling methods for the Pentium II require a "retention module" to firmly fix the Pentium II CPU to slot 1. The following Figures 1-4 through 1-6 illustrate the steps involved in mounting the retention module and installing the CPU and cooling modules. Step 1 Figure 1-4: Mounting CPU and cooling modules - Step 1 20 SBC-775 User’s Manual Figure 1-5: Mounting CPU and cooling modules - Step 2 Step 2 Step 3 Figure 1-6: Mounting CPU and cooling modules - Step 3 Chapter 1 Hardware Configuration 21 On-board Support Bracket The SBC-775 also includes an on-board metal bracket to provide balanced support for the Pentium II processor cartridge. Figure 1-7: On-board support bracket 22 SBC-775 User’s Manual 2 Connecting Peripherals This chapter tells how to connect peripherals, switches and indicators to the SB-775 board. You can access most of the connectors from the top of the board while it is installed in the chassis. If you have a number of cards installed, or your chassis is very tight, you may need to partially remove the card to make all the connections. CHAPTER Primary (CN6) and Secondary (CN7) IDE Connectors You can attach up to four IDE (Integrated Device Electronics) drives to the SBC-775’s internal controller. The primary (CN6) and secondary (CN7) connectors can each accommodate two drives. Wire number 1 on the cable is red or blue and the other wires are gray. Connect one end to connector CN6 or CN7 on the CPU card. Make sure that the red/blue wire corresponds to pin 1 on the connec- tor (in the upper right hand corner). See Chapter 1 for help finding the connector. Unlike floppy drives, IDE hard drives can connect in either position on the cable. If you install two drives to a single connector, you will need to set one as the master and one as the slave. You do this by setting the jumpers on the drives. If you use just one drive per connector, you should set each drive as the master. See the docu- mentation that came with your drive for more information. Connect the first hard drive to the other end of the cable. Wire 1 on the cable should also connect to pin 1 on the hard drive connector, which is labeled on the drive circuit board. Check the documentation that came with the drive for more information. Connect the second hard drive to the remaining connector (CN7 or CN6), in the same way as described above. Floppy Drive Connector (CN13) You can attach up to two floppy disk drives to the SBC-775's on-board controller. You can use any combination of 5.25" (360 KB/1.2 MB) and/or 3.5" (720 KB/1.44/2.88 MB) drives. The card comes with a 34-pin daisy-chain drive connector cable. On one end of the cable is a 34-pin flat-cable connector. On the other end are two sets of floppy disk drive connectors. Each set consists of a 34-pin flat-cable connector (usually used for 3.5" drives) and a printed circuit-board connector (usually used for 5.25" drives). You can use only one connector in each set. The set on the end (after the twist in the cable) connects to the A: floppy drive. The set in the middle connects to the B: floppy drive. 24 SBC-775 User’s Manual Parallel Port Connector (CN8) The parallel port is normally used to connect the CPU card to a printer. The SBC-775 includes an on-board parallel port, accessed through a 26-pin flat-cable connector, CN8. The card comes with an adapter cable which lets you use a traditional DB-25 connector. The cable has a 26-pin connector on one end and a DB-25 connector on the other, mounted on a retaining bracket. The bracket installs at the end of an empty slot in your chassis, giving you access to the connector. The parallel port is designated as LPT1 and can be disabled or changed to LPT2 or LPT3 in the system BIOS setup. To install the bracket, find an empty slot in your chassis. Unscrew the plate that covers the end of the slot. Screw in the bracket in place of the plate. Next, attach the flat-cable connector to CN8 on the CPU card. Wire 1 of the cable is red or blue, and the other wires are gray. Make sure that wire 1 corresponds to pin 1 of CN8. Pin 1 is on the upper right side of CN8. Keyboard & PS/2 Mouse Connector (CN12) The SBC-775 board provides a keyboard connector. A 6-pin mini-DIN connector (CN12) on the card mounting bracket supports single-board computer applications. The card comes with an adapter to convert from the 6-pin mini-DIN connector to a standard keyboard DIN connector and to a PS/2 mouse connector. Chapter 2 Connecting Peripherals 25 Serial Ports (CN9: COM1; CN10: COM2) The SBC-775 offers two serial ports, CN9 as COM1 and CN10 as COM2. These ports can connect to serial devices (such as a mouse, printers, and so on) or to a communication network. Table 2-1: Serial port connections (COM1, COM2) Connector Ports Address Interrupt CN9 COM1 3F8*, 3E8 IRQ4 CN10 COM2 2F8*, 2E8 IRQ3 * default settings The IRQ and address ranges for both ports are fixed. However, if you want to disable the port or change these parameters later, you can do this in the system BIOS setup. Different devices implement the RS-232 standard in different ways. If you are having problems with a serial device, be sure to check the pin assignments for the connector. 26 SBC-775 User’s Manual Front Panel Connectors (CN2, CN3, CN4, J1 and J2) There are several external switches to monitor and control the SBC- 775. Keyboard lock and power on LED (CN2) CN2 is a 5-pin connector for the keyboard lock and power on LED connection. Refer to Appendix B.12 for detailed information on the pin assignments. If a PS/2 power supply is used, the system's power LED status will be one of the following: PS/2 Power Mode LED Status System On O n System Suspend Flashes eight times/sec. System Off O f f If an ATX power supply is used, refer to Section 2.7.2. External speaker (CN3) CN3 is a 4-pin connector for an extenal speaker connection. If there is no external speaker, the SBC-775 provides an on-board buzzer as an alternative. To enable the buzzer, set pins 3-4 as closed. IDE LED (CN4) You can connect an LED to connector CN4 to indicate when the HDD is active. ATX soft power switch (J1) If your computer case is equipped with an ATX power supply, you should connect the power on/off button on your computer case to J1. This connection enables you to turn your computer on and off. Reset (J2) Many computer cases offer the convenience of a reset button. Connect the wire from the reset button to J2. Chapter 2 Connecting Peripherals 27 ATX Power Control Connectors (J7 and J1) ATX feature connector (J7) and soft power switch connector (J1) The SBC-775 can support an advanced soft power switch function if an ATX power supply is used. To enable the soft power switch function: 1. Take the specially designed ATX-to-PS/2 power cable out of the SBC-775's accessory bag. 2. Connect the 3-pin plug of the cable to J7 (ATX feature connec- tor). 3. Connect the power on/off button to J1. (A momentary type of button should be used.) Warnings: 1. Make sure that you unplug your power supply when adding or removing expansion cards or other system components. Failure to do so may cause severe damage to both your CPU card and expansion cards. 2. ATX power supplies may power on if certain motherboard components or connections are touched by metallic objects. Important: Be sure that the ATX power supply can take at least a 10 mA load on the 5 V standby lead (5VSB). If not, you may have difficulty powering on your system. 28 SBC-775 User’s Manual Controlling the soft power switch It is easy to control the ATX soft power switch. Pushing the button once will switch the system between the "On" and "Suspend" power modes. Pushing the button for more than 4 seconds while in the "On" mode will turn the system off. Users can also identify the current power mode through the system's power LED, as indicated below: ATX Power Mode LED Status System On On System Suspend Flashes eight times/sec. System Off Flashes once/sec. USB Connector (CN11) The SBC-775 CPU card provides two USB (Universal Serial Bus) interfaces, which give complete plug and play, hot attach/detach for up to 127 external devices.The USB interfaces comply with USB Specification Rev. 1.0, and are fuse-protected. The USB interfaces are accessed through a 10-pin flat-cable connector, CN11. The adapter cable has a 10-pin connector on one end and a USB connector on the bracket. The USB interfaces can be disabled in the system BIOS setup. Chapter 2 Connecting Peripherals 29 IR Connector (CN1) This connector supports the optional wireless infrared transmitting and receiving module. This module mounts on the system case. You must configure the setting through the BIOS setup. External Keyboard Connector (J10) In addition the the PS/2 mouse/keyboard connector on the SBC-775's rear plate, there is also an extra on-board external keyboard connec- tor. This gives system integrators greater flexibility in designing their systems. External Suspend Switch Lead (SMI) (J3) This allows the user to manually place the system into a suspend mode or "Green" mode when the system is not in use. System activity is decreased to save electricity and prolong the life of certain components. The 2-pin connector connects to the case-mounted suspend switch. If you do not have a switch for the connector, you may use the "turbo switch", because it does not have any other function. SMI is activated when it detects a "short to open" moment. Therefore, leaving it shorted will not cause any problems. It may require one or two pushes depending on the position of the switch. Wake-up can be controlled by settings in the BIOS, but the keyboard will always allow wake-up. (The SMI lead cannot wake up the sys- tem.) If you want to use the SMI connector, the "Suspend" switch in the Power Management Setup of the BIOS software should be on the default setting "Enable". 30 SBC-775 User’s Manual 3 Award BIOS Setup This chapter describes how to set the card’s BIOS configuration data. CHAPTER Introduction Award’s BIOS ROM has a built-in setup program that allows users to modify the basic system configuration. This type of information is stored in battery-backed RAM so that it retains the setup information when the power is turned off. Entering Setup Turn on the computer and press immediately, to allow you to enter the setup. Standard CMOS Setup Choose the “STANDARD CMOS SETUP” option from the "INITIAL SETUP SCREEN" menu, and the screen below will be displayed. This standard setup menu allows users to configure system components such as date, time, hard disk drive, floppy drive, display, and memory. Figure 3-1: CMOS setup screen 32 SBC-775 User’s Manual BIOS Features Setup The “BIOS FEATURES SETUP” screen appears when choosing the "BIOS FEATURES SETUP" item from the "CMOS SETUP UTILITY" menu. It allows users to configure the SBC-775 according to their particular requirements. Below are some major items that are provided in the BIOS FEATURES SETUP screen: Figure 3-2: BIOS features setup screen Virus Warning During and after the system boots up, any attempt to write to the boot sector or partition table of the hard disk drive will halt the system. In this case, a warning message will be displayed. You can run the anti-virus program to locate the problem. If Virus Warning is disabled, no warning message will appear if anything attempts to access the boot sector or hard disk partition. Chapter 3 Award BIOS Setup 33 Quick Power On Self Test This option speeds up the Power-On Self Test (POST) conducted as soon as the computer is turned on. When enabled, BIOS shortens or skips some of the items during the test. When disabled, the computer conducts normal POST procedures. Boot Sequence This function determines the sequence in which the computer will search the drives for the disk operating system (i.e. DOS). The BIOS provides the folllowing boot sequences: A,C, SCSI C,A. SCSI (Default) C, CDROM, A CDROM, C, A D, A, SCSI E, A, SCSI F, A, SCSI SCSI, A, C SCSI, C, A C only LS120, C Boot Up Floppy Seek During POST, BIOS will determine if the floppy disk drive installed is 40 or 80 tracks. A 360 KB type drive is 40 tracks; while 720 KB, 1.2 MB, and 1.44 MB type drives are all 80 tracks. Enabled BIOS searches the floppy drive to determine if it is 40 or 80 tracks. Note that BIOS cannot differentiate 720 KB, 1.2 MB, and 1.44 MB type drives as they are all 80 tracks. Disabled BIOS will not search for the floppy drive type by track number. Note that there will not be any warning message if the drive installed is 360 KB. 34 SBC-775 User’s Manual Boot Up NumLock Status The default is “On”. On Keypad boots up to number keys. Off Keypad boots up to arrow keys. Boot Up System Speed High Sets the speed to high. Low Sets the speed to low. IDE HDD Block Mode Enabled Enable IDE HDD Block Mode. BIOS will detect the block size of the HDD and send a block command automatically. Disabled Disable IDE HDD Block Mode. Gate A20 Option Normal The A20 signal is controlled by the keyboard controller or chipset hardware. Fast (Default) The A20 signal is controlled by Port 92 or the chipset specific method. Typematic Rate Setting The typematic rate determines the characters per second accepted by the computer. The Typematic Rate setting enables or disables the typematic rate. Typematic Rate (Chars/Sec) BIOS accepts the following input values (characters/second) for typematic rate: 6, 8, 10, 12, 15, 20, 24, 30. Chapter 3 Award BIOS Setup 35 Typematic Delay (msec) Typematic delay is the time interval between the appearance of the first and second characters, when holding down a key. The input values for this category are: 250, 500, 750, 1000 (msec). Security Option This setting determines whether the system will boot up if the password is denied. Access to Setup is, however, always limited. System The system will not boot, and access to Setup will be denied if the correct password is not entered at the prompt. Setup The system will boot, but access to Setup will be denied if the correct password is not entered at the prompt. Note: To disable security, select "PASSWORD SETTING" in the main menu. At this point, you will be asked to enter a password. Simply press to disable security. When security is disabled, the system will boot, and you can enter Setup freely. OS Select for DRAM > 64 MB This setting is under the OS/2 system. Video BIOS Shadow This determines whether video BIOS will be copied to RAM, which is optional according to the chipset design. When enabled, Video BIOS Shadow increases the video speed. C8000-CBFFF Shadow / DC000-DFFFF Shadow These determine whether optional ROM will be copied to RAM in blocks of 16 KB. Enabled Optional shadow is enabled. Disabled Optional shadow is disabled. 36 SBC-775 User’s Manual CHIPSET Features Setup By choosing the “CHIPSET FEATURES SETUP” option from the INITIAL SETUP SCREEN menu, the screen below will be displayed. This sample screen contains the manufacturer’s default values for the SBC-775. Figure 3-3: CHIPSET features setup screen Note: If you enable the IDE HDD block mode, the enhanced IDE driver will be enabled. Chapter 3 Award BIOS Setup 37 Power Management Setup The power management setup controls the CPU card's “Green” features. The following screen shows the manufacturer’s defaults. Figure 3-4: Power management setup screen Power Management This option allows you to determine if the values in power management are disabled, user-defined, or predefined. HDD Power Management You can choose to turn the HDD off after one of the time intervals listed, or when the system is in Suspend mode. If the HDD is in a power saving mode, any access to it will wake it up. Note: The HDD will not power down if the Power Management option is disabled. 38 SBC-775 User’s Manual IRQ Activity IRQ can be set independently. Activity on any enabled IRQ will wake up the system. PCI Configuration Setup Figure 3-5: PCI configuration screen Load BIOS Defaults “LOAD BIOS DEFAULTS” indicates the most appropriate values for the system parameters for minimum performance. These default values are loaded automatically if the stored record created by the setup program becomes corrupted (and therefore unusable). Load Setup Defaults “LOAD SETUP DEFAULTS” loads the values required by the system for maximum performance. Chapter 3 Award BIOS Setup 39 Integrated Peripherals Figure 3-6: Integrated peripherals 40 SBC-775 User’s Manual Password Setting To change the password: 1. Choose the "PASSWORD SETTING" option from the Setup main menu and press . The screen will display the following message: Enter Password: Press . 2. If the CMOS is good or if this option has been used to change the default password, the user is asked for the password stored in the CMOS. The screen will display the following message: Confirm Password: Enter the current password and press . 3. After pressing (ROM password) or the current password (user-defined), you can change the password stored in the CMOS. The password must be no longer than eight (8) characters. Remember, to enable the password setting feature, you must first select either Setup or System to secure your option in "BIOS FEA- TURES SETUP". IDE HDD Auto Detection "IDE HDD AUTO DETECTION" automatically self-detects for the correct hard disk type. Chapter 3 Award BIOS Setup 41 Save & Exit Setup If you select this and press , the values entered in the setup utilities will be recorded in the CMOS memory of the chipset. The microprocessor will check this every time you turn your system on and compare this to what it finds as it checks the system. This record is required for the system to operate. Exit Without Saving Selecting this option and pressing lets you exit the setup program without recording any new values or changing old ones. 42 SBC-775 User’s Manual A Programming the Watchdog Timer The SBC-775 is equipped with a watch- dog timer that resets the CPU or gener- ates an interrupt if processing comes to a stand-still for any rason. This feature ensures system reliability in industrial standalone or ummanned environments. APPENDIX Programming the watchdog timer To program the watchdog timer, you must write a program which writes I/O port address 443 (hex). the output data is a time interval value. The value ranges is from 01 (hex) to 3F (hex), and the related time interval is 1 sec. to 63 sec. Data Time Interval 01 1 sec. 02 2 sec. 03 3 sec. 04 4 sec. ·· ·· ·· 3F 63 sec. 44 SBC-775 User’s Manual After data entry, your program must refresh the watchdog timer by rewriting I/O port 443 (hex) while simultaneously setting it. When you want to disable the watchdog timer, your program should read I/O port 443 (hex). The following example shows how you might program the watchdog timer in BASIC: 10 REM Watchdog timer exaple program 20 OUT &H443, data REM Start and restart the watchdog 30 GOSUB 1000 REM Your application task #1, 40 OUT &H443, data REM Reset the timer 50 GOSUB 2000 REM Your application task #2, 60 OUT &H043, data REM Reset the timer 70 X=INP (&H043) REM, Disable the watchdog timer 80 END 1000 REM Subroutine #1, Your application task · · · · · · 1070 RETURN 2000 REM Subroutine #2, your application task · · · · · · 2090 RETURN Appendix A Programming the Watchdog Timer 45 46 SBC-775 User’s Manual B Pin Assignments This appendix contains information of a detailed or specialized nature. It includes: • RS-232 serial port connector • Keyboard and mouse connector • External keyboard connector • ATX feature connector • IDE hard drive connector • USB connector • CPU fan power connector • Floppy drive connector • Parallel port connector • IR connector • HDD LED connector • Power LED and keylock connector • External speaker • System I/O ports • DMA channel assignments • Interrupt assignments • 1st MB memory map APPENDIX COM1/COM2 RS-232 Serial Port (CN9,CN10) Table B-1: COM1/COM2 RS-232 serial port (CN9) Pin Signal 1 DCD 2 RXD 3 TXD 4 DTR 5 GND 6 DSR 7 RTS 8 CTS 9RI Keyboard and Mouse Connnector (CN12) Table B-2: Keyboard and mouse connector (CN12) Pin Signal 1 KB DATA 2 MS DATA 3 GND 4V CC 5 KB CLOCK 6 MS CLOCK External Keyboard Connector (J10) Table B-3: External keyboard connector (J10) Pin Signal 1 CLK 2DATA 3NC 4 GND 5V CC 48 SBC-775 User’s Manual ATX Feature Connector (J7) Table B-4: ATX feature connector (J7) Pin Signal 1 5VSB 2NC 3 PS-ON IDE Hard Drive Connector (CN6, CN7) 39 37 .... 3 1 40 38 .... 4 2 Table B-5: IDE hard drive connector (CN6, CN7) Pin Signal Pin Signal 1 IDE RESET* 2 GND 3DATA 7 4 DATA 8 5DATA 6 6 DATA 9 7DATA 5 8 DATA 10 9 DATA 4 10 DATA 11 11 DATA 3 12 DATA 12 13 DATA 2 14 DATA 13 15 DATA 1 16 DATA 14 17 DATA 0 18 DATA 15 19 SIGNAL GND 20 N/C 21 N/C 22 GND 23 IO WRITE 24 GND 25 IO READ 26 GND 27 IO CHANNEL READY 28 N/C 29 HDACKO* 30 GND 31 IRQ14 32 IOCS16 33 ADDR 1 34 N/C 35 ADDR 0 36 ADDR 2 37 HARD DISK SELECT 0* 38 HARD DISK SELECT 1* 39 IDE ACTIVE* 40 GND * Low active Appendix B Pin Assignments 49 USB Connector (CN11) 1 2 9 10 Table B-6: USB1/USB2 connector (CN11) Pin USB1 Signal Pin USB2 Signal 1 +5 V 2 +5 V 3 UV- 4 UV- 5 UV+ 6 UV+ 7 GND 8 GND 9 Chassis GND 10 N/C CPU Fan Power Connector (CN5) 123 Table B-7: CPU fan power connector (CN5) Pin Signal 1 Detect 2 +12 V 3 GND 50 SBC-775 User’s Manual Floppy Drive Connector (CN13) 33 31 .... 3 1 34 32 .... 4 2 Table B-8: Floppy drive connector (CN13) Pin Signal Pin Signal 1 GND 2 DENSITY SELECT* 3 GND 4 N/C 5 GND 6 N/C 7 GND 8 INDEX* 9 GND 10 MOTOR 0* 11 GND 12 DRIVE SELECT 1* 13 GND 14 DRIVE SELECT 0* 15 GND 16 MOTOR 1* 17 GND 18 DIRECTION* 19 GND 20 STEP* 21 GND 22 WRITE DATA* 23 GND 24 WRITE GATE* 25 GND 26 TRACK 0* 27 GND 28 WRITE PROTECT* 29 GND 30 READ DATA* 31 GND 32 HEAD SELECT* 33 GND 34 DISK CHANGE* * Low active Appendix B Pin Assignments 51 Parallel Port Connector (CN8) 13 12 .... 2 1 26 25 .... 15 14 Table B-9: Parallel port connector (CN8) Pin Signal 1 \STROBE 2 \AUTOFD 3D0 4 ERR 5D1 6 \INIT 7D2 8 \SLCTINI 9D3 10 GND 11 D4 12 GND 13 D5 14 GND 15 D6 16 GND 17 D7 18 GND 19 \ACK 20 GND 21 BUSY 22 GND 23 PE 24 GND 25 SLCT 26 N/C 52 SBC-775 User’s Manual IR Connector (CN1) Table B-10: IR connector (CN1) Pin Signal 1 +5 V 2 N/C 3 IR_RX 4 GND 5 IR_TX HDD LED Connector (CN4) Table B-11: HDD LED connector Pin Signal 1V CC 2 LED Power LED and Keylock Connector (CN2) You can use an LED to indicate when the CPU card is on. Pin 1 of CN2 supplies the LED's power, and Pin 3 is the ground. You can use a switch (or a lock) to disable the keyboard so that the PC will not respond to any input. This is useful if you do not want anyone to change or stop a program which is running. Simply connect the switch from Pin 4 to Pin 5 of CN2. Table B-12: Power LED and keylock connector (CN2) Pin Function 1 LED power (+5 V) 2NC 3 GND 4 Keyboard lock 5 GND Appendix B Pin Assignments 53 External Speaker (CN3) The CPU card has its own buzzer. You can also connect it to the external speaker on your computer chassis. Table B-13: External speaker (CN3) Pin Function 1 +5 V CC 2 GND 3 Internal buzzer 4 Speaker out 54 SBC-775 User’s Manual System I/O Ports Table B-14: System I/O ports Addr. range (Hex) Device 000-01F DMA controller 020-021 Interrupt controller 1, master 022-023 Chipset address 040-05F 8254 timer 060-06F 8042 (keyboard controller) 070-07F Real-time clock, non-maskable interrupt (NMI) mask 080-09F DMA page register, 0A0-0BF Interrupt controller 2 0C0-0DF DMA controller 0F0 Clear math co-processor 0F1 Reset math co-processor 0F8-0FF Math co-processor 1F0-1F8 Fixed disk 200-207 Game I/O 278-27F Parallel printer port 2 (LPT 3) 2F8-2FF Serial port 2 300-31F Prototype card 360-36F Reserved 378-37F Parallel printer port 1 (LPT 2) 380-38F SDLC, bisynchronous 2 3A0-3AF Bisynchronous 1 3B0-3BF Monochrome display and printer adapter (LPT1) 3C0-3CF Reserved 3D0-3DF Color/graphics monitor adapter 3F0-3F7 Diskette controller 3F8-3FF Serial port 1 Appendix B Pin Assignments 55 DMA Channel Assignments Table B-15: DMA channel assignments Channel Function 0 Available 1 Available 2 Floppy disk (8-bit transfer) 3 Available 4 Cascade for DMA controller 1 5 Available 6 Available 7 Available Interrupt Assignments Table B-16: Interrupt assignments Priority Interrupt# Interrupt source 1 NMI Parity error detected 2 IRQ 0 Interval timer 3 IRQ 1 Keyboard - IRQ 2 Interrupt from controller 2 (cascade) 4 IRQ 8 Real-time clock 5 IRQ 9 Cascaded to INT 0A (IRQ 2) 6 IRQ 10 Available 7 IRQ 11 Available 8 IRQ 12 PS/2 mouse 9 IRQ 13 INT from co-processor 10 IRQ 14 Fixed disk controller 11 IRQ 15 Available 12 IRQ 3 Serial communication port 2 13 IRQ 4 Serial communication port 1 14 IRQ 5 Parallel port 2 15 IRQ 6 Diskette controller (FDC) 16 IRQ 7 Parallel port 1 (print port) 56 SBC-775 User’s Manual 1st MB Memory Map Table B-17:1st MB memory map Addr. range (Hex) Device F000h - FFFFh System ROM C800h - EFFFh Unused C000h - C7FFh VGA BIOS B800h - BFFFh CGA/EGA/VGA text B000h - B7FFh Unused A000h - AFFFh EGA/VGA graphics 0000h - 9FFFh Base memory Appendix B Pin Assignments 57 58 SBC-775 User’s Manual C fi DOC 2000 Installation Guide This appendix contains information on the ® DiskOnChip 2000 quick installation guide. It includes: • DiskOnChip 2000 installation instructions • Additional information and assistance APPENDIX fi DiskOnChip 2000 Quick Installation Guide DiskOnChip 2000 installation instructions 1. Make sure the target platform is powered OFF. ® 2. Plug the DiskOnChip 2000 device into its socket. Verify the ® direction is correct (pin 1 of the DiskOnChip 2000 is aligned with pin 1 of the socket). 3. Power up the system. 4. During power up you may observe the messages displayed by the ® DiskOnChip 2000 when its drivers are automatically loaded into the system's memory. ® 5. At this stage the DiskOnChip 2000 can be accessed as any disk in the system. ® 6. If the DiskOnChip 2000 is the only disk in the system, it will appear as the first disk (drive C: in DOS). 7. If there are more disks besides the DiskOnChip 2000, the DiskOn- ® Chip 2000 will appear by default as the last drive, unless it was ® programmed as the first drive. (Please refer to the DiskOnChip 2000 utilities user manual.) ® 8. If you want the DiskOnChip 2000 to be bootable: ® a . Copy the operating system files into the DiskOnChip by using the standard DOS command (for example: sys d:). ® b . The DiskOnChip should be the only disk in the systems or would be configured as the first disk in the system (c:) using the DUPDATE utility. DUPDATE D /S: DOC104.EXB /FIRST (set as c:) DUPDATE C /S: DOC104.EXB (set as d:) 60 SBC-775 User’s Manual Additional information and assistance 1. Visit M-Systems' Web site at www.m-sys.com where you can find Utilities, Manual, Data Sheet, and Application Notes. In ® addition, you can find the latest DiskOnChip 2000 S/W Utilities. 2. Contact your dealer for technical support if you need additional assistance, and have the following information ready: • Product name and serial number. • Description of your computer hardware (manufacturer, model, attached devices, etc.) • Description of your software (operating system, version, application software, etc.) • A complete description of the problem. • The exact wording of any error messages. ® Appendix C DOC 2000 Installation Guide 61 62 SBC-775 User’s Manual

Frequently asked questions

How does Industrial Trading differ from its competitors?

chervon down
Industrial Trading' parent company, GID Industrial, specializes in procuring industrial parts. We know where to find the rare and obsolete equipment that our customers need in order to get back to business. There are other companies who claim to do what we do, but we're confident that our commitment to quality and value is unparalleled in our field.

Is there a warranty for the SBC-775?

chervon down
The warranty we offer will be based on what we negotiate with our suppliers. Sometimes, a part will be sold as-is and without a warranty. Our specialty, single board computers, tend to receive a one-year warranty.

Which carrier will Industrial Trading use to ship my parts?

chervon down
We use FedEx, UPS, DHL, and USPS. We have accounts with each of them and generally ship using one of those, but we can also ship using your account if you would prefer. However, we can use other carriers if it will be more convenient for you.

Can I buy parts from Industrial Trading if I am outside the USA?

chervon down
Industrial Trading will definitely serve you. We work with international clients all the time, and we are familiar with shipping to destinations all across the globe.

Which payment methods does Industrial Trading accept?

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Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American Express are all accepted by Industrial Trading. We will also accept payment made with wire transfer or PayPal. Checks will only be accepted from customers in the USA. Terms may available for larger orders, upon approval.

Why buy from GID?

quality

Quality

We are industry veterans who take pride in our work

protection

Protection

Avoid the dangers of risky trading in the gray market

access

Access

Our network of suppliers is ready and at your disposal

savings

Savings

Maintain legacy systems to prevent costly downtime

speed

Speed

Time is of the essence, and we are respectful of yours

What they say about us

FANTASTIC RESOURCE

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One of our top priorities is maintaining our business with precision, and we are constantly looking for affiliates that can help us achieve our goal. With the aid of GID Industrial, our obsolete product management has never been more efficient. They have been a great resource to our company, and have quickly become a go-to supplier on our list!

Bucher Emhart Glass

EXCELLENT SERVICE

star star star star star

With our strict fundamentals and high expectations, we were surprised when we came across GID Industrial and their competitive pricing. When we approached them with our issue, they were incredibly confident in being able to provide us with a seamless solution at the best price for us. GID Industrial quickly understood our needs and provided us with excellent service, as well as fully tested product to ensure what we received would be the right fit for our company.

Fuji

HARD TO FIND A BETTER PROVIDER

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Our company provides services to aid in the manufacture of technological products, such as semiconductors and flat panel displays, and often searching for distributors of obsolete product we require can waste time and money. Finding GID Industrial proved to be a great asset to our company, with cost effective solutions and superior knowledge on all of their materials, it’d be hard to find a better provider of obsolete or hard to find products.

Applied Materials

CONSISTENTLY DELIVERS QUALITY SOLUTIONS

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Over the years, the equipment used in our company becomes discontinued, but they’re still of great use to us and our customers. Once these products are no longer available through the manufacturer, finding a reliable, quick supplier is a necessity, and luckily for us, GID Industrial has provided the most trustworthy, quality solutions to our obsolete component needs.

Nidec Vamco

TERRIFIC RESOURCE

star star star star star

This company has been a terrific help to us (I work for Trican Well Service) in sourcing the Micron Ram Memory we needed for our Siemens computers. Great service! And great pricing! I know when the product is shipping and when it will arrive, all the way through the ordering process.

Trican Well Service

GO TO SOURCE

star star star star star

When I can't find an obsolete part, I first call GID and they'll come up with my parts every time. Great customer service and follow up as well. Scott emails me from time to time to touch base and see if we're having trouble finding something.....which is often with our 25 yr old equipment.

ConAgra Foods

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