13.
Connect
the
power
cable
to
the
back
of
the
drive.
The
connectors
are
keyed
and
can
be
inserted
only
one
way.
14.
Push
the
drive
cage
outward,
and
press
in
on
the
drive-cage
release
tab.
Rotate
the
cage
part-way
into
the
computer;
then,
reconnect
any
power
cables
you
disconnected
in
step
5
and
rotate
the
cage
the
rest
of
the
way
back
into
the
computer.
Make
sure
that
the
drives
and
cables
do
not
strike
the
microprocessor
fan
sink.
15.
If
you
have
other
options
to
install
or
remove,
do
so
now;
otherwise,
replace
the
support
bracket
(see
“Removing
and
installing
the
support
bracket”
on
page
16)
and
then
go
to
“Completing
the
installation”
on
page
39.
Power
and
signal
cables
for
internal
drives:
Your
computer
uses
cables
to
connect
IDE,
Serial
ATA,
and
SCSI
devices
to
the
power
supply
and
to
the
system
board.
(See
“System-board
internal
connectors”
on
page
13
for
the
location
of
system-board
connectors.)
Review
the
following
information
before
connecting
power
and
signal
cables
to
internal
drives:
v
The
drives
that
are
preinstalled
in
your
computer
come
with
power
and
signal
cables
attached.
If
you
replace
any
drives,
remember
which
cable
is
attached
to
which
drive,
or
label
the
cables.
v
When
you
install
a
drive,
make
sure
that
one
of
the
drive
connectors
of
the
signal
cable
is
connected
to
the
drive
and
that
the
connector
at
the
other
end
of
the
signal
cable
is
connected
to
the
system
board.
v
When
you
install
a
drive,
set
the
jumpers
either
to
disable
auto-start
or
to
delay
startup,
to
prevent
the
system
power
supply
from
being
overtaxed
by
all
drives
trying
to
spin
up
at
once.
v
The
computer
has
two
IDE
buses,
primary
and
secondary.
Each
of
these
buses
supports
up
to
two
IDE
devices.
The
primary
IDE
bus
uses
connector
IDE1
on
the
system
board
and
the
secondary
IDE
bus
uses
connector
IDE2.
v
If
you
have
only
one
IDE
device
on
a
cable,
it
must
be
set
as
a
master
device.
v
If
two
IDE
devices
are
used
on
a
single
cable,
one
must
be
designated
as
the
master
device
and
the
other
as
the
subordinate
device;
otherwise,
the
computer
might
not
recognize
some
of
the
IDE
devices.
The
master
and
subordinate
designation
is
determined
by
switch
or
jumper
settings
on
each
IDE
device.
The
following
cables
are
provided:
v
Power
cables:
Four-wire
power
cables
connect
the
drives
to
the
power
supply.
At
the
end
of
these
cables
are
plastic
connectors
that
attach
to
different
drives;
these
connectors
vary
in
size.
With
Serial
ATA
drives,
you
can
use
either
a
four-wire
power
cable
or
a
five-wire
Serial
ATA
power
cable,
but
do
not
use
both
at
the
same
time
(use
one
or
the
other).
v
Signal
cables:
Signal
cables
typically
are
flat
cables,
also
called
ribbon
cables,
that
connect
IDE,
SATA,
SCSI,
and
diskette
drives
to
the
system
board.
Two
or
three
types
of
signal
cables
come
with
your
computer:
–
IDE:
The
wider
IDE
signal
cable
has
three
connectors.
One
of
these
connectors
is
attached
to
the
drive,
one
is
a
spare,
and
the
third
is
attached
to
the
primary
or
secondary
IDE
connector
on
the
system
board.
The
spare
connector
can
be
used
to
connect
additional
IDE
drives
to
your
computer.
Note:
The
optical
drive
is
attached
to
an
ATA
100
signal
cable.
ATA
100
signal
cables
are
color-coded.
The
blue
connector
is
connected
to
the
system
board.
The
black
connector
is
connected
to
the
master
IDE
device.
The
gray
middle
connector
is
connected
to
the
subordinate
IDE
device.
Chapter
2.
Installing
the
hardware
29
Содержание IntelliStation A Pro
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