System locks up on power-up; may or may not respond to reset switch
A common cause is using a non-Octagon power supply such as a PC desktop supply.
Most of these PC supplies are rated at 5V at 20A or more. Switching supplies
usually requires a 20% load to operate properly, that is, 4A or more. Since a typical
Octagon system takes less than 2A, the supply does not regulate properly. Output
drift up to 6–7V and/or 7–8 voltage spikes have been reported. If the power supply
comes up slowly (that is, longer than 10 ms), the sequencing of ICs on the board
may be out of sync, thus, causing the system to lock up.
Octagon supplies are designed to ramp up fast, discharge fast on power-down and
to regulate properly under a no load condition.
System locks up after power-down/power-up
If the power supply does not drain below 0.7V, the CMOS components on the card
will act like diodes and forward bias. This is typically caused by using power
supplies that have large output capacitors. Either use a different power supply
that discharges faster, leave the power off until the supply has adequate time to
discharge or place a 100 ohm, large wattage resistor across the output capacitor.
Octagon supplies are designed to ramp up fast, discharge fast on power-down and
to regulate properly under a no load condition.
LED signaling of “beep” codes
The 2060 CPU Card has a bicolor LED that is used by the BIOS to indicate the
BIOS processing state.
Immediately after the 2060 CPU Card powers on, the amber LED is on and the
green LED is off. Once the card boots, the CR5 amber LED turns off and the green
LED is on.
If the BIOS finds an error during the power on self test (POST) the amber LED is
flashed in a pattern indicating the POST code failure. The visual beep codes are
defined in Table 17–1.
Count the number of flashes in each of four sets. Subtract one from each set, the
resulting number matches the POST error found in the Table 17–1.
For example:
Flash–Flash pause
Flash–Flash–Flash–Flash pause
Flash–Flash–Flash–Flash–Flash pause
Flash–Flash–Flash–Flash
Is counted as 2–4–5–4. After subtracting one from each set the result is 1–3–4–3.
This is a failure of the first 64K of base RAM.
100
Содержание 2060 PC/104
Страница 20: ...Figure 2 1 2060 CPU Card component diagram top 20 ...
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Страница 22: ...Figure 2 3 2060 CPU Card dimensions 22 ...