Electrostatic Discharge (ESD)
CAUTION!
ESD CAN DAMAGE DRIVES, BOARDS, AND OTHER PARTS. WE RECOMMEND THAT YOU
PERFORM ALL PROCEDURES AT AN ESD WORKSTATION. IF ONE IS NOT AVAILABLE,
PROVIDE SOME ESD PROTECTION BY WEARING AN ANTI-STATIC WRIST STRAP AT-
TACHED TO CHASSIS GROUND -- ANY UNPAINTED METAL SURFACE -- ON YOUR SERVER
WHEN HANDLING PARTS.
Always handle boards carefully. They can be extremely sensitive to ESD. Hold boards only by
their edges without any component and pin touching. After removing a board from its protective
wrapper or from the system, place the board component side up on a grounded, static free sur-
face. Use a conductive foam pad if available but not the board wrapper. Do not slide board over
any surface.
System power on/off:
To remove power from system, you must remove the system from
rack. Make sure the system is removed from the rack before opening the chassis, adding, or
removing any non hot-plug components.
Hazardous conditions, devices and cables:
Hazardous electrical conditions may be
present on power, telephone, and communication cables. Turn off the system and discon-nect
the cables attached to the system before servicing it. Otherwise, personal injury or equipment
damage can result.
Electrostatic discharge (ESD) and ESD protection:
ESD can damage drives,
boards, and other parts. We recommend that you perform all procedures in this chapter only at
an ESD workstation. If one is not available, provide some ESD protection by wearing an antistatic
wrist strap attached to chassis ground (any unpainted metal surface on the server) when handling
parts.
ESD and handling boards:
Always handle boards carefully. They can be extremely
sensi-tive to electrostatic discharge (ESD). Hold boards only by their edges. After removing a
board from its protective wrapper or from the system, place the board component side up on a
grounded, static free surface. Use a conductive foam pad if available but not the board wrapper.
Do not slide board over any surface.
Installing or removing jumpers:
A jumper is a small plastic encased conductor that slips
over two jumper pins. Some jumpers have a small tab on top that can be gripped with fin-gertips
or with a pair of fine needle nosed pliers. If the jumpers do not have such a tab, take care when
using needle nosed pliers to remove or install a jumper; grip the narrow sides of the jumper with
the pliers, never the wide sides. Gripping the wide sides can dam-age the contacts inside the
jumper, causing intermittent problems with the function con-trolled by that jumper. Take care to
grip with, but not squeeze, the pliers or other tool used to remove a jumper, or the pins on the
board may bend or break.
Summary of Contents for R182-Z90
Page 10: ... 10 This page left intentionally blankThis ...
Page 17: ... 17 Hardware Installation 1 3 System Block Diagram ...
Page 18: ...Hardware Installation 18 ...
Page 26: ...System Appearance 26 This page left intentionally blank ...
Page 32: ...System Hardware Installation 32 CPU 4 5 6 2 3 1 7 ...
Page 40: ...System Hardware Installation 40 5 6 6 ...
Page 46: ...System Hardware Installation 46 R182 Z90 HDD Backplane Board Power Front Panel IO ...
Page 47: ... 47 System Hardware Installation R182 Z90 Front Panel USB ...
Page 48: ...System Hardware Installation 48 3 12 2 Cable Routing for R182 Z91 Onboard SATA NVME ...
Page 50: ...System Hardware Installation 50 R182 Z91 Front Panel IO Front Panel USB ...
Page 52: ...System Hardware Installation 52 R182 Z92 NVMe Card 4 5 NVMe Card 6 7 Top Bo om Bo om Top ...
Page 53: ... 53 System Hardware Installation R182 Z92 NVMe Card 8 9 HDD Backplane Board Signal ...
Page 54: ...System Hardware Installation 54 R182 Z92 HDD Backplane Board Power Front Panel IO ...
Page 55: ... 55 System Hardware Installation R182 Z92 Front Panel USB ...
Page 56: ...System Hardware Installation 56 This page intentionally left blank ...
Page 81: ...BIOS Setup 82 5 2 11 SATA Configuration ...
Page 86: ... 87 BIOS Setup 5 2 16 Intel R I350 Gigabit Network Connection ...