American Megatrends III User Manual

Apollo III PCI Pentium  
ISA Motherboard  
User's Guide  
MAN-752  
12/6/96  
Preface  
To the OEM  
Thank you for purchasing the high performance American Megatrends  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA motherboard. This product is a state of the art  
motherboard that includes the famous AMIBIOS. It is assumed that you have  
also licensed the rights to use the American Megatrends documentation for  
the American Megatrends Apollo III motherboard  
This manual was written for the OEM to assist in the proper installation and  
operation of this motherboard. This manual describes the specifications and  
features of the Apollo III motherboard. It explains how to assemble a system  
based on the Apollo III motherboard and how to use the AMIBIOS that is  
specifically designed for this motherboard.  
This manual is not meant to be read by the computer owner who purchases a  
computer with this motherboard. It is assumed that you, the computer  
manufacturer, will use this manual as a sourcebook of information, and that  
parts of this manual will be included in the computer owner's manual.  
Preface  
iii  
Packing List  
You should have received the following:  
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an Apollo III Pentium PCI ISA motherboard,  
an optional USB cable and mounting bracket,  
two serial cables,  
one parallel cable,  
a Warranty Card, and  
the American Megatrends Apollo III Pentium ISA Motherboard User's  
Guide.  
Static Electricity  
The Apollo III motherboard can easily be damaged by static electricity. Make  
sure you take appropriate precautions against static electric discharge:  
·
·
·
wear a properly-grounded wristband while handling the Apollo III  
motherboard or any other electrical component,  
touch a grounded anti-static surface or a grounded metal fixture before  
handling the Apollo III motherboard,  
handle system components by the mounting bracket, if possible.  
Batteries  
Make sure you dispose of used batteries according to the battery  
manufacturer’s instructions. Improper use of batteries may cause an  
explosion. Make sure you follow the battery manufacturer’s instructions about  
using the battery.  
Replace used batteries with the same type of battery or an equivalent  
recommended by the battery manufacturer.  
Preface  
iv  
1 Hardware Installation  
Overview  
The American Megatrends Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA motherboard includes  
the following features.  
CPU  
The motherboard supports an Intel® Pentium™ 75, 90, 100, 120, 133, 150,  
166, 180, 200 MHz or higher speed CPU operating at Standard, VR, or VRE  
voltages. The CPU speed and voltage are set via jumpers.  
Upgrade CPU You can install an Intel P54C series, P54CT, or P55C CPU.  
Chipset  
The Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA motherboard uses an Intel 82430HX,  
including CPU interface controller, advanced cache controller, integrated  
DRAM controller, synchronous ISA bus controller, PCI local bus interface,  
and integrated power management unit.  
Expansion slots The motherboard includes three 16-bit ISA expansion slots and four 32-bit  
PCI expansion slots. The PCI local bus throughput can be up to 132  
megabytes per second.  
L1 Internal Cache The Intel Pentium on the motherboard has an 8 KB data cache and an 8  
KB instruction cache.  
L2 Secondary Cache The motherboard has either 256 KB or 512 KB of synchronous  
PBSRAM, direct-mapped, write-back. L2 secondary cache memory.  
Cont’d  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
1
Overview, Continued  
DRAM Cached If 256 KB of L2 secondary cache memory is installed on the motherboard, up  
to 128 MB of system memory can be cached.  
If 512 KB of L2 secondary cache memory is installed on the motherboard, up  
to 256 MB of system memory can be cached.  
System Memory The motherboard supports up to 256 MB of system memory mounted on the  
motherboard in two banks of 72-pin 4 MB, 8 MB, or 16 MB SIMMs.  
Use Fast Page Mode or Extended Data Out (EDO) SIMMs operating at 60 ns.  
Fast ATA  
The motherboard supports the Fast ATA specification using PIO mode 4 and  
multiword DMA mode 2.  
System BIOS This motherboard has a 128 KB AMIBIOS system BIOS on a Flash ROM  
with built-in WINBIOS Setup.  
BIOS Shadowing The system BIOS is always copied from ROM to RAM for faster execution.  
The end user can shadow 16 KB ROM segments from C0000h – DCFFFh.  
Motherboard Size The Apollo III Pentium PCI ISA motherboard is 10 inches by 8.625  
inches.  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
2
Overview, Continued  
AMIBIOS Features AMIBIOS features include:  
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IDE block mode support,  
IDE 32-bit data transfer support,  
IDE Programmed I/O mode 0, 1, 2, 3, and 4 support,  
IDE LBA mode support,  
APM (Advanced Power Management) and Flash BIOS hooks,  
EPA Green PC-compliant,  
PCI and Plug and Play (PnP) support, and  
DIM (Device Initialization Manager) support,  
DMI (Desktop Management Interface) support,  
ATAPI support,  
can boot from a CD-ROM drive,  
automatically detects system memory, cache memory, and IDE drive  
parameters,  
·
·
·
·
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Intel NSP-compliant,  
Fast ATA IDE mode programming,  
Boot sector virus protection,  
instant-on support,  
automatically configures PnP and PCI devices.  
IDE  
The Apollo III motherboard has two 40-pin IDE connectors onboard that  
support up to four IDE drives. The IDE controller is on the PCI local bus.  
Floppy  
The Apollo III motherboard has an onboard floppy controller that supports up  
to two 360 KB, 720 KB, 1.2 MB, 1.44 MB, or 2.88 MB floppy drives.  
Parallel Port  
Serial Ports  
Keyboard  
The Apollo III motherboard has an onboard ECP and EPP-capable parallel  
port connector.  
The Apollo III motherboard has two onboard serial port connectors and two  
16550 UART serial ports.  
The Apollo III motherboard Includes a standard miniDIN keyboard  
connector.  
Cont’d  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
3
Overview, Continued  
Mouse  
USB  
The Apollo III motherboard includes a 5-pin berg mouse connector.  
The Apollo III motherboard has two 4-pin USB connectors. USB allows  
future generations of USB-compliant peripheral devices to be automatically  
detected and configured through a single port. The AMIBIOS on the Apollo  
III motherboard provides complete USB system BIOS support.  
Infrared  
A 10-pin infrared connector is provided on the motherboard. The  
motherboard and AMIBIOS comply with the IrDA SIR infrared device  
standards and specifications.  
Power Connectors The Apollo III motherboard has three power supply connectors.  
RTC/CMOS RAM A real time clock and 128 bytes of CMOS RAM with a battery backup is  
provided on the motherboard.  
Power Management Power management services include:  
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Green PC LED,  
power management signal to Green PC-aware power supplies,  
automatic IDE and video power down,  
monitor blanking,  
SMI (System Management Interrupt) support,  
APM, and  
system stop clock.  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
4
Overview, Continued  
PCI Slots The motherboard conforms to the PCI Version 2.1 specification. The PCI  
slots are automatically configured by the AMIBIOS. The PCI slots operate  
synchronously with the CPU clock, as follows:  
CPU External Clock Frequency  
PCI Expansion Slot Frequency  
66 MHz  
60 MHz  
50 MHz  
33 MHz  
30 MHz  
25 MHz  
Onboard I/O  
The Apollo III Pentium ISA motherboard includes:  
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two 40-pin IDE connectors on the PCI bus that support up to four IDE drives,  
a 34-pin floppy drive connector,  
two 10-pin serial port connectors (with 16550 UARTs),  
a 26-pin parallel port connector with ECP and EPP support,  
an infrared connectors,  
two USB connectors,  
a keyboard connector, and  
a PS/2 mouse connector.  
Apollo III Dimensions  
Power Connectors  
2.0"  
Keyboard  
Connector  
0.85"  
SIMM  
Sockets  
2.5"  
Expansion  
Slots  
0.62"  
CPU Heat Sink  
1.75"  
8.625"  
10"  
Heat Sink  
1.5"  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
5
Installation Steps  
Step  
1
2
Action  
Unpack the motherboard.  
Configure the CPU.  
Select the CPU voltage.  
Select the CPU speed.  
Install the CPU.  
3
Install memory.  
Install system memory.  
Install the motherboard.  
Attach cables to connectors.  
Connect the power supply.  
Attach the keyboard cable.  
Connect the mouse cable.  
Attach cables.  
4
5
6
Connect onboard I/O.  
Connect the serial ports.  
Connect the parallel port.  
Connect floppy drive(s).  
Connect the IDE drive(s).  
Test and configure.  
7
8
9
Warning  
This motherboard contains sensitive electronic  
components that can be easily damaged by static  
electricity. Follow the instructions carefully to  
ensure correct installation and to avoid static  
damage.  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
6
Apollo III Motherboard Layout  
PS/2 Mouse  
Keyboard  
Power Supply  
RPW_CON  
IR  
Floppy  
LPT1  
EP3  
EP2  
EP1  
CPS  
CLK1  
CLK2  
Bank0  
Bank1  
VR1  
M2  
M1  
M3  
M4  
FREQ1  
FREQ2  
VR2  
Fan  
M5  
Tag RAM  
M6  
The connectors in this Block  
Header are detailed below.  
A Square Pad identifies Pin 1  
in Jumpers and Connectors.  
Remote  
Power  
Switch  
Speaker  
IDE  
LED  
Reset  
Susp.  
Turbo  
Kbd  
Lock  
Susp.  
LED  
PWR  
LED  
Mode  
Switch  
LED  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
7
Step 1 Unpack the Motherboard  
Step  
Action  
1
2
Inspect the cardboard carton for obvious damage. If damaged,  
call 770-246-8645. Leave the motherboard in its original  
packing.  
Perform all unpacking and installation procedures on a ground-  
connected anti-static mat. Wear an anti-static wristband  
grounded at the same point as the anti-static mat. Or use a  
sheet of conductive aluminum foil grounded through a 1  
megohm resistor instead of the anti-static mat. Similarly, a  
strip of conductive aluminum foil wrapped around the wrist  
and grounded through a 1 megohm resistor serves the same  
purpose as the wristband.  
3
Inside the carton, the motherboard is packed in an anti-static  
bag, and sandwiched between sheets of sponge. Remove the  
sponge and the anti-static bag. Place the motherboard on a  
grounded anti-static surface component side up. Save the  
original packing material.  
4
5
Inspect the motherboard for damage. Press down on all ICs  
mounted in sockets to verify proper seating. Do not apply  
power to the motherboard if it has been damaged.  
If the motherboard is undamaged, it is ready to be installed.  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
8
Set Jumpers  
Set all jumpers and install the CPU before placing the motherboard in the  
chassis. Set jumpers by placing a shunt (shorting bridge) on the designated  
pins of the jumper. A shunt and jumpers are shown below:  
3-dimensional view of motherboard jumpers and a shunt.  
Shunt  
2-pin Berg  
3-pin Berg  
In this manual, jumpers are shown in two -dimensions,  
as if viewed from directly above, as shown below:  
The placement of shunts is  
indicated by a solid line  
between pins, as shown  
between Pins 1-2  
1
3
5
1
2
2
3
4
4
to the right:  
6
6
5
Avoid Static Electricity  
Static electricity can damage the motherboard and other computer  
components. Keep the motherboard in the anti-static bag until it is to be  
installed. Wear an anti-static wrist grounding strap before handling the  
motherboard. Make sure you stand on an anti-static mat when handling the  
motherboard.  
Avoid contact with any component or connector on any adapter card, printed  
circuit board, or memory module. Handle these components by the mounting  
bracket.  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
9
Step 2 Configure CPU  
Important  
Perform the following steps to configure the  
motherboard before installing a CPU.  
External and Internal CPU Clock CLK1, CLK2, FREQ1, and FREQ2 are 3-pin bergs that set  
the CPU external and internal clock frequencies. FREQ1 and FREQ2 are next  
to the CPU. CLK1 and CLK2 are towards the middle of the motherboard.  
External  
66 MHz  
Internal  
166 MHz  
CLK1  
Short Pins  
1-2  
CLK2  
Short Pins  
2-3  
FREQ1  
Short Pins  
2-3  
FREQ2  
Short Pins  
2-3  
60 MHz  
66 MHz  
60 MHz  
66 MHz  
60 MHz  
50 MHz  
60 MHz  
66 MHz  
150 MHz  
133 MHz  
120 MHz  
100 MHz  
90 MHz  
Short Pins  
2-3  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
2-3  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
2-3  
Short Pins  
2-3  
Short Pins  
2-3  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
2-3  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
2-3  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
2-3  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
2-3  
Short Pins  
2-3  
Short Pins  
2-3  
Short Pins  
2-3  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
2-3  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
1-2  
Short Pins  
2-3  
Short Pins  
2-3  
75 MHz  
180 MHz  
200 MHz  
Important  
Please contact American Megatrends technical  
support at 770-246-8645 if you need to support a  
CPU running at a higher speed.  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
10  
Step 2 Configure CPU, Continued  
JVR Set CPU Voltage Install Intel Pentium CPUs that adhere to either the standard or VRE  
voltage specifications. VR1 and VR2 are 6-pin bergs that set CPU voltage.  
VR1 is near the top of the CPU socket. VR2 is next to the CPU, near the edge  
of the motherboard.  
Standard and VRE Voltage This is the factory setting.  
3.49V Standard and VRE  
for Intel P54C CPUs  
Pins 7  
Pins 8  
5
3
1
Pins 7  
5
3
1
2
6
4
2
Pins 8  
6
4
VR1  
VR2  
Standard Voltage  
3.3V Standard  
for Intel P54C CPUs  
Pins 7  
5
6
3
1
Pins 7  
5
3
1
2
Pins 8  
4
2
Pins 8  
6
4
VR1  
VR2  
Mixed Voltage  
2.8V and 3.3V  
for Intel P55C CPUs  
Pins 7  
Pins 8  
5
3
1
Pins 7  
5
3
1
2
6
4
2
Pins 8  
6
4
VR1  
VR2  
Cont’d  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
11  
Step 2 Configure CPU, Continued  
Important  
If you are not sure about the voltage specification  
for the CPU that will be installed in this  
motherboard, please call Intel and make sure that  
you set the voltage jumpers correctly. Selecting the  
wrong voltage may damage the CPU.  
Install CPU  
Install the CPU in the ZIF (zero insertion force) socket by performing the  
following steps. The CPU socket is near one edge of the motherboard.  
Warning  
Improper CPU installation can damage the CPU  
and the motherboard. You must follow the  
procedures in this section exactly as documented.  
Make sure you wear an antistatic wristband while  
installing the CPU.  
Step  
1
Action  
Lift the lever on the ZIF socket. The empty CPU socket  
looks like this.  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
12  
Step  
Action  
2
Check for bent pins on the CPU. Gently straighten any bent  
pins with pliers. Place the CPU in the middle of the socket,  
as shown below. Make sure that pin 1 of the CPU is aligned  
with pin 1 of the socket. Make sure you are properly  
grounded while handling the CPU.  
3
Complete installation by lifting the ZIF lever to the other  
side of the socket, as shown below.  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
13  
Step 3 Install Memory  
System Memory The motherboard has four 32-bit SIMM – Single Inline Memory Module)  
sockets. You can use Fast Page Mode or EDO (Extended Data Out) SIMMs.  
Memory must be populated one bank at a time. Each bank has two sockets.  
Each bank must be populated with the same type of SIMM. If a 1 MB SIMM  
is installed in the first socket in Bank0, then the same type of 1 MB SIMM  
must be installed in the second Bank0 SIMM socket. Each socket can hold  
one 72-pin SIMM. You can use:  
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1 MB x 36,  
4 MB x 36,  
8 MB x 36, or  
16 MB x 36 SIMMs.  
The motherboard supports banks of fast page mode and EDO (Extended Data  
Out) memory together operating at 60 ns (RAS access time).  
Memory Display  
System memory is reported by AMIBIOS as it boots and again when  
the AMIBIOS System Configuration Screen is displayed just before the  
operating system boots. The memory displayed by AMIBIOS on the System  
Configuration Screen is 384 KB less than the total memory installed.  
SIMM Part Numbers  
Type  
Manufacturer  
Micron  
Part Number  
4 MB x 36  
MT12D436M-6  
MH4M36SAJ-6  
Mitsubishi  
Motorola  
PNY  
MCM36400S-60  
P364000-60  
Samsung  
Motorola  
PNY  
KMM5364100-6  
MCM36800S-60  
P368000-60  
8 MB x 36  
Samsung  
KMM5368100-6  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
14  
Step 3 Install Memory, Continued  
DRAM Configurations Valid memory configurations include:  
Total RAM  
8 MB  
Bank0  
4 MB  
Bank0  
4 MB  
Bank1  
None  
Bank1  
None  
16 MB  
24 MB  
32 MB  
40 MB  
48 MB  
64 MB  
64 MB  
72 MB  
80 MB  
96 MB  
128 MB  
136 MB  
144 MB  
160 MB  
192 MB  
256 MB  
8 MB  
8 MB  
8 MB  
8 MB  
8 MB  
8 MB  
None  
None  
4 MB  
8 MB  
4 MB  
8 MB  
16 MB  
None  
4 MB  
8 MB  
16 MB  
32 MB  
4 MB  
8 MB  
16 MB  
32 MB  
64 MB  
4 MB  
8 MB  
4 MB  
8 MB  
16 MB  
None  
4 MB  
8 MB  
16 MB  
32 MB  
4 MB  
8 MB  
16 MB  
32 MB  
64 MB  
16 MB  
16 MB  
16 MB  
32 MB  
32 MB  
32 MB  
32 MB  
32 MB  
64 MB  
64 MB  
64 MB  
64 MB  
64 MB  
16 MB  
16 MB  
16 MB  
32 MB  
32 MB  
32 MB  
32 MB  
32 MB  
64 MB  
64 MB  
64 MB  
64 MB  
64 MB  
Cont’d  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
15  
Step 3 Install Memory, Continued  
Installing SIMMs The motherboard has four x 36 SIMM sockets. These sockets can be filled  
with either 1 MB x 36, 4 MB x 36, 8 MB x 36, or 16 MB x 36 SIMMs.  
Place the motherboard on an anti-static mat. With the component side of the  
SIMM facing you, firmly push the SIMM into the socket at an angle, then  
push it up. When properly inserted, the SIMM clicks into place as the  
latching pins engage. The SIMM installation process is shown below:  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
16  
Step 3 Install Memory, Continued  
Configure Cache Memory The motherboard supports 256 KB or 512 KB of L2 3V Pipeline  
Burst SRAM secondary cache memory. Either 256 KB or 512 KB of Pipeline  
Burst Mode Static RAM L2 secondary cache memory is mounted on the  
motherboard. You cannot upgrade L2 secondary cache memory.  
L2 Cache Size  
256 KB  
Cache DIP Type  
32 KB x 32 (M2 and M4)  
32 KB x 32 (M1, M2, M3,  
and M4)  
Tag RAM Type  
8 KB x 8 (M5)  
16 KB x 8 (M5, M6)  
512 KB  
Flash ROM Type You must specify the type of flash EPROM installed on the motherboard, as  
follows. EP1, EP2, and EP3 are next to the BIOS ROM between the ISA and  
PCI expansion slots.  
Flash ROM Type  
Intel 28F010  
Intel 28F001BX-T  
SST 29EE010  
(factory setting)  
AMD28F020  
EP1  
EP2  
EP3  
Short Pins 1-2 Short Pins 2-3  
Short Pins 1-2 Short Pins 1-2  
Short Pins 2-3 Short Pins 2-3  
OPEN  
OPEN  
OPEN  
OPEN  
OPEN  
Short Pins 1-2  
Short Pins 2-3  
Short Pins 2-3  
Short Pins 2-3  
SST29EE020  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
17  
Step 4 Install the Motherboard  
The motherboard mounting hole pattern is the same as the mounting hole  
pattern on the standard baby AT motherboard. Standoffs and mounting  
screws are not supplied with the motherboard. The chassis manufacturer  
should supply these parts.  
Step  
Action  
1
Place the chassis on an anti-static mat. Connect the chassis to  
ground to avoid static damage during installation. Connect an  
alligator clip with a wire lead to any unpainted part of the chassis.  
Ground the other end of the lead at the same point as the mat and  
the wristband.  
2
3
Rotate the chassis so the front is to the right, and the rear is to the  
left. The side facing you is where the motherboard is mounted.  
The power supply is mounted at the far end of the chassis.  
Hold the motherboard, component-side up, with the edge with the  
SIMM sockets toward you and the edge with the power supply  
connector away from you. The keyboard, mouse, and video  
connectors should be to the left.  
4
5
Carefully slide the motherboard into the chassis. Make certain the  
edge connectors fit the ports in the rear of the chassis. The  
motherboard should rest level with the chassis.  
Place the mounting screws in the holes provided and tighten them.  
If necessary, shift the motherboard slightly to align the mounting  
holes on the motherboard with the holes on the chassis. See the  
drawing on the next screen.  
Warning  
If using metallic screws, make sure you use them  
only in the plated mounting holes.  
If using metallic screws, make sure the head of  
the screw fits completely inside the plated  
mounting holes.  
See the graphic on the following screen.  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
18  
Step 4 Install Motherboard, Continued  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
19  
Step 5 Attach Cables  
Connectors  
The Apollo III motherboard includes many connectors. Connection  
instructions, illustrations of connectors, and pinouts are listed below. A list of  
all connectors described in this section follows:  
Connector  
CPS Clear password  
Power supply connector  
Keyboard connector  
Mouse connector  
CPU Fan  
Infrared  
Remote Power connector  
USB connectors  
Speaker  
IDE LED  
Remote Power Switch  
Hardware Reset Switch  
Power LED (lit when power is on)  
Keyboard Lock  
Turbo LED (lit when high speed is active)  
Suspend Mode Switch  
Suspend LED (lit when system in suspend  
mode)  
Serial Port  
Parallel port  
Floppy drive connector  
IDE drive connectors  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
20  
Step 5 Attach Cables, Continued  
Cable Connector Ends When connecting chassis connectors to the motherboard, make sure  
to connect the correct connector end. Most connector wires are color-coded.  
Match the color of the wires leaving the switch or LED to the same pin on the  
connector end. There may be more than one connector with the same color-  
coded wires. If so, follow the wire to the switch or LED. Pin 1 is indicated for  
all motherboard components by a white line. Pin 1 is always nearest to the  
white line.  
3 2 1  
CPS Clear Password If you forget the computer password, the only course of action is to erase  
the system configuration information stored in the NVRAM (Non-Volatile  
Random Access Memory). The computer password is stored in the system  
configuration data. Short the CPS pins together for two seconds. CPS is  
located near the bottom of PCI Slot4. All system memory will be erased. You  
must now turn the computer power on and run WINBIOS Setup to reset all  
system configuration information. Make sure that CPS remains OPEN unless  
you have to erase a forgotten password.  
Cont’d  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
21  
Step 5 Attach Cables, Continued  
Connect Power Supply The power supply should match the physical configuration of the  
chassis. Make sure that the power switch is Off before assembly.  
Before attaching all components, make sure that the proper voltage has been  
selected. Power supplies often can run on a wide range of voltages and must  
be set (usually via a switch) to the proper range. Use at least a 200 watt power  
supply, which should have built-in filters to suppress radiated emissions.  
Power Cables Attach the power supply cables to the power connector on the motherboard.  
AT-compatible power supplies have one twelve pin connector, as shown  
below.  
Pin 1  
Pin 12  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
22  
Step 5 Attach Cables, Continued  
Connector Keys The keys on the connector must be cut to fit on some power supplies, as  
shown below.  
Power Connector Pinout  
Pin  
1
Description  
Power Good (Orange wire) (Not used)  
VCC (Red wire)  
2
3
+12 Volts (Yellow wire)  
-12 Volts (Blue wire)  
Ground (Black wire)  
Ground (Black wire)  
Ground (Black wire)  
Ground (Black wire)  
-5 Volts (White wire)  
VCC (Red wire)  
4
5
6
7
8
9
10  
11  
12  
VCC (Red wire)  
VCC (Red wire)  
Keyboard CableThe keyboard attaches via a PS/2 keyboard connector, labeled KB_CONN.  
Pin  
1
Assignments  
Keyboard data  
2
N/C  
3
Ground  
VCC  
4
5
Keyboard clock  
N/C  
6
Cont’d  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
23  
Step 5 Attach Cables, Continued  
Mouse Cable  
Attach the mouse connector cable supplied by American Megatrends to the  
five-pin mouse berg connector on the motherboard (labeled MS_COM), as  
shown below. Attach the standard 9-pin mouse connector at the other end of  
the mouse cable to the mouse connector port on the computer case. Incorrect  
mouse installation can cause the system to hang.  
Error! Not a valid filename.  
Pin  
Description  
Mouse Clock  
N/C  
N/C  
Mouse Data  
Ground  
1
2
3
4
5
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
24  
Step 5 Attach Cables, Continued  
When connecting chassis connectors to the motherboard, make sure to  
connect the correct connector end. Most connector wires are color-coded.  
Match the color of the wires leaving the switch or LED to the same pin on the  
connector end. There may be more than one connector with the same color-  
coded wires. If so, follow the wire to the switch or LED. Pin 1 is always  
indicated on the motherboard, as shown below:  
CPU Fan  
A three-pin berg labeled FAN attaches to the CPU fan. The FAN connector is  
next to the CPU socket.  
Pin  
1
Description  
Ground  
2
+12V  
3
Ground  
Cont’d  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
25  
Step 5 Attach Cables, Continued  
IR Infrared  
The 8-pin infrared connector (IR1) near PCI Slot 1 connects to an infrared  
port mounted on the computer chassis. It allows data transmission to any  
other device that supports the IrDA standards for infrared transmission.  
Remote Control Power RPW_COM is a 2-pin berg next to the infrared connector that  
connects to the power supply for enabling system power when the remote  
power switch is turned on. Connect a 2-wire power cable to RPW_COM and  
attach the other end to the peripheral device.  
USB Connectors The Apollo III motherboard has two 4-pin headers (USB1 and USB2) that  
attach to a USB connector on the computer chassis. The USB port allows you  
to attach to a USB hub. The USB connector pinouts are the same for both  
USB connectors:  
Pin  
1
Signal Description  
VCC (Fused 5V)  
2
- Data  
3
4
+ Data  
Ground  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
26  
Step 5 Attach Cables, Continued  
Block Connector The Apollo III motherboard has a 22-pin header that is used to connect the  
following offboard connectors. The header is on the corner of the  
motherboard near the CPU socket.  
Pins  
13  
17 18 19  
14 15 16  
20 21  
12  
7
6
10  
3
5
9
11  
4
8
1 2  
Pins  
Connector  
Signal Descriptions  
Speaker  
IDE LED  
Pin 12 VCC  
Pin 15 Speaker Data  
Pin 16 LED Power  
Pin 17 IDE Active  
Pin 18 Remote Power  
Pin 19 Ground  
Remote Power Switch (Power when  
low).  
Hardware Reset Switch  
Pin 20 Hard Reset  
Pin 21 Ground  
Power LED (lit when power is on)  
Keyboard Lock  
Pin 1  
Pin 2  
Pin 4  
Pin 5  
Pin 6  
Pin 7  
+Power  
Ground  
Keyboard Lock  
Ground  
TURBO_LIT  
TURBO_LEDPWR  
Suspend In Switch  
Ground  
Turbo LED (lit when low speed is  
active)  
Suspend Mode Switch (Suspend when Pin 8  
Low)  
Pin 9  
Suspend LED (lit when system in  
suspend mode)  
Pin 10 Suspend Out LED+  
Pin 11 Suspend Out LED-  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
27  
Step 6 Onboard I/O  
Onboard I/O  
The Apollo III motherboard has:  
·
·
·
two serial ports (COM1 and COM2),  
a parallel port (LPT),  
an IDE controller on the PCI bus. The primary IDE connector is IDE1.  
The secondary connector is IDE2.  
·
a floppy controller (FDD).  
The serial and parallel port connectors are described below.  
Conflicts  
AMIBIOS minimizes conflicts between onboard and offboard I/O devices.  
AMIBIOS automatically checks the adapter cards installed in the expansion  
slots on the Apollo III motherboard for a hard disk or floppy controller and  
serial or parallel ports.  
Serial Ports  
COM1 and COM2 are 10-pin connectors that provide an AT-compatible  
serial port interface. Connect the cables supplied with the motherboard to the  
10-pin serial connectors. The serial port base I/O port address and other serial  
port settings can be selected in Peripheral Setup in WINBIOS Setup. The  
serial connector pinout is shown below.  
Pin  
1
2
3
4
Description  
Carrier Detect  
Receive Data  
Transmit Data  
Data Terminal  
Ready  
Pin  
6
7
8
9
Signal Description  
Data Set Ready  
Request to Send  
Clear to Send  
Ring Indicator  
5
Ground  
10  
CUT PIN  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
28  
Step 6 Onboard I/O, Continued  
Parallel Port  
LPT is a 26-pin connector for a parallel port. The LPT pinout is shown below.  
Connect the 26-pin to DB25 cable provided with the motherboard to LPT. All  
parallel port settings can be configured through Peripheral Setup in  
WINBIOS Setup.  
Pin  
1
Signal Description  
STROBE#  
PD1  
Pin  
2
Signal Description  
PD0  
3
4
PD2  
5
PD3  
6
PD4  
7
PD5  
8
PD6  
9
PD7  
10  
12  
14  
16  
18  
20  
22  
24  
26  
ACK#  
11  
13  
15  
17  
19  
21  
23  
25  
BUSY  
PE  
SLCT  
AUTOFD#  
INIT#  
ERROR#  
SLCTIN#  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
29  
Step 7 Attach Floppy Drive  
FDD is a 34-pin dual-inline berg. Connect the cable from the floppy drive to  
FDD, as shown below. The onboard floppy controller cannot be used if a hard  
disk card with a floppy controller is installed. Choose Standard Setup and  
Peripheral Setup to configure the floppy controller.  
The motherboard supports up to two 720 KB, 1.44 MB, or 2.88 MB 3½"  
drives and 360 KB and 1.2 MB 5¼" drives. The connecting cable is a 34-pin  
ribbon connector with two 34-pin edge connectors for attaching the floppy  
disk drives. There is a small twist in the cable between the floppy connectors.  
The last (end) connector should be connected to floppy drive A:.  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
30  
Step 7 Attach Floppy Drive, Continued  
Floppy Connector Pinout  
Pin  
1
Use  
Pin  
2
Use  
DENSE1  
N/C  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
3
4
5
6
DRATE0  
-INDEX  
-MOTOR0  
-FDSEL1  
-FDSEL0  
-MOTOR1  
DIR  
7
8
9
10  
12  
14  
16  
18  
20  
22  
24  
26  
28  
30  
32  
34  
11  
13  
15  
17  
19  
21  
23  
25  
27  
29  
31  
33  
-
-WDATA  
-WGATE  
-TRK0  
-WRPROT  
-RDATA  
HDSEL  
DSKCHNG  
Twist in Floppy Cable  
Floppy B to A  
10 to 16  
Floppy B to A  
12 to 14  
Floppy B to A  
Floppy B to A  
14 to 12  
15 to 11  
16 to 10  
11 to 15  
13 to 13  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
31  
Step 8 Attach IDE Drive  
IDE Drives  
Attach the IDE drives in the following manner. Choose Peripheral Setup in  
WINBIOS Setup to enable the onboard IDE controller.  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
32  
Step 8 Attach IDE Drive, Continued  
Attach IDE Cable IDE1 is the primary IDE (Integrated Drive Electronics) hard disk drive  
connector. Both the primary master and the primary slave IDE drives must be  
connected by cable to IDE1, as shown below.  
IDE1 is a 40-pin dual-inline berg that connects an IDE drive to the primary  
onboard IDE connector. This motherboard supports IDE Modes 0, 1, 2, 3, and  
4, IDE prefetch, LBA (Logical Block Address) mode, high capacity drives  
(over 528 MB), 32-bit data transfer, and fast IDE transfer. These IDE features  
are configured in Peripheral Setup in the WINBIOS Setup utility. Disable the  
onboard IDE interface in Peripheral Setup to use an ISA ESDI, RLL, MFM,  
or SCSI hard disk drive controller.  
Cont’d  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
33  
Step 8 Attach IDE Drive, Continued  
IDE1 Pinout  
The IDE1 pinout is:  
Pin  
1
3
5
7
Use  
Pin  
2
4
6
8
Use  
GND  
-RESET  
DATA7  
DATA6  
DATA5  
DATA4  
DATA3  
DATA2  
DATA1  
DATA0  
GND  
N/C  
-IOW  
-IOR  
IDERDY  
N/C  
DATA8  
DATA9  
DATA10  
DATA11  
DATA12  
DATA13  
DATA14  
DATA15  
KEY (N/C)  
GND  
GND  
GND  
ALE  
GND  
-IOCS16  
N/C  
HA2  
-CS1  
GND  
9
10  
12  
14  
16  
18  
20  
22  
24  
26  
28  
30  
32  
34  
36  
38  
40  
11  
13  
15  
17  
19  
21  
23  
25  
27  
29  
31  
33  
35  
37  
39  
INT14  
HA1  
HA0  
-CS0  
-IDEACT  
IDE2 Secondary IDE Controller IDE2, the secondary IDE connector, is a 40-pin dual-inline  
berg that connects the secondary primary and slave IDE drives to the  
secondary onboard IDE controller.  
Attach the secondary master and slave IDE drives to IDE2 via a standard 40-  
pin IDE cable.  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
34  
Step 8 Attach IDE Drive, Continued  
IDE2 Pinout  
The IDE2 pinout is:  
Pin  
1
3
5
7
9
Use  
Pin  
2
4
6
8
Use  
GND  
-RESET  
DATA7  
DATA6  
DATA5  
DATA4  
DATA3  
DATA2  
DATA1  
DATA0  
GND  
N/C  
-IOW  
-IOR  
IDERDY  
N/C  
DATA8  
DATA9  
DATA10  
DATA11  
DATA12  
DATA13  
DATA14  
DATA15  
KEY (N/C)  
GND  
GND  
GND  
ALE  
GND  
-IOCS16  
N/C  
HA2  
-CS3  
GND  
10  
12  
14  
16  
18  
20  
22  
24  
26  
28  
30  
32  
34  
36  
38  
40  
11  
13  
15  
17  
19  
21  
23  
25  
27  
29  
31  
33  
35  
37  
39  
INT15  
HA1  
HA0  
-CS2  
N/C  
Chapter 1 Hardware Installation  
35  
Step 9 Test and Configure  
Review the following points before powering up:  
·
·
·
·
make sure that all adapter cards are seated properly,  
make sure all connectors are properly installed,  
make sure the CPU is seated properly,  
make sure there are no screws or other foreign material on the  
motherboard,  
·
·
plug the system into a surge-protected power strip, and  
make sure blank back panels are installed on the back of the chassis to  
minimize RF emissions.  
Start the Test Plug everything in and turn on the switch. If there are any signs of a problem,  
turn off the unit immediately. Reinstall the connectors. Call Technical  
Support if there are problems.  
BIOS Errors  
If the system operates normally, a display should appear on the monitor. The  
BIOS Power On Self Test (POST) should execute.  
If POST does not run successfully, it will beep or display error messages.  
Beeps indicate a serious problem with the system configuration or hardware.  
The Beep Code indicates the problem. AMIBIOS Beep Codes are defined in  
the AMIBIOS Technical Reference. Make sure the affected part is properly  
seated and connected. An error message is displayed if the error is less  
serious. Recheck the system configuration or the connections.  
Configure the System Run WINBIOS Setup. You must enter the requested information and  
save the configuration data in CMOS RAM. The system will then reset, run  
POST, and boot the operating system. See the following chapter for  
information about configuring the computer.  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
36  
2 WINBIOS Setup  
In ISA and EISA computers, the system parameters (such as amount of  
memory, type of disk drives and video displays, and many other elements) are  
stored in CMOS RAM. Unlike the DRAM (dynamic random access memory)  
that is used for standard system memory, CMOS RAM requires very little  
power. When the computer is turned off, a back-up battery provides power to  
CMOS RAM, which retains the system parameters. Every time the computer  
is powered-on, the computer is configured with the values stored in CMOS  
RAM by the system BIOS, which gains control when the computer is powered  
on.  
The system parameters are configured by a system BIOS Setup utility.  
Historically, BIOS Setup utilities have been character-based, required  
keyboard input, and have had user interfaces that were not very intuitive.  
Graphical Interface American Megatrends has a new type of system BIOS Setup utility.  
WINBIOS Setup has a graphical user interface the end user can access using  
a mouse. The WINBIOS Setup code is so compact that it can reside on the  
same ROM as the system BIOS. The system configuration parameters are set  
by WINBIOS Setup.  
Since WINBIOS Setup resides in the ROM BIOS, it is available each time the  
computer is turned on.  
Starting WINBIOS Setup  
Hit <DEL> if you want to run SETUP  
Press <Del> to run WINBIOS Setup.  
As POST executes, the following appears:  
Chapter 2 WINBIOS Setup  
37  
Using a Mouse with WINBIOS Setup  
WINBIOS Setup has a built-in mouse driver and can be accessed by either a  
serial mouse or PS/2-style mouse. WINBIOS Setup supports Microsoft-  
Compatible serial mice and all PS/2-type mice.  
The mouse click functions are: single click to change or select both global  
and current fields and double click to perform an operation in the selected  
field.  
Using the Keyboard with WINBIOS Setup  
WINBIOS has a built-in keyboard driver that uses simple keystroke  
combinations:  
Keystroke  
<Tab>  
<®, ¬ , , ¯  
<Enter>  
+
Action  
Change or select a global field.  
Change or select the current field.  
Perform an operation in the current field.  
Increment a value.  
Decrement a value.  
<Esc>  
Abort any window function.  
Return to the previous screen.  
Advance to the next screen.  
Returns to the beginning of the text.  
Advance to the end of the text.  
<PgUp>  
<PgDn>  
<Home>  
<End>  
<Ctrl><Alt><+> Change to high speed.  
<Ctrl><Alt><-> Change to low speed.  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
38  
WINBIOS Setup Menu  
The WINBIOS Setup main menu is organized into four sections. Each of  
these sections corresponds to a section in this chapter.  
Each section contains several icons. Clicking on each icon activates a specific  
AMIBIOS function. The WINBIOS Setup main windows and related  
functions are described below.  
Main Windows The WINBIOS Setup main windows are:  
·
Setup, described in Section 1, has icons that permit you to set system  
configuration options such as date, time, hard disk type, floppy type, and  
many others,  
·
·
·
Security, described in Section 2, has three icons that control AMIBIOS  
security features, and  
Utilities, described in Section 3, sets the screen color and allows  
language changes,  
Default, described in Section 4, this section has three icons that permit  
you to select a group of settings for all WINBIOS Setup options.  
Chapter 2 WINBIOS Setup  
39  
Section 1 Setup  
Standard Setup  
Standard Setup options are displayed by choosing the Standard icon from the  
WINBIOS Setup main menu. All Standard Setup options are described in this  
section.  
Date/Time  
Select the Standard option. Select the Date and Time icon. The current values  
for each category are displayed. Enter new values through the keyboard.  
Floppy Drive A: and B: Move the cursor to these fields via and ¯ and select the floppy  
type. The settings are 360 KB 5¼ inch, 1.2 MB 5¼ inch, 720 KB 3½ inch,  
1.44 MB 3½ inch, or 2.88 MB 3½ inch.  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
40  
Standard Setup, Continued  
Primary Master, Primary Slave, Secondary Master, Secondary Slave Select one of these  
hard disk drive icons to configure the hard disk drive named in the option.  
Select Auto from the drive parameters screen to let AMIBIOS automatically  
configure the drive. A screen with a list of drive parameters appears. Click on  
OK to configure the drive.  
Drive Type  
How to Configure  
SCSI  
Select Type. Select Not Installed in the drive parameter  
screen. The SCSI drivers provided by the SCSI drive or  
SCSI host adapter manufacturer should allow you to  
configure the SCSI drive.  
IDE  
Select Type. Select Auto to let AMIBIOS determine the  
parameters. Click on OK when AMIBIOS displays the drive  
parameters.  
Select LBA/Large Mode. Select On if the drive has a  
capacity greater than 540 MB.  
Select Block Mode. Select On to allow block mode data  
transfers.  
Select 32-Bit Transfer. Select On to allow 32-bit data  
transfers.  
Select the PIO Mode. It is best to select Auto to allow  
AMIBIOS to determine the PIO mode. If you select a PIO  
mode that is not supported by the IDE drive, the drive will  
not work properly. If you are absolutely certain that you  
know the drive’s PIO mode, select PIO mode 0 - 5, as  
appropriate.  
CD-ROM  
Select Type. Select CDROM. Click on OK when AMIBIOS  
displays the drive parameters.  
Standard  
MFM Drive  
Non-  
Standard  
MFM Drive  
Select Type. You must know the drive parameters. Select  
the drive type that exactly matches your drive’s parameters.  
Select Type. If the drive parameters do not match the drive  
parameters listed for drive types 1 - 46, select User and  
enter the correct hard disk drive parameters.  
Cont’d  
Chapter 2 WINBIOS Setup  
41  
Standard Setup, Continued  
Entering Drive Parameters You can also enter the hard disk drive parameters. The drive  
parameters are:  
Parameter  
Description  
Type  
The number for a drive with certain identification  
parameters.  
Cylinders  
Heads  
The number of cylinders in the disk drive.  
The number of heads.  
Write  
The actual physical size of a sector gets progressively  
Precompensation smaller as the track diameter diminishes. Yet each  
sector must still hold 512 bytes. Write  
precompensation circuitry on the hard disk  
compensates for the physical difference in sector size  
by boosting the write current for sectors on inner  
tracks. This parameter is the track number on the disk  
surface where write precompensation begins.  
Landing Zone  
Sectors  
This number is the cylinder location where the heads  
normally park when the system is shut down.  
The number of sectors per track. MFM drives have 17  
sectors per track. RLL drives have 26 sectors per  
track. ESDI drives have 34 sectors per track. SCSI  
and IDE drives have even more sectors per track.  
Capacity  
The formatted capacity of the drive is the number of  
heads times the number of cylinders times the number  
of sectors per track times 512 (bytes per sector).  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
42  
Standard Setup, Continued  
Hard Disk Drive Types  
Type  
Cylinders  
Heads  
Write  
Precompensation  
Landing  
Zone  
Sectors  
Capacity  
1
2
306  
615  
615  
940  
940  
615  
462  
733  
900  
820  
855  
855  
306  
733  
612  
977  
977  
1024  
733  
733  
733  
306  
925  
925  
754  
754  
699  
823  
918  
1024  
1024  
1024  
612  
1024  
1024  
615  
987  
987  
820  
977  
981  
830  
830  
917  
1224  
4
4
128  
300  
305  
615  
615  
940  
940  
615  
511  
733  
901  
820  
855  
855  
319  
733  
663  
977  
977  
1023  
732  
732  
733  
336  
925  
925  
754  
754  
699  
823  
918  
1024  
1024  
1024  
612  
1024  
1024  
615  
987  
987  
820  
977  
981  
830  
830  
918  
1223  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
17  
10 MB  
20 MB  
31 MB  
62 MB  
47 MB  
20 MB  
31 MB  
30 MB  
112 MB  
20 MB  
35 MB  
50 MB  
20 MB  
43 MB  
20 MB  
41 MB  
57 MB  
60 MB  
30 MB  
43 MB  
30 MB  
10 MB  
54 MB  
69 MB  
44 MB  
69 MB  
41 MB  
68 MB  
53 MB  
94 MB  
128 MB  
43 MB  
10 MB  
77 MB  
68 MB  
41 MB  
25 MB  
57 MB  
41 MB  
41 MB  
41 MB  
48 MB  
69 MB  
114 MB  
152 MB  
3
6
300  
4
8
512  
5
6
512  
6
4
65535  
256  
7
8
8
5
65535  
65535  
65535  
65535  
65535  
128  
9
15  
3
10  
11  
12  
13  
14  
16  
17  
18  
19  
20  
21  
22  
23  
24  
25  
26  
27  
28  
29  
30  
31  
32  
33  
34  
35  
36  
37  
38  
39  
40  
41  
42  
43  
44  
45  
46  
5
7
8
7
65535  
0
4
5
300  
7
65535  
512  
7
5
300  
7
300  
5
300  
4
0
7
0
9
65535  
754  
7
11  
7
65535  
256  
10  
7
65535  
918  
11  
15  
5
65535  
65535  
1024  
128  
2
9
65535  
512  
8
8
128  
3
987  
7
987  
6
820  
5
977  
5
981  
7
512  
10  
15  
15  
65535  
65535  
65535  
AMIBIOS automatically sets IDE drive parameters. Select USER to enter MFM, ESDI, or RLL drive  
parameters. Select Not Installed for SCSI drives. Select CDROM for CD-ROM drives.  
Chapter 2 WINBIOS Setup  
43  
Advanced Setup  
Advanced Setup options are displayed by choosing the Advanced icon from  
the WINBIOS Setup main menu. All Advanced Setup options are described  
in this section.  
System Keyboard This option does not specify if a keyboard is attached to the computer.  
Rather, it specifies if error messages are displayed if a keyboard is not  
attached. This option permits you to configure workstations with no  
keyboards. The settings are Absent or Present. The Optimal and Fail-Safe  
default settings are Present.  
Primary Display This option configures the type of monitor attached to the computer. The  
settings are Mono, CGA40x25, CGA80x25, VGA/EGA, or Absent. The  
Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are VGA/EGA.  
PS/2Mouse Support Set this option to Enabled to enable AMIBIOS support for a PS/2-type  
mouse.. The settings are Enabled or Disabled. The Optimal and Fail-Safe  
default settings are Enabled.  
Pause on Config. Screen This option specifies the length of time that the AMIBIOS  
configuration screen appears. The settings are 2 (seconds), 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,  
10, 11, 12, 13, 14, or Disabled. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings  
are Disabled.  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
44  
Advanced Setup, Continued  
Boot Up Num Lock Set this option to On to turn the Num Lock key On at system boot. The  
settings are On or Off. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are On.  
Password CheckThis option enables the password check option every time the system boots or  
the end user runs Setup. If Always is chosen, a user password prompt appears  
every time the computer is turned on. If Setup is chosen, the password prompt  
appears if WINBIOS is executed. The Optimal and Power-On defaults are  
Setup.  
Boot To OS/2 Set this option to Yes if running OS/2 operating system and using more than  
64 MB of system memory on the motherboard. The settings are Yes or No.  
The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are No.  
Floppy Drive Swap Set this option to Enabled to permit drives A: and B: to be swapped. The  
settings are Enabled or Disabled. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings  
are Disabled.  
Boot Up Sequence This option sets the sequence of boot drives (either floppy drive A, hard  
disk drive C:, or a CD-ROM drive.) AMIBIOS attempts to boot from after  
AMIBIOS POST completes. The three settings are C:,A:,CDROM,  
A:,C:CDROM, and CDROM,C:,A:. The Optimal default setting is  
C:,A:CDROM. The Fail-Safe default setting is A:,C:CDROM.  
Cont’d  
Chapter 2 WINBIOS Setup  
45  
Advanced Setup, Continued  
External Cache Set this option to Enabled to enable L2 secondary (external) cache memory.  
The settings are Enabled or Disabled. The Optimal default setting is  
Enabled. The Fail-Safe default setting is Disabled.  
Caching Controller Set this option to Yes if a cache controller is installed in the computer.  
Setting  
Description  
To comply with the PCI specifications, PCI adapter cards  
must be reset every time the CPU is reset. When the end  
user forces a soft reset by pressing <Ctrl> <Alt> <Del>, only  
the CPU is reset. When this option is set to No, all soft  
resets are converted to hard resets, and all PCI adapter cards  
are reset when the CPU is reset.  
Absent  
(the  
default  
setting)  
Soft resets still behave like soft resets when Yes is selected.  
Select this option if a caching controller is installed in the  
computer. Soft resets must not generate a hard reset if a  
caching controller is used. If a hard reset is generated, a PCI  
caching controller card cannot flush data from cache memory  
to a hard disk drive before the reset.  
Present  
Video Shadow C000,32K This option controls the location of the contents of video ROM. The  
settings are:  
Setting  
Description  
The contents of the video ROM area (C0000h - C7FFFh) are  
written to the corresponding address in RAM.  
Shadow  
The contents of the video ROM area (C0000h - C7FFFh) are  
written to the corresponding RAM address and may be read  
from or written to cache memory.  
Cached  
The video ROM is not copied to RAM. The contents of the  
video ROM cannot be read from or written to cache memory.  
Disabled  
The Optimal default setting is Cached. The Fail-Safe default setting is  
Disabled.  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
46  
Advanced Setup, Continued  
Shadow C800,16K  
Shadow CC00,16K  
Shadow D000,16K  
Shadow D400,16K  
Shadow D800,16K  
Shadow DC00,16K These options enable shadowing of the contents of the ROM area in the  
option title.  
Setting  
Description  
The contents of the ROM area are written to the corresponding  
address in RAM for faster execution.  
Shadow  
The contents of the ROM area are written to the corresponding  
RAM address and can be read from or written to cache memory.  
The ROM is not copied to RAM. The contents of the video  
ROM cannot be read from or written to cache memory.  
Cached  
Disabled  
The Optimal and Fail-Safe settings are Disabled.  
Chapter 2 WINBIOS Setup  
47  
Chipset Setup  
Memory Hole This option allows the end user to specify a memory hole. The settings are  
Disabled, 512-640K, or 15-16M (from 15 MB to 16 MB). The Optimal and  
Fail-Safe default settings are Disabled.  
IRQ12/M Mouse Function This option should be set according to the mouse hardware  
implementation. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are Enabled. The  
settings are:  
Settings  
Description  
Disabled  
Choose this setting if the hardware uses IRQ12 for the PS/2  
mouse.  
Enabled  
Choose this setting if a keyboard controller mouse interrupt  
is used for the mouse.  
DRAM Data Integrity Mode This option sets the system memory integrity mode. The  
settings are Parity (system memory parity is checked) or ECC (an Error  
Checking and Correction routine is used). The Optimal and Fail-Safe default  
settings are Parity.  
USB Function Set this option to Enabled to enable the system BIOS USB (Universal Serial  
Bus) functions. The settings are Enabled or Disabled. The Optimal and Fail-  
Safe default settings are Enabled.  
USB Keyboard/Mouse Legacy Support Set this option to Enabled to enable USB support for  
legacy keyboards and mice. The settings are Enabled or Disabled. The  
Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are Enabled.  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
48  
Power Management Setup  
The AMIBIOS Setup options described in this section are selected by  
choosing the Power Management Setup icon from the Setup section on the  
AMIBIOS Setup main menu.  
Power Management/APM Set this option to Enabled to enable the Intel Triton 2 power  
management features and APM (Advanced Power Management). The settings  
are Enabled, Inst-On (instant-on), or Disabled. The Optimal and Fail-Safe  
default settings are Disabled.  
Instant-On Timeout (Minute) This option specifies the length of a period of system inactivity  
while the computer is in Full power on state. When this length of time  
expires, AMIBIOS takes the computer to a lower power consumption state,  
but the computer can return to full power instantly when any system activity  
occurs. This option is only available if supported by the computer hardware.  
The settings are Disabled and 1 Min. through 15 Min in 1 minute intervals.  
The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are Disabled.  
Green PC Monitor Power State This option specifies the power state that the green PC-  
compliant video monitor enters when AMIBIOS places it in a power saving  
state after the specified period of display inactivity has expired. The settings  
are Off, Standby, Suspend, or Disabled. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default  
settings are Standby.  
Video Power Down Mode This option specifies the power conserving state that the VESA  
VGA video subsystem enters after the specified period of display inactivity  
has expired. The settings are Disabled, Standby, or Suspend. The Optimal  
and Fail-Safe default settings are Disabled.  
Cont’d  
Chapter 2 WINBIOS Setup  
49  
Power Management Setup, Continued  
Hard Disk Power Down Mode This option specifies the power conserving state that the hard  
disk drive enters after the specified period of hard drive inactivity has  
expired. The settings are Disabled, Standby, or Suspend. The Optimal and  
Fail-Safe default settings are Disabled.  
Hard Disk Timeout (Minute) This option specifies the length of a period of hard disk drive  
inactivity. When this length of time expires, the computer enters power-  
conserving state specified in the Hard Disk Power Down Mode option (see  
the previous screen). The settings are Disabled and 1 Min. through 15 Min in  
1 minute intervals. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are Disabled.  
Standby Timeout (Minute) This option specifies the length of a period of system inactivity  
while in Full power on state. When this length of time expires, the computer  
enters Standby power state. The settings are Disabled and 1 Min. through 15  
Min in 1 minute intervals. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are  
Disabled.  
Suspend Timeout (Minute) This option specifies the length of a period of system inactivity  
while in Standby state. When this length of time expires, the computer enters  
Suspend power state. The settings are Disabled and 1 Min. through 15 Min in  
1 minute intervals. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are Disabled.  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
50  
Power Management Setup, Continued  
Slow Clock Ratio This option specifies the speed at which the system clock runs in power  
saving states. The settings are expressed as a ratio between the normal CPU  
clock speed and the CPU clock speed when the computer is in the power-  
conserving state. The settings are 1:1, 1:2, 1:4, 1:8, 1:16, 1:32, 1:64, and  
1:128. The Optimal and Fail-Safe defaults are 1:8.  
Display Activity This option specifies if AMIBIOS is to monitor display activity for power  
conservation purposes. When this option is set to Monitor and there is no  
display activity for the length of time specified in the Standby Timeout  
(Minutes) option, the computer enters a power savings state. The settings are  
Monitor or Ignore. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are Ignore.  
Cont’d  
Chapter 2 WINBIOS Setup  
51  
Power Management Setup, Continued  
IRQ3  
IRQ4  
IRQ5  
IRQ7  
IRQ9  
IRQ10  
IRQ11  
IRQ12  
IRQ13  
IRQ14  
IRQ15  
When set to Monitor, these options enable event monitoring on the specified  
IRQ line. If set to Monitor and the computer is in a power saving state,  
AMIBIOS watches for activity on the specified IRQ line. The computer enters  
the full on power state if any activity occurs. AMIBIOS reloads the Standby  
and Suspend timeout timers if activity occurs on the specified IRQ line. The  
settings for each of these options are Ignore, or Monitor. The defaults are:  
Option  
IRQ3  
IRQ4  
IRQ5  
IRQ7  
Optimal  
Ignore  
Ignore  
Ignore  
Ignore  
Ignore  
Ignore  
Ignore  
Monitor  
Ignore  
Monitor  
Ignore  
Fail-Safe  
Ignore  
Ignore  
Ignore  
Ignore  
Ignore  
Ignore  
Ignore  
Ignore  
Ignore  
Ignore  
Ignore  
IRQ9  
IRQ10  
IRQ11  
IRQ12  
IRQ13  
IRQ14  
IRQ15  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
52  
PCI/PnP Setup  
Choose the PCI/PnP Setup icon from the WINBIOS Setup screen to display  
the PCI and Plug and Play Setup options, described below.  
Plug and Play-Aware OS Set this option to Yes if the operating system in this computer is  
aware of and follows the Plug and Play specification. Windows 95 is PnP-  
aware. The settings are Yes or No. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings  
are No.  
Allocate IRQ to PCI VGA Set this option to Yes to allocate an IRQ to a VGA adapter card  
that uses the PCI local bus. The settings are Yes or No. The Optimal and Fail-  
Safe default settings are Yes.  
PCI Slot-1 Latency Timer  
PCI Slot-2 Latency Timer  
PCI Slot-3 Latency Timer  
PCI Slot-4 Latency Timer These options specify the latency timings (in PCI clocks) for PCI  
devices installed in the four PCI expansion slots. The settings are 32, 64, 96,  
128, 160, 192, 224, or 248. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are 64.  
USB Device Latency Timer This option specifies the latency timings (in PCI clocks) for USB  
devices installed in the computer. The settings are 32, 64, 96, 128, 160, 192,  
224, or 248. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are 64.  
USB Device IRQ Preference These options specify the IRQ priority for USB devices installed  
in the computer. The settings are Auto, IRQ5, IRQ9, IRQ10, IRQ11, IRQ14,  
and IRQ15, in priority order. If Auto is selected, AMIBIOS automatically  
determines the optimal IRQ priority order. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default  
settings are Auto.  
Cont’d  
Chapter 2 WINBIOS Setup  
53  
PCI/PnP Setup, Continued  
PCI Slot-1 IRQ Preference  
PCI Slot-2 IRQ Preference  
PCI Slot-3 IRQ Preference  
PCI Slot-4 IRQ Preference These options specify the IRQ priority for PCI devices installed in  
the four PCI expansion slots. The settings are Auto, IRQ5, IRQ9, IRQ10,  
IRQ11, IRQ 14, and IRQ15, in priority order. If Auto is selected, AMIBIOS  
automatically determines the optimal IRQ priority order. The Optimal and  
Fail-Safe default settings are Auto.  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
54  
PCI/PnP Setup, Continued  
IRQ3  
IRQ4  
IRQ5  
IRQ7  
IRQ9  
IRQ10  
IRQ11  
IRQ12  
IRQ14  
IRQ15  
These options specify the bus that the specified IRQ line is used on. These  
options allow you to reserve IRQs for legacy ISA adapter cards. These options  
determine if AMIBIOS should remove an IRQ from the pool of available  
IRQs passed to devices that are configurable by the system BIOS. The  
available IRQ pool is determined by reading the ESCD NVRAM. If more  
IRQs must be removed from the pool, the end user can use these options to  
reserve the IRQ by assigning an ISA setting to it. Onboard I/O is configured  
by AMIBIOS. All IRQs used by onboard I/O are configured as PCI, PnP, or  
PCI/PnP. IRQ14 and 15 will not be available if the onboard Triton 2 PCI IDE  
is enabled. If all IRQs are set to ISA and IRQ14 and 15 are allocated to the  
onboard PCI IDE, IRQ9 will still be available for PCI and PnP devices,  
because at least one IRQ must be available for PCI and PnP devices. The  
settings are ISA, PnP, PCI/PnP, or PCI. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default  
settings are:  
Option  
IRQ3  
IRQ4  
IRQ5  
IRQ7  
Optimal Default  
PnP  
Fail-Safe Default  
PCI/PnP  
PCI/PnP  
PCI/PnP  
PCI/PnP  
PCI/PnP  
PCI/PnP  
PCI/PnP  
PnP  
PnP  
PCI/PnP  
PnP  
PCI/PnP  
PCI/PnP  
PCI/PnP  
PnP  
PCI/PnP  
PCI/PnP  
IRQ9  
IRQ10  
IRQ11  
IRQ12  
IRQ14  
IRQ5  
PCI/PnP  
PCI/PnP  
Cont’d  
Chapter 2 WINBIOS Setup  
55  
PCI/PnP Setup, Continued  
DMA Channel 0  
DMA Channel 1  
DMA Channel 3  
DMA Channel 5  
DMA Channel 6  
DMA Channel 7These options allow you to specify the bus type used by each DMA channel.  
The settings are PnP or ISA. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are  
PnP.  
Reserved ISA Card Memory Size This option specifies the size of the memory area reserved  
for legacy ISA adapter cards. The settings are Disabled, 16K, 32K, or 64K.  
The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are Disabled.  
Reserved ISA Card Memory Address This option specifies the beginning address (in hex) of  
the reserved memory area. The specified ROM memory area is reserved for  
use by legacy ISA adapter cards.  
The settings are C0000, C4000, C8000, CC000, D0000, D4000, D8000, or  
DC000. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are C4000.  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
56  
Peripheral Setup  
Choose the Peripheral Setup icon from the WINBIOS Setup screen to display  
the Peripheral Setup options, described below.  
Onboard Floppy Controller Set this option to Enabled to enable the floppy drive controller  
on the motherboard. The settings are Auto (AMIBIOS automatically  
determines if the floppy controller should be enabled), Enabled, or Disabled.  
The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are Enabled.  
Onboard Primary/Secondary IDE This option specifies the IDE channels on the onboard  
IDE controller that will be used. The settings are Disabled, Primary,  
Secondary, or Both. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are Disabled.  
Onboard IDE Bus Master Set this option to Enabled to specify that the IDE controller on the  
PCI local bus includes a bus mastering capability. The settings are Enabled or  
Disabled. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are Disabled.  
Cont’d  
Chapter 2 WINBIOS Setup  
57  
Peripheral Setup, Continued  
Offboard PCI/ISA IDE Card This option specifies if an offboard PCI IDE controller adapter  
card is installed in the computer. You must choose ISA if an ISA IDE card is  
installed or the PCI expansion slot on the motherboard where the offboard  
PCI IDE controller is installed. If an offboard ISA or PCI IDE controller is  
used, the onboard IDE controller is automatically disabled. The settings are  
Auto (AMIBIOS automatically determines where the offboard PCI IDE  
controller adapter card is installed), Absent, ISA, Slot1, SLot2, Slot3, or  
Slot4. The Optimal And Fail-Safe default settings are Auto.  
In the AMIBIOS for the Intel Triton II ISA chipset, this option forces IRQ14  
and IRQ15 to a PCI slot on the PCI Local bus. This is necessary to support  
non-compliant ISA IDE controller adapter cards.  
If an offboard PCI IDE controller adapter card is installed in the computer,  
you must also set the Offboard PCI IDE Primary IRQ and Offboard PCI  
IDE Secondary IRQ options.  
Offboard Primary/Secondary This option specifies the IDE controller channels used by the  
offboard IDE adapter card. The settings are Disabled, Primary, Secondary, or  
Both. There are no Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings.  
Offboard PCI IDE Primary IRQ  
Offboard PCI IDE Secondary IRQ These options specify the PCI interrupt used by the  
primary or secondary IDE channel on the offboard PCI IDE controller. The  
settings are Disabled, Hardwired, INTA, INTB, INTC, or INTD. The Optimal  
and Fail-Safe default settings are Disabled.  
Serial Port1 IRQ This option specifies the IRQ used for serial port1. The settings are IRQ4 or  
Disabled. The Optimal default setting is IRQ4. The Fail-Safe default setting  
is Disabled.  
Cont’d  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
58  
Peripheral Setup, Continued  
Serial Port1 Address This option specifies the base I/O port address of serial port 1. The  
settings are Auto (AMIBIOS automatically determines the correct base I/O  
port address), Disabled, 3F8h, or 3E8h. The Optimal default setting is 3F8h.  
The Fail-Safe default setting is Disabled.  
Serial Port2 IRQ This option specifies the IRQ used for serial port2. The settings are IRQ3 or  
Disabled. The Optimal default setting is IRQ3. The Fail-Safe default setting  
is Disabled.  
Serial Port2 Address This option specifies the base I/O port address of serial port 2. The  
settings are Auto (AMIBIOS automatically determines the correct base I/O  
port address), Disabled, 2F8h, or 2E8h. The Optimal default setting is 3F8h.  
The Fail-Safe default setting is Disabled.  
Serial Port2 Mode This option specifies the serial port 2 mode. The settings are Normal or IR  
(Infrared). The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are Normal.  
IR Duplex Mode This option selects the infrared transmission method. The settings are Full  
or Half. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default settings are Full.  
IR Protocol  
This option specifies the infrared standard used for the serial port2 infrared  
capability. The settings are 1.6 us or 3/16. The Optimal and Fail-Safe default  
settings are unspecified because IR is not the default setting for the Serial  
Port2 Mode option.  
Parallel Port IRQ This option specifies the IRQ used by the parallel port. The settings are  
Disabled, IRQ 5, or IRQ 7. The Optimal default setting is IRQ 7. The Fail-  
Safe default setting is Disabled.  
Cont’d  
Chapter 2 WINBIOS Setup  
59  
Peripheral Setup, Continued  
Parallel Port Address This option specifies the base I/O port address of the parallel port on  
the motherboard. The settings are Disabled, 378h, 278h, or 3BCh. The  
Optimal default setting is 378h. The Fail-Safe default setting is Disabled.  
Parallel Port Mode This option specifies the parallel port mode. The Optimal default setting is  
Normal. The Fail-Safe default setting is Disabled. The settings are:  
Setting  
Normal  
Bi-Dir  
Description  
The normal parallel port mode is used.  
Use this setting to support bidirectional transfers on the  
parallel port.  
The parallel port can be used with devices that adhere to the  
Enhanced Parallel Port (EPP) specification. EPP uses the  
existing parallel port signals to provide asymmetric  
bidirectional data transfer driven by the host device.  
The parallel port can be used with devices that adhere to the  
Extended Capabilities Port (ECP) specification. ECP uses the  
DMA protocol to achieve data transfer rates up to 2.5 Megabits  
per second. ECP provides symmetric bidirectional  
communication.  
EPP  
ECP  
EPP Version  
This option specifies the Enhanced Parallel Port specification version number  
that is used if the Parallel Port Mode option is set to EPP. This option can  
only be selected if the Parallel Port Mode option is set to EPP  
The settings are 1.7 or 1.9. There are no Optimal and Fail-Safe default  
settings because the default setting for the Parallel Port Mode option is not  
EPP.  
Parallel Port DMA Channel This option is only available if the setting for the Parallel Port  
Mode option is ECP. This option sets the DMA channel used by the parallel  
port. The settings are (DMA Channel) 0, 1 or 3. The Optimal and Fail-Safe  
default settings are 3.  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
60  
Section 2 Security  
Three icons appear in this part of the WINBIOS Setup screen:  
·
·
·
Supervisor (Password),  
User (Password), and  
Anti-Virus.  
Two Levels of Passwords Both the Supervisor and the User icons configure password support.  
If you use both, the Supervisor password must be set first.  
The system can be configured so that all users must enter a password every  
time the system boots or when WINBIOS Setup is executed, using either or  
both the Supervisor password or User password.  
AMIBIOS Password Support  
The Supervisor and User icons activate two different levels of password  
security.  
If WINBIOS Setup has an optional password feature. The system can be  
configured so that all users must enter a password every time the system boots  
or when WINBIOS Setup is executed.  
Chapter 2 WINBIOS Setup  
61  
Setting a Password  
The password check option is enabled in Advanced Setup (see the Advanced  
Setup section ) by choosing either Always (the password prompt appears every  
time the system is powered on) or Setup (the password prompt appears only  
when WINBIOS is run). The password is encrypted and stored in NVRAM.  
As shown on the above screen, you are prompted for a 1 – 6 character  
password. You can either type the password on the keyboard or select each  
letter of the password, one at a time, using the mouse. The password does not  
appear on the screen when typed. Make sure you write it down. If you forget  
it, you must drain NVRAM and reconfigure.  
If You Do Not Want to Use a Password Just press <Enter> when the password prompt  
appears.  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
62  
Changing a Password  
Select the Supervisor or User icon from the Security section of the WINBIOS  
Setup main menu. Enter the password and press <Enter>. The screen does  
not display the characters entered. After the new password is entered, retype  
the new password as prompted and press <Enter>.  
If the password confirmation is incorrect, an error message appears. If the  
new password is entered without error, press <Esc>. The password is stored  
in NVRAM after WINBIOS completes. The next time the system boots, a  
password prompt appears if the password function is present and enabled.  
Remember the PasswordKeep a record of the new password when the password is changed. If  
you forget the password, you must erase the system configuration information  
in NVRAM (Non-Volatile Random Access Memory).  
Anti-Virus  
When this icon is selected from the Security section of the WINBIOS Setup  
main menu, AMIBIOS issues a warning when any program (or virus) issues a  
Disk Format command or attempts to write to the boot sector of the hard disk  
drive. The settings are Enabled or Disabled. If enabled, the following appears  
when a write is attempted to the boot sector. You may have to type N several  
times to prevent the boot sector write.  
Boot Sector Write!!!  
Possible VIRUS: Continue (Y/N)? _  
The following appears after any attempt to format any cylinder, head, or  
sector of any hard disk drive via the BIOS INT 13 Hard Disk Drive Service:  
Format!!!  
Possible VIRUS: Continue (Y/N)? _  
Chapter 2 WINBIOS Setup  
63  
Section 3 Utility  
The following icons appear in this section of the WINBIOS Setup main  
screen:  
Color Set  
Language  
Color Set sets the Setup screen colors.  
If this feature is enabled, you can select WINBIOS Setup messages in  
different languages.  
Section 4 Default  
The icons in this section permit you to select a group of settings for all  
WINBIOS Setup options. Not only can you use these icons to quickly set  
system configuration parameters, you can choose a group of settings that have  
a better chance of working when the system is having configuration-related  
problems.  
Original  
Optimal  
Choose the Original icon to return to the system configuration values present  
in WINBIOS Setup when you first began this WINBIOS Setup session.  
You can load the optimal default settings for the WINBIOS by  
selecting the Optimal icon. The Optimal default settings are best-case values  
that should optimize system performance. If NVRAM is corrupted, the  
Optimal settings are loaded automatically.  
Fail-Safe  
You can load the Fail-Safe WINBIOS Setup option settings by selecting the  
Fail-Safe icon from the Default section of the WINBIOS Setup main menu.  
The Fail-Safe settings provide far from optimal system performance, but are  
the most stable settings. Use this option as a diagnostic aid if the system is  
behaving erratically.  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
64  
3 Programming the Flash ROM  
All versions of the Apollo III motherboard use Flash EPROM to store the  
system BIOS. The advantage of Flash EPROM is the EPROM chip does not  
have to be replaced to update the BIOS. The end user can actually reprogram  
the BIOS, using a ROM file supplied by American Megatrends.  
Programming the Flash EPROM  
Step  
Action  
1
2
3
Turn power off. Make sure the computer has a working speaker.  
Insert the floppy disk with the S752P.ROM file in drive A:.  
Before DOS boots, press and hold down the <Ctrl> and  
<Home> keys to reprogram the Flash EPROM-based AMIBIOS.  
The bootblock code immediately reads the A: drive, looking for  
the new BIOS information.  
4
When the flash ROM has successfully been programmed, the  
computer will reboot.  
Bootblock BIOS Actions When you reprogram from system boot, the bootblock BIOS code:  
Reads S752P.ROM from the root directory of the floppy disk in drive A:.  
Erases the Flash EPROM.  
Programs the Flash EPROM with the data read from the floppy disk in drive  
A:.  
Generates a CPU reset, rebooting the computer.  
The bootblock part of the Flash EPROM is not programmed. Should you  
inadvertently open the disk drive door or turn power off to the computer while  
programming the Flash EPROM, the bootblock will be unaffected. Simply  
turn power back on and begin the Flash ROM programming process again.  
Cont’d  
Chapter 3 Programming the Flash ROM  
65  
Programming the Flash ROM, Continued  
S752P.ROM  
S752P.ROM resides on a floppy disk and contains the updated main BIOS  
code. American Megatrends will provide this file when the AMIBIOS for the  
Apollo III ISA motherboard must be updated.  
S752P.ROM must be present in the root directory of the floppy disk before the  
onboard Flash EPROM can be reprogrammed. The file that has the main  
BIOS code must be named S752P.ROM.  
Sequence of Operation The sequence of operation and expected behavior of the bootblock  
BIOS code is:  
Step  
Expected behavior  
1 Look for floppy  
disk.  
The system beeps one time before the BIOS  
attempts to read from floppy drive A:.  
2 Look for  
S752P.ROM on the  
floppy disk.  
S752P.ROM must be in the root directory of  
the floppy disk in drive A:. There is no beep  
if successful.  
3 Read the floppy  
disk.  
The floppy disk is read. There is no beep if  
this step is successful.  
4 Check for BIOS file The BIOS file size is checked. There is no  
size.  
beep if this step is successful.  
5 Check for Flash  
EPROM.  
The BIOS looks for an Intel i28F001BX-T  
Flash EPROM. It does not beep if this step is  
successful.  
6 Erase the Flash  
EPROM.  
Two beeps sound when the BIOS begins  
erasing the Flash EPROM.  
7 Program the Flash  
EPROM.  
Three beeps sound when the AMIFlash Code  
begins reprogramming the Flash EPROM.  
8 Continue  
programming the  
Flash EPROM.  
Four beeps sound when reprogramming has  
been successfully completed.  
9 AMIFlash does a  
reset.  
A CPU reset is generated to reboot the  
computer.  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
66  
Programming the Flash ROM, Continued  
Beep Codes  
The bootblock code produces a series of beeps during Flash ROM  
programming to:  
·
·
signify completion of a step (as shown on the previous screen), or to  
signal an error.  
Error beeps are arranged in a coded sequence and have different meanings  
depending on when they occur. The error beep codes and when they can occur  
are:  
Number of  
Beeps  
Description  
1
2
Insert diskette in floppy drive A:.  
The AMIBOOT.ROM file was not found in the root directory  
of the diskette in floppy drive A:.  
Base memory error.  
3
4
Flash program successful.  
5
Floppy read error.  
6
7
8
Keyboard controller BAT command failed.  
No Flash EPROM detected.  
Floppy controller failure.  
9
Boot Block BIOS checksum error.  
Flash erase error.  
Flash program error.  
10  
11  
12  
AMIBOOT.ROM file size error.  
Continuous Flash Programming successful. Turn power off. The turn  
beep power on again to restart.  
Chapter 3 Programming the Flash ROM  
67  
Bootblock Code Checkpoint Codes  
Code  
Description  
E0h  
Verify the bootblock BIOS checksum. Disable the internal  
cache, DMA, and interrupt controllers. Initialize the  
system timer. Start memory refresh.  
E1h  
E2h  
Initialize the chipset registers. Set the BIOS size to 128K.  
Make the 512 KB base memory available.  
Test the base 64 KB of system memory. Send the BAT  
command to the keyboard controller. Make sure that  
<Ctrl> <Home> was pressed. Verify the main system  
BIOS checksum.  
E3h  
The main system BIOS is good. Transfer control to the  
main system BIOS.  
E4h  
E5h  
Start the memory test.  
The memory test is over. Initialize the interrupt vector  
table.  
E6h  
E7h  
E8h  
E9h  
EAh  
Initialize the DMA and interrupt controllers.  
Determine the CPU internal clock frequency.  
Initialize the I/O chipset, if any.  
Program the CPU clock-dependent chip set parameters.  
Enable the timer and the floppy diskette interrupt. Enable  
the internal cache. Copy the bootblock BIOS and pass  
control to the bootblock BIOS in the 0000h segment.  
Initialize the floppy drive.  
EDh  
EEh  
Look for a diskette in drive A:. Read the first sector of the  
diskette.  
EFh  
F0h  
Floppy read error.  
Search for AMIBOOT.ROM in the root directory of the  
floppy diskette in drive A:.  
F1h  
F2h  
The AMIBOOT.ROM file is not in the root directory.  
Read the FAT. Analyze the FAT to find the clusters  
occupied by the AMIBOOT.ROM.  
F3h  
F4h  
F5h  
Start reading the AMIBOOT.ROM file, cluster by cluster.  
The AMIBOOT.ROM file is not the correct size.  
Disable the internal cache. Raise the Vpp. Enable Flash  
write and reset the Flash ROM.  
FBh  
FCh  
FDh  
FEh  
FFh  
Detect the flash type.  
Start erasing flash blocks.  
Program the Flash ROM in the E0000-EFFFFh region.  
Start programming Flash at F0000-FFFFF region.  
Flash programming is successful. The computer reboots.  
A Specifications  
Item  
Description  
CPU  
Intel Pentium 75, 90, 100, 120, 133, 150, 166, 180,  
200 MHz or higher speed CPU  
Upgrade CPU  
Chipset  
Intel P54C series, P54CT, or P55C with an optional  
split voltage regulator module.  
Intel 82430HX, including CPU interface controller,  
advanced cache controller, integrated DRAM  
controller, synchronous ISA bus controller, PCI local  
bus interface, and integrated power management unit.  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
68  
Item  
Description  
Three ISA expansion slots  
Four PCI expansion slots  
L1 internal cache The Intel Pentium has 8 KB data cache and 8 KB  
Expansion slots  
memory  
instruction cache.  
L2 secondary  
cache memory  
Cache memory  
/system memory  
Type of System  
Memory  
256 KB or 512 KB of synchronous PBSRAM, direct-  
mapped, write-back.  
256 KB caches up to 128 MB of system memory  
512 KB caches up to 512 MB of system memory  
Up to 512 MB mounted on the motherboard in two  
banks of 72-pin 4 MB, 8 MB, 16 MB, or 32 MB  
SIMMs.  
System memory  
Fast page mode or Extended Data Out (EDO) SIMMs  
operating at 70 ns.  
Memory buffer  
Max. system  
memory  
One level posted write memory buffer  
128 MB  
Fast ATA  
Supports the Fast ATA specification using PIO mode 4  
and multiword DMA mode 2.  
System BIOS  
This motherboard has a 128 KB AMIBIOS system  
BIOS on a Flash ROM with built-in WINBIOS Setup.  
BIOS shadowing The system BIOS is always copied from ROM to RAM  
for faster execution. The end user can shadow 16 KB  
ROM segments from C000h – DCFFFh.  
AMIBIOS  
features  
IDE block mode support,  
IDE 32-bit data transfer support,  
IDE Programmed I/O mode 0, 1, 2, 3, and 4 support,  
IDE LBA mode support,  
APM (Advanced Power Management) and Flash BIOS  
hooks,  
EPA Green PC-compliant,  
PCI and Plug and Play (PnP) support, and  
DIM (Device Initialization Manager) support,  
DMI (Desktop Management Interface) support,  
ATAPI support,  
can boot from a CD-ROM drive,  
automatically detects system memory, cache memory,  
and IDE drive parameters,  
Intel NSP-compliant,  
Fast ATA IDE mode programming,  
Boot sector virus protection,  
instant-on support,  
automatically configures PnP and PCI devices.  
Provides two 40-pin IDE connectors onboard that  
support up to four IDE drives. IDE controller is on the  
PCI local bus.  
IDE  
Floppy  
Onboard support for up to two 360 KB, 720 KB, 1.2  
MB, 1.44 MB, or 2.88 MB floppy drives.  
Onboard ECP and EPP-capable parallel port connector.  
Two onboard serial port connectors. Two 16550 UART  
serial ports.  
Parallel port  
Serial ports  
Keyboard  
USB  
Infrared  
Includes a standard miniDIN keyboard connectors.  
Two USB connectors are provided on the motherboard.  
An infrared connector is provided on the motherboard  
Includes a 10-pin berg mouse connector.  
Includes three power supply connectors.  
A real time clock and 128 bytes of CMOS RAM with a  
battery backup is provided on the motherboard.  
Mouse  
Power supply  
Real time clock/  
CMOS RAM  
Index  
69  
Item  
Power  
Description  
Power management services include:  
management  
Green PC LED,  
power management signal to Green PC-aware power  
supplies,  
automatic IDE and video power down,  
monitor blanking,  
SMI (System Management Interrupt) support,  
APM, and  
system stop clock.  
Speaker  
Standard four-pin speaker connection.  
Apollo III PCI Pentium ISA Motherboard User’s Guide  
70  

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