AOpen MX3W-E2 Manual Download Page 1

 

 

 

 


 

 




 

 

 

 



 

Summary of Contents for MX3W-E2

Page 1: ... ...

Page 2: ...ure Highlight 12 Quick Installation Procedure 15 Motherboard Map 16 Block Diagram 17 Hardware Installation 18 About Optional and Upgrade Optional 19 Clear CMOS Data 20 CPU Installation 21 JP23 Adjust FSB PCI Clock Ratio 23 CPU Jumper less Design 25 CPU and Housing Fan Connector with H W Monitoring 30 DIMM Socket 31 ...

Page 3: ...40 WOM Zero Voltage Wake on Modem Connector 41 WOL Wake on LAN 44 CNR Communication and Network Riser Expansion Slot 46 PC99 Color Coded Back Panel 47 Support 2nd USB Port 48 CD Audio Connector 49 Modem Audio Connector 50 AUX IN Connector 51 Front Panel Audio Connector 52 GPO General Purpose Output Connector 53 Over current Protection 56 Hardware Monitoring 57 Resettable Fuse 58 ...

Page 4: ...ity 65 Installing Onboard AGP Driver 66 Installing Ultra ATA 100 IDE Driver 67 Installing Onboard Sound Driver 68 Installing Hardware Monitoring Utility 69 Installing Smart Card Driver and Application 70 ACPI Suspend to Hard Drive 76 AWARD BIOS 80 How To Use Award BIOS Setup Program 81 How To Enter BIOS Setup 82 BIOS Upgrade 83 Overclocking 85 VGA Card Hard Disk 86 Glossary 87 ...

Page 5: ...66 88 ATA 100 89 BIOS Basic Input Output System 89 Bus Master IDE DMA mode 89 CNR Communication and Networking Riser 89 CODEC Coding and Decoding 90 DDR Double Data Rated SDRAM 90 DIMM Dual In Line Memory Module 90 DMA Direct Memory Access 90 ECC Error Checking and Correction 91 EDO Extended Data Output Memory 91 EEPROM Electronic Erasable Programmable ROM 91 EPROM Erasable Programmable ROM 91 ...

Page 6: ... Bus 93 IEEE 1394 93 Parity Bit 93 PBSRAM Pipelined Burst SRAM 94 PC 100 DIMM 94 PC 133 DIMM 94 PC 1600 or PC 2100 DDR DRAM 94 PCI Peripheral Component Interface Bus 94 PDF Format 95 PnP Plug and Play 95 POST Power On Self Test 95 RDRAM Rambus DRAM 95 RIMM Rambus Inline Memory Module 96 SDRAM Synchronous DRAM 96 Shadow E2 PROM 96 ...

Page 7: ... 96 SMBus System Management Bus 97 SPD Serial Presence Detect 97 Ultra DMA 97 USB Universal Serial Bus 98 VCM Virtual Channel Memory 98 ZIP file 98 Troubleshooting 99 Technical Support 103 Product Registration 106 How to Contact Us 107 ...

Page 8: ... ...

Page 9: ... 0 1 ...

Page 10: ... 01 2 3 4 56 1 3 07 8 56 4 2 9 6 6 3 4 0 6 0 6 8 6 0 1 6 6 A 3 A 4 655 B2 1 A 01 ...

Page 11: ... C7D 8 C D 56 1 56 1 56 1 56 7 7 7 7 7 7 ...

Page 12: ... 2 9 E6 F 6 6 3 4 2 56 1 56 1 56 1 0 56 1 G 3 4 H A B2 56 1 I 56 3 4 3 4 0 6 0 A 6 9 A 3 A 4 01 A H A ...

Page 13: ... 6 50 6 06 3 4 J 6 5 6 A 01 0 1 1 6 1 1 1 01 8 655 B2 0 01 0 1 31 4 1 0 0 0 0 ...

Page 14: ... B B5 1 A 0 3 4 3 4 3 4 H 3 H A4 01 0 1 1 01 ...

Page 15: ... 8 3 1 0 H 8 3 B54 ...

Page 16: ... 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 3 6 87 0 90 3 5 4 3 33 8 3 63 7 3 6 63 3 5 26 2 264 2 4 6 6 56 6 4 3 7 2 3 7 2 7 2 ...

Page 17: ... 23 45 0 6 7 1 4 8 9 3 ...

Page 18: ...the following precautions before you install a system component 1 Do not remove a component from its protective packaging until you are ready to install it Wear a wrist ground strap and attach it to a metal part of the system unit before handling a component If a wrist strap is not available maintain contact with the system unit throughout any procedure requiring ESD protection ...

Page 19: ... 0 0 C D C D K 8 8 C D C D C D L ...

Page 20: ... J H M 6 0 6 M 6 6 9 When should I Clear CMOS 1 Boot fail because of overclocking 2 Forget password 3 Troubleshooting A 3 4 6 6 6 ...

Page 21: ... 7 2 L 2 H 6 J C A6D 6 B 0 ...

Page 22: ... If you do not insert CPU well or go wrong with its direction you may damage the CPU 3 ...

Page 23: ... 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 3 4 N6 E6 NB E6 N E5 6 6 6 6 ...

Page 24: ...0 9 0 24 5 0 30 2 2 2 6 66 2 2 6 6 5 2 22 I 56 1 supports maximum 133MHz FSB and 810 chipset supports maximum 100MHz FSB Both support 66MHz AGP clock Higher clock setting may cause serious system damage ...

Page 25: ... 1 1 7 0 8 K 0 1 9 0 0 0 7 3 4 9 3 8 7 1 ...

Page 26: ... 5 5 7 6 7 7 7 ...

Page 27: ...d 810 chipset supports maximum 100MHz FSB Both support 66MHz AGP clock Higher clock setting may cause serious system damage If your system hangs or fails to boot because of overclocking simply use Home key to restore the default setting 433MHz This motherboard supports CPU auto detection function Therefore you don t need to set CPU frequency by manual ...

Page 28: ... 0 0 17 9 2 2 5 5 B 2 2 6 2 2 6 1 6 1 6 1 6 2 1 2 6 2 2 1 2 6 2 5 1 5 6 5 5 1 5 6 5 ...

Page 29: ...21 2 6 2 1 2 6 5 1 5 6 5 1 5 6 B 1 B 6 2 6 1 6 6 2 I 56 1 supports maximum 133MHz FSB and 810 chipset supports maximum 100MHz FSB Both support 66MHz AGP clock Higher clock setting may cause serious system damage ...

Page 30: ... 8 8 3 3 9 9 0 0 0 K Some CPU fans do not have sensor pin so they cannot support fan monitoring A A A 1A F6 7 ...

Page 31: ... 6 50 6 06 6 01 6 ...

Page 32: ... 6 55 The tabs of the DIMM slot will close up and hold the memory module in place when the module has been firmly located ...

Page 33: ... 1 0 3 64 3 4 3 4 H1 H1 1 C D 9 H1 H 0 0 10 ...

Page 34: ... 0 F6 7 7 0 O F 7 F 7 F 7 F 7 F 7 F 7 0 7 0 A 06 7 F 7 ...

Page 35: ... 7 7 3 3 0 J M 5 1 3 4 M 5 O 0 ...

Page 36: ... 4 4 H1 J Do not install or remove the DIMM module when the RAM power LED is on H1 H1 ...

Page 37: ... 4 4 7 7 0 ...

Page 38: ... 6 3 4 36 4 3 4 3 4 7 7 0 0 1 1 16 6 6 1 6 ...

Page 39: ...n of the IDE cable is a maximum of 46cm 18 inches make sure your cable does not exceed this length 1 For better signal quality it is recommended to set the far end side device to master mode and follow the suggested sequence to install your new device Please refer to above diagram To achieve the best performance of Ultra DMA 66 100 hard disks a special for Ultra DMA 66 100 is required ...

Page 40: ... H B 366 O 4 O0 3 O 4 6 A F 7 P A P ...

Page 41: ... 8 8 5 5 9 9 0 3 F 7 A 0 A ...

Page 42: ... 7 7 6 3 4 3 4 ...

Page 43: ... 7 7 J 3 4 3 4 ...

Page 44: ... 8 8 9 9 H A H A H 3 4 1 A 8 H A H A F 7 ...

Page 45: ... H 3 4 H 31 4 ...

Page 46: ... 4 4 8 8 4 4 9 9 A 3 4 7 B 0 0 3 1 4 8 A 1 3 4 A A ...

Page 47: ... O 6 B2 018 018 0 17 0 0 0 1 1 0 3 1 9 1 1 83 0 6 0 A 6 6 6 1 1 M 0 1 ...

Page 48: ... 6 F 7 0 F A O1J F 7 0 F A A 6 B 6 ...

Page 49: ... 7 6 0 A A A H ...

Page 50: ... 1 0 A A A A 60 0 6 ...

Page 51: ... 0 A A A H 1 1 6 ...

Page 52: ...ove the jumper cap from the Front Panel Audio Connector before you connect the cable Do not remove this yellow jumper cap if housing without an audio port on the front panel 6 P A 7 1 A1P A A1PH A F 7 M 6 A 6 B 6 ...

Page 53: ... 8 8 9 9 30 23 0 5 6 7 6 6B A A 6 ...

Page 54: ... 0 0 0 Both Windows 2000 and GSM smart cards can be applied to the driver we provide in Bonus Pack CD disc ...

Page 55: ... 7 3 4 11 1 7 1 0 1 2 95 ...

Page 56: ...gh we have implemented protection circuit try to prevent any human operating mistake there is still certain risk that CPU memory HDD add on cards installed on this motherboard may be damaged because of component failure human operating error or unknown nature reason ...

Page 57: ... 0 0 1 1 48 ...

Page 58: ... 4 4 O 0 3 4 ...

Page 59: ... 8 8 9 9 J O B5 6BB5 BB 6BBB 6B 3 4 6 5 6BB2 6BB5 6BBB 6B J O 3 4 3 4 J O 3 A H 4 3 B54 J O 0 1 2 3 31 ...

Page 60: ... 4 4 8 1 3H 18 4 8 0 8 ...

Page 61: ... 3 4 7 6 5 7 6 7 5 7 6 65 A L ...

Page 62: ... 7 7 8 8 6 6 7 7 9 9 8 8 C 8 D 8 8 8 3 4 36 6 4 A L ...

Page 63: ... D Dr ri iv ve er r a an nd d U Ut ti il li it ty y J 3 B54 Please follow recommended procedure to install Windows 95 and Windows 98 ...

Page 64: ... J 0 ...

Page 65: ... 7 7 B B5 56 1 56 J 0 CQD ...

Page 66: ... 56 1 56 6 6 J 0 If you are using Windows95 you should install DCOM95 patch from the Bonus Pack auto run menu first before you install AGP driver ...

Page 67: ... 3 3A A 1 6 Installing this ATA 100 IDE driver may cause Suspend to Hard Drive failure ...

Page 68: ... 655 B2 1 J 0 ...

Page 69: ... 7 7 J A ...

Page 70: ... 6 C D C H D Under Win98 98SE ME you have to install step 2 and step 3 or the application cannot be executed ...

Page 71: ... ...

Page 72: ... 6 J C D B5 B5 1 1 31 81 ...

Page 73: ... 364 H a Setting Logon Smart Card Logon is an action to identify the user by password smart card or other tokens If identity is correct the system will boot successfully ...

Page 74: ...otect Check Mode L L 3 4 a Encrypt Files you can encrypt files in the following screen Please note that read only files cannot be encrypted Decrypt Files allows you to decrypt the encrypted files only with the original card you set earlier ...

Page 75: ... ...

Page 76: ... 3 4 A 2 2 0 4 1 5 6 0 4 6 ...

Page 77: ... 6 B 4 C 6 1 R1 C 8 DR B5 B5G S S RA R R R R1 R R R R R G R R R R A K R R R R R R R R T7 B5 3 6 4 R E 8 8 R 6 7 5 B5 R E 8 8 R J G 0 R S S R 6 G K ...

Page 78: ... 6 R C R O1JPH HP A1 1 A 1A 71 A 1 1 R R R 0 0 R R 6R R R R 6R R A R B5 3 R 0 7 1R R0 0 7 1R4 R T7 1 1 R 6 R C R ...

Page 79: ... R B5 3 R0 0 7 1R F 0 7 1R4 R A R R R R OR 02 means Windows 98 is ACPI acknowledged but the ACPI function is disabled Currently we found only ATI 3D Rage Pro AGP card would support ACPI suspend to disk Please refer to AOpen web site for latest update ...

Page 80: ...IO OS S 6 5 3 4 0 1 9 0 U S 3 0 4 Because the BIOS code is the most often changed part of the motherboard design the BIOS information contained in this manual may be different with actual BIOS that come with your motherboard ...

Page 81: ... a more friendly computer system Now we include all function descriptions of BIOS setup program into the BIOS Flash ROM When you select one function of BIOS setup program the function description will appeared at right side of screen Hence you don t need read this manual while you changing the BIOS setting ...

Page 82: ... U S 3 0 4 RH R Please avoid of using Load Turbo Defaults unless you are sure your system components CPU DRAM HDD etc are good enough for turbo setting ...

Page 83: ...ote AOpen Easy Flash BIOS programs are not available for AMI BIOS AMI BIOS appears mostly only on old 486 boards and some early Pentium boards Please be sure to view the README compressed inside the BIOS package before upgrading and follow upgrade instructions carefully This will minimize the chance of flash failures ...

Page 84: ...GG U S RH R C 9 1 D W The new BIOS upgrade will permanently replace your original BIOS s settings and PnP information when flashing You may need to reconfigure your BIOS setting and re install Win95 Win98 as well as your add on cards so that your system can go back to work as normal ...

Page 85: ...ed and you are taking your own risk to damage your system or important data Before doing overclocking you must make sure your components are able to tolerate such abnormal setting especially CPU DRAMs hard disks and AGP VGA cards Note that overclocking may also cause thermal problem Please make sure that the cooling fan and the heatsink were adequate to dissipate excessive heat that s generated by...

Page 86: ... 5 5 C C 7 2 5 7 L L 0 L L 0 ...

Page 87: ... G Gl lo os ss sa ar ry y B2 1 B2 B2 36BB24 3 B54 0 0 0 0 0 N 5 N 6 3 5 4 37 B 4 6BBB ...

Page 88: ... 1 B2 3 4 5 3 4 6 N 1 ...

Page 89: ... 6 1 6 36 4 N 6 6 5 0 1 1 8 3 4 1 8 1 1 1 J 1 1 1 A H A H G R R A 1 7 ...

Page 90: ... A 1 B2 7 0 0 6 50 0 H 7 A 1 7 ...

Page 91: ... 1 5 1 0 1 K 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 3 4 0 0 1 1 11 0 11 1 1 0 3 74 1 7 0 ...

Page 92: ... 2 2 17 18 17 1 17 N 17 6 8 3 3 1 J 3 4 3 3 4 4 3 3 4 4 0 O 2 8 2 0 2 6 3 3 0 O O 3 4 O 3 4 A 3 5 4 3 56 4 11 0 0 ...

Page 93: ... 3 3 3 3 N 5 5 6 6 111 6 B 0 H A 111 6 B 111 6 B 6 8 111 6 B L 0 8 111 6 B 8 0 0 0 0 6 R6R R6R ...

Page 94: ... 2 8 V 3V 0 6 N 4 V 8 A 060606 H 3 4 2 6 2 4 4 6 4 4 5 55 5 6 4 4 4 47 7 8 8 0 5N6 5N 6 06 6 0 6 6 8 0 ...

Page 95: ... 3 3 3 3 H X J 1 A 0 3 4 3 B 4 V 4 4 0 0 5 6 0 ...

Page 96: ... 65 0 6 31 4 0 6 50 7 0 3 74 V6 6BB 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 H 1 0 ...

Page 97: ... 0 3 4 0 6 O 11 8 8 3 4 3 4 3 4 3 4 V 3 4 8 0 8 3 4 0 1 6 N 6 N 6 N 6 ...

Page 98: ... 8 8 8 8 0 3 6 4 2 2 2 2 A1 7 37 4 8 7 7 9 9 O AT 3 L 4 AT 3 L 4 ...

Page 99: ... 0 7 1 6 T Tr ro ou ub bl le es sh ho oo ot ti in ng g A ...

Page 100: ... 7 A H ...

Page 101: ... U S U S U S Q H 7 Q A H ...

Page 102: ... U S CH D Q 1 1 H 0 1 0 B5 ...

Page 103: ... T Te ec ch hn ni ic ca al l S Su up pp po or rt t 0 8 W L 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 L 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 I V 3 8 V 4 L 8 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 1 L 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ...

Page 104: ... 1 1 1 1 A J L 08 JJ 18 6 J 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 3 J L 8 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 7 1 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 A A ...

Page 105: ... 2 2 3 3 3 4 L 1 1 M 6 6 1 6 Y 6BB5 ...

Page 106: ...d du uc ct t R Re eg gi is st tr ra at ti io on n 8 L 8 G 0 1 0 If registering products purchased from different dealers retails and or purchased on different dates please submit a separate form for each product ...

Page 107: ...H Ho ow w t to o C Co on nt ta ac ct t U Us s 1 A 3 1 L 55 0 0 B 06 L 55 0 05 B60 L 60 6 0 B505B 5 L 60 50B 0 B 60 50 0 B 1 L 602 0 0B 6 L 602 0 0B L B0 6 06 22 L B0 6 06 22BB L B0 6 06 22 L B0 6 06 22BB ...

Reviews: