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Maintenance Manual

ExtensaTM 900 Series


Notebook Computers
9813715-0001
December 1996
Copyright © 1996 Texas Instruments
All Rights Reserved

ExtensaTM 900 Series Notebook Computers


Maintenance Manual
TI Part No. 9813715-0001

Original Issue: December 1996

Changes may be made periodically to the information in this publication. Such


changes will be incorporated in new editions of this manual.

No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or


transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical,
photocopy, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of
Texas Instruments.

The equipment, as well as the programs that TI has created to use with them,
are tools that can help people better manage the information used in their
business; but tools — including TI products — cannot replace sound judge-
ment nor make the manager's business decisions.

Consequently, TI cannot warrant that its products are suitable for any specific
customer application. The manager must rely on judgement of what is best for
his or her business.

Address all correspondence regarding orders to:

Texas Instruments
P.O. Box 6102, M/S 3255
Temple, Texas 76503

Extensa is a trademark of Texas Instruments. The icons in the Windows Notebook and
Startup groups are copyrighted by Texas Instruments.
IBM and PS/2 are registered trademarks, and OS/2 is a trademark of International
Business Machines Corporation.
Microsoft, Windows and MS-DOS are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation..
Intel and Pentium are registered trademarks of Intel Corporation.
Cirrus is a registered trademark of Cirrus Logic, Inc.
Ethernet is a registered trademark of Xerox Corporation.
IRDA is a trademark of Infra Red Data Association.
Sound Blaster is a trademark of Creative Technology, Ltd.
SimulSCAN is a trademark of Cirrus Logic, Inc.
SCSI is a registered trademark of Security Control Systems, Inc.
Synaptics is a registered trademark of Synaptics, Inc.
Phillips is a tegistered trademark of Phillips screw Company.
TranXit is a trademark of Puma Technology, Inc.
Cyrix is a registered trademark of Dakota Systems, Incorporated.
CHIPS is a registered trademark of Chips Technologies, Inc.
AudioRack is a trademark of ESS Technology, Inc.
Preface
Introduction
This manual provides installation, operation and servicing data for the ExtensaTM 900
Series Notebook Computers.

Intended Audience
This manual is primarily intended for use by qualified service technicians but contains
information useful to non-technical users.

Contents
This manual contains six sections and one appendix that are common to all Extensa
900 Series Notebook Computers (differences described as they are covered):

♦ Section 1: General Description - Introduces the main features of the Extensa


900 Series Notebook Computers; identifies all options, provides physical and
electrical specifications.
♦ Section 2: Installation - Describes how to unpack, install options and begin
using the notebook.
♦ Section 3: Operating Instructions - Describes the notebook computer
operating controls and indicators and basic operating procedures required to
support maintenance operations.
♦ Section 4: Theory of Operation - Provides a block diagram level theory of
operation for the Extensa Series Notebooks.
♦ Section 5: Troubleshooting Procedures - Provides troubleshooting
procedures for the notebook computer series.
♦ Section 6: Field Service - Provides preventive and corrective maintenance
procedures for the notebook computer series including FRU removal/
replacement procedures.
♦ Appendix A: Notebook Schematic Diagrams - Provides schematic diagrams
for the Extensa 900 Series Notebook Computer.
♦ Appendix B: MPB Schematic Diagrams - Provides schematic diagrams for the
Extensa 900 Series Mobile Productivity Base.

Preface ix
Other Manuals About the System
The following documents provide additional information related to the Extensa
Notebook Computer Series:

♦ Extensa Series Notebook Computers Users Guide - Contains user reference


information for the Extensa 900 Series Notebook Computers.
♦ PC-Doctor Help and Technical Reference (online)

Ordering Parts and Supplies


To order a copy of any TI publication or to order option kits, spare parts or supplies for
your system, contact your TI reseller:

Telephone Toll-free: 1-800-TI TEXAS.

x Preface
Contents
Paragraph Page
Preface
Introduction - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - vii
Intended Audience- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - vii
Contents - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - vii
Other Manuals About the System- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -viii
Ordering Parts and Supplies - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -viii
Section 1 General Description
Introduction - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-1
Product Overview - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-1
Video Display Features - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-3
Internal LCD - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-3
External CRTs - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-3
Display Hot Key Sequences - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-3
Keyboard Features - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-4
Software Features - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-4
Standard Peripheral Devices - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-5
900 Series Connectivity Features - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-5
Notebook Expansion Capabilities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-7
Memory Expanson - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-7
PCMCIA Card Options - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-7
Mobile Productivity Base Option - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-7
Docking and Undocking- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-10
Mobile Productivity Base Ports - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-11
Advanced PCI Card Options - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-12
Notebook Battery - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-12
Standard Test Features - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-12
Power On Self Test - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-12
PC-Doctor Diagnostics Program- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-13
Extensa 900 Series Specifications - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-14
Regulatory Agency Approvals- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1-17
Section 2 Installation
Introduction - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-1
Unpacking Instructions - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-1
Installing Internal Notebook Options - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-2
Installing Main Memory Expansion (Optional) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-2
Setting Up the Software - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-3
Installing PCMCIA Options - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-4

Contents iii
Contents (continued)
Paragraph Page
Section 2 Installation (continued)
Installing External Notebook Options - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-5
Installing the Mobile Productivity Base (Option) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-5
Docking the Notebook to the MPB - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-5
Cabling to the MPB - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-6
Installing Ext. Keyboard/Mouse/Numeric Keypad - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-8
Installing an External Parallel Printer - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-9
Installing an External Serial Port Device - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-10
Installing an External VGA Monitor - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-11
Primary Battery Pack Installation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-13
Installing the AC Power Adapter - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-13
Initial Software Load - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2-14
Section 3 Operating Instructions
Introduction - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-1
Controls/Indicators - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-1
Power On/Off Switch - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-2
Notebook LEDs - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-2
LED Icons - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-2
Keyboard Hot Key Sequences - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-3
Windows 95 Special Keys - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-5
DOS Special Keys - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-5
Configuring the Touchpad- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-6
Using a CD-ROM Drive (MPB Option Only - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-6
Inserting a CD (MPB Option Only) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-6
Handling CDs (MPB Option Only - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-6
Built-In Sound System - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-7
Turning Sound On/Off- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-7
Sound Software - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-7
External Sound Equipment- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-8
Using Remote Connections - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-8
Using the Fast Infrared (FIR) Port- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-8
Using Zoomed Video Features - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-9
MPEG PC Card - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-9
Battery Saving Tips - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-9
Lowering Inactivity Timeouts- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-9
Suspending Operation While Idle - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-10
Responding to a Low Battery Condition- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-10
Replacing the Battery- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-11
Saving to Disk - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3-11

iv Contents
Contents (continued)
Paragraph Page
Section 4 Theory of Operation
Introduction - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4-1
Notebook Functional Overview - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4-1
System Processor - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4-3
Memory Subsystem- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4-5
Main Memory- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4-5
Flash ROM - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4-6
System Controller Function - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4-6
ALI M1521 (Memory, Cache and DRAM Controller)- - - - - - - - - - - - - 4-8
ALI M1523 (PCA-ISA Bridge)- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4-9
Video Subsystem - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-12
C&T 65550 Features - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-12
Versatile Panel Support - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-13
Low Power Consumption - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-13
Software Compatibility/Flexibility - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-13
Sound Subsystem - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-13
ESS1878 Audio Controller with Interface to Expansion Audio Mixer -4-13
ES1878 Features - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-14
Keyboard Subsystem - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-14
I/O Subsystem - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-14
NS87338VJG Super I/O Controller - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-14
Hard Disk Drive Subsystem - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-17
PCI0643 Features- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-17
Floppy Disk Drive Subsystem - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-18
PCI 1130 Features - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-19
PCMCIA Subsystem - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-18
Power Subsystem - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-20
ALI M6377 Power Management Unit - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-22
AC Power Adapter- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-25
Mobile Productivity Base Interface - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -4-25
Section 5 Troubleshooting Procedures
Introduction - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5-1
Overview of Fault Isolation Process - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5-1
Troubleshooting Procedures - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5-3
Troubleshooting a Power Supply Problem - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5-3
Troubleshooting a Display Problem - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5-3
Fault Isolation Using Power On Self Test- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5-4
POST Error Messages - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5-5
POST Beep Error Messages - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5-8
Run-Time Error Messages - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5-9
PCMCIA Modem Problems - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -5-10

Contents v
Contents (continued)
Paragraph Page
Section 6 Troubleshootig Procedures (continued)
General Fault Isolation Procedures - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5-12
Fault Isolation Using Diagnostics - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5-13
PC-Doctor (In DOS Mode or DOS Windows) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5-13
Supporting Online Documentation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5-15
User Interface to PC-Doctor - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5-15
Quitting PC-Doctor - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5-15
Section 6 Field Service
Introduction - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-1
Preventive Maintenance - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-1
Cleaning the Computer - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-1
Handling the Computer - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-2
Handling the Computer Battery Pack - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-2
Password Caution - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-3
Required Tools and Equipment - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-3
Notebook FRUs - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-3
Cover-Display Assembly - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-4
System Base Assembly- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-6
Mobile Productivity Base Assembly - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-9
Notebook FRU Replacement Procedures - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-10
Removing/Replacing the Notebook Battery Pack- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-11
Removing/Replacing PCMCIA Options - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-12
Installing/Removing the Mobile Productivity Base- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-13
Removing/Replacing the Hard Disk Drive Assembly - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-15
Removing/Replacing the Keyboard Assembly - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-16
Heat Sink Assembly Removal/Replacement - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-17
Display Assembly Removal/Replacement - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-18
Removing/Replacing the LED/Microphone Board Assembly - - - - - - - - - - 6-19
Removing/Replacing the CPU Board- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-20
Removing/Replacing the Top Cover - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-21
Removing/Replacing the VGA Video Board - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-23
Removing/Replacing the Power Supply Board - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-24
Removing/Replacing the DC-In Board Assembly- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-25
Removng/Replacing the PC Card Module - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-26
Removing/Replacing the Main Board Assembly - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-27
Removing Touchpad and Speakers - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-28
Removing/Replacing the Display Bezel - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-29
Removing/Replacing the LCD - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-30
Removing/Replacing the Display Inverter Boards - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-31
Removing/Repalcing MPB FRUs- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-32
Removing/Replacing the Media Bay Device - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6-32

vi Contents
Contents (continued)
Paragraph Page
Section 6 Field Service (continued)
Removing/Replacing the MPB Battery - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -6-33
Removing/Replacing the MPB Housing- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -6-34
Removing/Replacing the Docking Cable - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -6-35
Removing/Replacing the Docking Mechanism - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -6-36
Removing/Replacing the MPB DC-DC Converter - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -6-37
Removing/Replacing the MPB Main Board Assembly - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -6-38
Appendix A Notebook Schematic Diagrams
Introduction - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - A-1
Appendix B Notebook Schematic Diagrams
Introduction - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - B-1
Appendix A POST BIOS
Introduction - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - C-1

Contents vii
1
General Description
1.1 Introduction
This manual contains field and factory level servicing information for the ExtensaTM 900
Series Notebook Computers (Figure 1-1) marketed by Texas Instruments. This section
provides a general overview of the Extensa 900 Series, describes the standard and
optional features, and identifies the major assemblies and subassemblies. This section
also contains detailed functional and environmental specifications for the Extensa 900
Series Notebook Computers.

Figure 1-1 Extensa 900 Series Notebook Computers

Basic Extensa 900 Series Extensa 900 Series


Notebook with Mobile Productivity Base

1.2 Product Overview


The Extensa 900 Series Notebook Computers are ultra-slim, large screen, high-
performance, multimedia notebooks powered by the Intel® P54CSLM Pentium®
Processor Chip (133-MHz). The Extensa 900 can be equipped with an optional Mobile
Productivity Base that allows for quick connect/disconnect to/from the desktop
environment and expanded functionality (modular bay and Advanced PCI card
features).

Other major features of the 900 Series include:

♦ 133 MHz Pentium processor with internal 256 KB cache memory and math
coprocessor

General Description 1-1


♦ Powerful PCI Bus architecture
♦ 16 MB main memory (expandable to 80 MB using 8 MB, 8 MB, 16 MB, 32 MB
or 64 MB EDO 64-bit type small outline dual inline memory module (soDIMM)
upgrades)

♦ 256 KB Level-2 cache memory


♦ Built-in 2.5-inch IDE high capacity (1.35 GB or greater) Hard Disk Drive
♦ External Floppy Drive Module (attaches to the Parallel Port)
♦ Advanced video features
- DSTN or TFT internal color display
- Simultaneous display with external CRT
- 2.0 MB video memory
- Fast video graphics accelerator

♦ Built-In 86/87-key keyboard


♦ Internal touchpad pointing device with two Select buttons
♦ Fast Infrared communications
♦ Built-in audio features
- 16-bit stereo audio
- Line In, Line Out and Microphone In stereo jacks

♦ Small, lightweight AC adapter, auto-switching (90 VAC to 264 VAC, 50-60 Hz)
♦ Portable power system with advanced power savings features for extra long
battery life
- Zero-Volt Suspend, 5-Volt Suspend and Standby power saving modes
- Rechargeable Li-Ion battery pack

♦ Powerful expansion capabilities including:


- Flexible set of desktop ports including external CRT (and simultaneous
LCD and external CRT display), 9-pin serial port, parallel port for
external printer/floppy drive, PS/2® port for external keyboard or mouse
- PC Card slots for two Type I or II options or one Type III option
- Mobile Productivity Base ready
Figure 1-2 identifies the major external notebook features.

1-2 General Description


LCD

Power
Switch Right
Status Speaker
Indicators
Right
Battery
Lock
FIR
Port
Left Battery
Audio and Touchpad
Speaker Pack Bottom of Unit
Mic Jacks
HDD
Left Access
Battery Cover
Lock

VGA
Port
Expansion
Serial Memory
PC Port Acess
Card Parallel Cover
Slots Port
PS/2 AC Adapter
Port Connection

Figure 1-2 900 Series Notebook External Features

1.2.1 Video Display Features


The Extensa 900 Series Notebooks contain large screen internal LCD displays and can
simultaneously drive the internal LCD and an external CRT (SimulSCANTM mode). On
all Extensa models, the LCD screen brightness, contrast, video mode of operation, etc.
are adjustable from the keyboard as described in Section 3.

General Description 1-3


1.2.1.1 Internal LCD
The Extensa 900 Series Notebooks contain one of the following LCDs (model dependent):

♦ 12.1-inch DSTN display (900CD Only)


♦ 11.3-inch TFT
1.2.1.2 External CRTs
The Extensa 900 Series Notebooks are equipped with a 15-pin SVGA connector that
can drive an external CRT (either alone or simultaneously with the internal LCD).

When the notebook is set to the SimulSCAN mode, a minimum resolution of 800 x 600
x 256 colors is supported. When operating in the External CRT Mode, resolutions up
to 1280 x 1024 x 256 colors are supported.

1.2.1.3 Display Hot Key Sequences


The display mode of operation (LCD only, Simultaneous LCD and external CRT and
external CRT only modes) is keyboard-selectable using the following hot key sequences.

♦ Fn-Up Arrow and Fn-Down Arrow - Control LCD screen brightness (higher
brightness setting uses more battery energy)

♦ Fn-Right Arrow - Lightens the LCD screen contrast

♦ Fn-Left Arrow - Darkens the LCD screen contrast

♦ Fn-F12 - Alternates between display modes (LCD, External CRT or both)


♦ Fn-F11 - Turns off the LCD backlight; pressing any key turns the LCD backlight
on.

Note: In addition to the hot keys that control the notebook display functions,
there are several other hot key functions that control other notebook functions
such as turning the Touchpad on/off, etc. For these sequences, refer to
Section 3.

1-4 General Description


1.2.2 Keyboard Features
The Extensa 900 Series Notebooks contain a built-in 86/87-key keyboard (Figure 1-3)
compatible with the IBM® enhanced 101/102-key keyboard. The keyboard contains 12
programmable function keys, an embedded numeric keypad (Figure 1-4) and dedicated
control keys (hot keys).

Figure 1-3 Embedded Numeric Keypad

1.2.3 Software Features


As a standard feature, the Extensa 900 notebooks are factory loaded with dual load
(Windows® 95 or Windows for Workgroups) software to allow the user to configure the
notebook’s operating system environment as summarized in Table 1-1.

Table 1-1 User-Selectable Operating System Environments

Operating System Description


Windows 95 Supports both desktop and mobile operation with Plug N Play capabilities and Advanced Power
Management; customized to include TI startup screen, CSL Support information, Internet
browser, multimedia options, and choice of wallpaper to customize different computer resources,
TI utilities such as wBattery, wSetpower, TISetup, variety of device drivers including Cirrus®
CL-GD7548, ESS 1888 Sound Device Drivers, WinModem Device Drivers, PC-Card Bus Socket
Services and Card Services Device Drivers, and Windows 95 MPEG-1 Software Audio/Video
Compression Device Drivers.

Windows/DOS 6.22 This environment has some limitations in the Plug N Play area; includes TI utilities and various
device drivers including Cirrus CL-GD7548, ESS 1888 Sound Device Drivers, WinModem Device
Drivers, PC-Card Bus Socket Services and Card Services Device Drivers, etc.

General Description 1-5


1.2.4 Standard Peripheral Devices
As standard features, the Extensa notebooks include an internal IDE hard drive, an
external 3.5-inch floppy disk drive and built-in touchpad (mouse device).

1.2.5 900 Series Connectivity Features


As standard features, the Extensa 900 Series notebooks includes most standard
desktop ports including a serial port, parallel port, PS/2 port, and external VGA port.
The 900 Series also includes a fast infrared (FIR) port and an expansion bus connector
for attaching to the optional Mobile Productivity Base. The external ports for the 900
Series are shown in Figure 1-4 and described in Table 1-2.

VGA
Port
Serial
Port
Parallel
Port
PS/2 AC Adapter
Port Connection

FIR
Port
Line Mic
Out Line In
In

Figure 1-4 900 Series External Ports

1-6 General Description


Table 1-2 900 Series External Ports

Port Assignment Description


External VGA Port 15-pin Female connector used to attach an external SVGA monitor to the
notebook.

Serial Port 9-pin Male connector used to attach an RS-232 serial device to the notebook.

Parallel Port 25-pin Female connector used to attach a bidirectional printer or an external
floppy disk drive (requires special cable for use with floppy disk drive).

PS/2 Port 6-pin Circular connectors used to attach external keyboard/mouse devices to
the notebook.

AC Adapter Connector Power in connector used to attach the output of the AC adapter to the
notebook.

Fast Infrared Port Fast Infrared Port (4 M/b) used for wireless communications between the
notebook and an FIR-equipped device such as keyboard, another notebook,
printer, etc.

Audio In/Out, Mic In Jacks Stereo audio line inputs, stereo line outputs and external microphone input

MPB Bus PCI Bus plus sidebands that support an optional Mobile Productivity Base.

1.2.6 Notebook Expansion Capabilities


In addition to the external ports, the Extensa 900 Series Notebooks are designed with
a variety of expansion features that permit substantial functionality and performance
upgrades over the life of the product. The expansion capabilities built into the notebook
are summarized in Table 1-3 and described in greater detail in the following paragraphs.

Table 1-3 Extensa 900 Expansion Features Summary

Expansion Feature Description


External 3.5-inch Diskette Drive Module Provides convenient storage on a removable diskette format

Memory Expansion Features Main memory can be expanded from 16 MB to a maximum of 80 MB using
one soDIMM module (8 MB, 16 MB, 32 MB, or 64 MB configurations).

Flash ROM (hardware feature) Permits new versions of BIOS to be downloaded into Flash ROM without
physically having to replace the ROMs

PCMCIA Slots Allows installation of any optional PCMCIA device such as speakerphone
modems, Ethernet® cards, and full motion video cards.

Mobile Productivity Base Ready Connectors and latch mechanisms to accept a Mobile Productivity Base
(provides desktop connectivity with quick removal/installation feature required
for combination desktop and portable environments and increased functionality
including media bay and Advanced PCI Card support).

General Description 1-7


1.2.7 Memory Expansion
The notebook comes standard with 16 MB of RAM expandable to a maximum of 80 MB
using soDIMM modules (available in 8, 16, 32 or 64 MB sizes). Access to the expansion
socket is accommodated via a removable panel on the bottom of the notebook as shown
in Figure 1-5.

Expansion Memory
Access Cover

Figure 1-5 Memory Expansion Features

1.2.8 PCMCIA Card Options


The Notebook contains an onboard PCMCIA Controller and two 64-pin sockets that can
accept up to two credit-card size (14.5 mm) Type I or Type II PCMCIA option cards or
one Type III card. The PCMCIA Card options install on the left side of the notebook
(Figure 1-6) and are removed using the PC Card Release levers.

1-8 General Description


Figure 1-6 Installing PCMCIA Card Options

1.2.9 Mobile Productivity Base Option


The Mobile Productivity Base (Figure 1-7) provides a port replicator function with
separate External Keyboard and Mouse ports, plus powerful desktop expansion
features including a Modular Bay for CD-ROM or Floppy Disk Drive and provisions for
an Advanced PCI Card option. These features are summarized in Table 1-4.

Table 1-4 Mobile Productivity Base Expansion Features

Expansion Feature Description


Media Bay CD-ROM Drive Reads from Audio CD, Photo CD or CD-ROM

Media Bay 3.5-inch Diskette Drive Module Provides convenient storage on a removable disk format

Advanced PCI Slot Provisions for installing one Advanced PCI Card

Secondary Battery Option Provides for extended portable operation time

General Description 1-9


Notebook
Connector
Secondary Battery

Audio Jacks

Advanced
PCI Option Slot
Media Bay
(Floppy or
CD-ROM Drive)

Two PS/2 Ports Standard


for both External Notebook
Keyboard and Mouse Ports

Figure 1-7 Mobile Productivity Base (MPB) Features

1.2.9.1 Docking and Undocking


Docking and undocking of the Mobile Productivity Base is controlled by a latch and
lever on the left side of the base as shown in Figure 1-8. The latch releases the lever;
the lever is extended 90 degrees outward to release the notebook.

1-10 General Description


Docking/
Undocking
Lever Lever Release
Latch

Left Side
Right
Side

Figure 1-8 Undocking from the Mobile Productivity Base

1.2.9.2 Mobile Productivity Base Ports


The Mobile Productivity Base provides the same ports as available on the Notebook plus
an additional PS/2 port to allow for both external mouse and keyboard. The port
assignments are shown in Figure 1-9.

General Description 1-11


Mic
In

Line
In
Line
Out
PS/2
Keyboard Advanced
Port PCI
VGA
PS/2 Serial Port
Mouse Port
Port Parallel
Port

Figure 1-9 Mobile Productivity Base Ports

1.2.9.3 Advanced PCI Card Options


The Extensa 900 Series Notebooks contain provisions for an advanced PCI Card as
shown in Figure 1-7.

1.3 Notebook Battery


The notebook computer uses a Lithium-Ion battery pack. A second identical battery
can be installed in the optional Mobile Connectivity Base as shown in Figure 1-7.

1.4 Standard Test Features


The Extensa 900 Series Notebook Computers use modular design and built-in test
features to reduce the mean time to repair. A power on self test program automatically
verifies the operational state of the primary circuits and a powerful suite of diagnostic
tests (known as PC-Doctor) are available to further test selected parts of the system.

1.4.1 Power On Self Test


The Extensa line of notebook computers contain a BIOS-resident, Power On Self Test
(POST) that automatically performs a test of memory and all major circuits each time

1-12 General Description


the computer is powered up. In the event of a failure, the computer displays a descriptive
error message and issues a series of coded beeps (in case the display subsystem is not
functioning). If self test completes normally, the computer displays the amount of
memory tested, loads the Operating System and Windows environment.

1.4.2 PC-Doctor Diagnostics Program


The Extensa 900 Series Notebooks are shipped with PC-Doctor for Windows, a powerful
diagnostics tool that can help you scan a system for viruses, determine the hardware
configuration of a local or remote system, benchmark its performance, analyze the
performance of all subsystems, and perform a suite of interactive and non-interactive
tests on attached devices (such as printers, VGA monitors, SCSI® devices, CD-ROM
drives). The test results are stored in a log which can be printed out (by pressing F2)
or saved in a disk file (by pressing F3).

Features of the diagnostic program are accessed through a series of pull-down menus
and basic keyboard keys (cursor keys to move highlighted pointer, Enter key to select
a highlighted feature, Esc key to cancel a function and move back one level.

PC-Doctor is typically user-friendly but if you don't understand a feature, context-


sensitive help information is available at any time by pressing the F1 function key;
pressing the F1 function key twice accesses the online Technical Reference Manual for
PC-Doctor.

A powerful set of utilities within PC-Doctor (that can be run locally or remotely) simplify
the task of determining system configuration data, allocating and using system memory,
IRQ and DMA use, what device drivers are installed, what COM and LPT ports are
assigned and what ports are available, identifying partitioning data for fixed disk
drive(s), determining the VGA setup information, reading the software interrupts/
interrupt vectors, etc.

Note: Refer to Troubleshooting Procedures (Section 5) for additional information


regarding the Diagnostics Program.

General Description 1-13


1.5 Extensa 900 Series Specifications
General specifications for the Extensa 900 Series Notebooks are provided in Table 1-5.

Table 1-5 Extensa 900 Specifications

Characteristic Model 900 Series Specifications

CPU Pentium P54CSLM, 133 MHz; 3.1 Volt,

Internal Hard Disk Drive

Disk Storage Capacity: 1.35 GB or greater

Average access time: 12 ms or less

Throughput 11+ Million I/O's per second

DRAM Memory
Size 16 MB DRAM, 60-ns, page-interleaved
80 MB
Maximum Expansion Size

Flash ROM: 256 KB

FDD External

Disk Storage Capacity: 1.44 MB

Disk Size 3.5-inch disk

Drive Height 12.5 mm

Mode Choice of 720 KB/1.2 MB or 1.44 MB

CD-ROM Drive Available with Mobile Productivity Base option

LCD Display 12.1-inch DSTN, SVGA or 11.3-inch TFT, SVGA

Software Dual Load

Internal Keyboard 86/87-key, PS/2 and AT-compatible

Embedded Numeric Keypad


Key Travel 3 mm

Built-in Mouse Device Touchpad built-in to the base of the keyboard (select buttons on sides
of Touchpad)

1-14 General Description


Table 1-5 Extensa 900 Specifications

Characteristic Model 900 Series Specifications

Video Subsystem

LCD Aspect Ratio 1-1

Emulations: SVGA

Video Memory Size 1.5 MB

Video Bus: 32-bits

LCD Resolution: 640 x 480 pixels bit-mapped at 256 colors


80
LCD Characters/Line
25
LCD Lines/Screen:
Function hot key brightness and contrast control and SimulSCAN
LCD Brightness Control: control

External CRT Monitor


Interface

Connector Type: 15-Pin, female, D-type connector

Monitors Supported: 640 x 480 with 16.7 million colors on CRT

800 x 600 with 65K colors on CRT

1024 x 768 with up to 256 colors on CRT

General Description 1-15


Table 1-5 Extensa 900 Specifications

Characteristic Model 900 Series Specifications

RS-232-D Serial Port: 9-Pin, male, sub-D-type connector

Method: EIA RS-232-D

Type: Asynchronous transmission

Bits per second: 110, 200, 300, 600, 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600, 19200

Parity: Transmit: Odd, even, mark, space

Receive: Data check: odd, even

Line control: READY/BUSY, DC1/DC3

Data word: 7- or 8-bit

16550 UART Support Yes

Selectable Serial Port COM1(IRQ4, 3F8h)


(BIOS Setup)
COM2(IRQ3, 2F8h)
COM3(IRQ4, 3E8h)
COM4(IRQ4, 2E8h)
Disable

Parallel Port EPP/ECP Bidirectional

Connector Type 25-Pin, DB-25 Connector

Fast I/R Port Yes

Transfer Data Rate 4 Mb/s

Mobile Productivity Yes


Base Ready

1-16 General Description


1.6 Regulatory Agency Approvals
All Extensa 900 Series products meet the following regulatory agency standards:

♦ Underwriter’s Lab (UL) Standard 1950 (safety)


♦ Canadian Standards Association (CSA) Standard 950 or CUL (safety)
♦ FCC CFR 47, Part 15, Subpart B, FCC Level B (Emissions)
♦ Canadian Department of Communications (DOC) ICES, Class B (Emissions)
♦ VDE- EN60950 (Safety)
♦ EN 50082-1 (Immunity: ESD, RFI, EFT, and Surge)
♦ EN 50081-1 (Emissions: RFI, EMI, Harmonics, and Flicker)
♦ Approval Marks: UL, CUL, VDE, FCC, and CE

General Description 1-17


2
Installation
2.1 Introduction
This section contains unpacking and preparation for use instructions for the Extensa
900 Series Notebook Computers. This includes:

♦ Removing the computer and all manuals, options and accessories from the
shipping container(s)

♦ Installing Internal Notebook Options


♦ Installing External Notebook Options
♦ Installing Battery Packs
♦ Installing Desktop Devices
♦ Installing the AC Adapter
♦ Checking Out the System
♦ Installing the System Software
♦ Making Backups of System Software
♦ Loading Application Software

2.2 Unpacking Instructions


Unpack the computer using the following instructions:

1. Carefully cut the tape that seals the top flap of the shipping carton.
2. Remove the computer and the accessories carton from the main shipping
carton.
3. Remove all protective coverings from the computer.
4. Open the accessory box; remove the contents.

Note: Save the two shipping containers and packaging for later reuse.

Installation 2-1
2.3 Installing Internal Notebook Options
If you have no internal options to install at this time, skip to Paragraph 2.4. Otherwise,
continue with Paragraph 2.3.1.

2.3.1 Installing Main Memory Expansion (Optional)


Main memory on the 900 Series Notebooks can be expanded using an EDO Small
Outline Dual Inline Memory Module (EDO soDIMM). These modules are available in
8 MB, 16 MB, 32 MB, and 64 MB sizes and install in the expansion memory slot on
the System Board accessed through the Memory Expansion Door on the bottom of the
notebook. The installation process consists of the following steps:

Caution: The EDO soDIMM module option contains components that are
sensitive to static electricity. When handling the module and the internal
parts of the computer, protect against static electricity by using wrist or
ankle grounding straps and grounded working mats. When moving or
storing items, use the anti-static bags supplied with the items.

1. Ensure that the notebook is powered off and the AC adapter disconnected
from the AC outlet. Also, ensure that all batteries are out of the unit.
2. Disconnect any peripheral device interface cables from the external interface
connectors and remove any installed PCMCIA options.
3. Turn the notebook over and locate the Expansion Memory Access Cover on
the bottom of the notebook.
4. Remove the screw holding the Expansion Memory Access Cover and remove
the cover.
5. Remove the EDO soDIMM module from its shipping container.
6. Refer to Figure 2-1. To install an soDIMM module, first align the connector
edge of the memory module with the key in the connector. Insert the edge of
the memory module board into the connector using a rocking motion to fully
insert the module. Push downward on each side of the memory module until
it snaps in place.
7. Reinstall the Expansion Memory Access Cover using the screw removed in
Step 4.
8. Replace the batteries and AC adapter.
9. Power up the notebook. If all of the installed memory is not recognized, try
reseating the soDIMM module and rebooting.

2-2 Installation
Expansion
Memory
Access
Cover

Inserting
soDIMM
Memory
Module

Figure 2-1 Memory Expansion Removal/Replacement

Note: After installing expansion memory in your notebook, you must run the
PHDISK utility in order for the Save-To-Disk or 0V Suspend functions to operate
correctly.

2.3.2 Setting up the Software

Note: If you are using an operating system other than Windows 95, Windows for
Workgroups, or DOS, you may need to re-partition your hard disk drive to allow
for the additional memory. Check with your system administrator.

Installation 2-3
In Windows 95
Follow these steps if your computer is running Windows 95.

1. From the Taskbar, select Start then Shut Down.


2. Select the Restart the Computer in MS-DOS mode.
3. Click on Yes.
4. Type PHDISK /C /F at the DOS prompt and press Enter.
5. The DOS screen appears and shows the save file name and size. Press any
key to reset the system. The computer will reboot.

In Windows for Workgroups


Follow these steps if your computer is running MS-DOS® and Windows for Workgroups.

1. Close all applications and exit Windows for Workgroups to MS-DOS.


2. At the command prompt (typically C:\) type PHDISK /C /F and press Enter.
This will create a file which can be used to save the contents of your memory
system when you perform a 0V Suspend operation.

2.3.3 Installing PCMCIA Options


The Notebook has two connector slots for PCMCIA option cards. These two slots can be
used to install one Type III or two Type I/II credit card size PCMCIA option cards. You
can install a PCMCIA (PC card) without turning the computer off.

Use the following procedure to install a PCMCIA option:

1. Review the installation instructions supplied with the PCMCIA option card(s).
2. Hold the card at the end opposite the connector pins with the label side up.
Insert the card into an unused slot on the left side of the Notebook.
3. If the option requires external cabling (e.g., modem option), connect external
cabling at this time.

Note: After installation of a PCMCIA option card, Windows 95 displays the New
Hardware Found dialog box to help you configure the new device. To remove a
card, click on the PCMCIA icon; then, press the appropriate PC Card Release
lever (or press both levers for a Type III device) and remove the option.

2-4 Installation
Figure 2-2 Installing PCMCIA Option Cards

Note: When installing a Zoomed Video option card, the card must be installed in
the lower card slot (slot 0 or A). Other option cards can be installed in either card
slot.

2.4 Installing External Notebook Options


2.4.1 Installing the Mobile Productivity Base (Option)
If using the Mobile Productivity Base option, install this accessory now. If not using
the MPB at this time, proceed directly to Paragraph 2.4.2.

2.4.1.1 Docking the Notebook to the MPB


To dock the Notebook Computer into the MPB, use the following procedure:

1. Turn the notebook over and open the expansion door (slide the door toward
the center of the notebook) to expose the docking connector.
2. Slide the lever release latch to the front of the MPB to release the docking
lever (refer to Figure 2-3).

Installation 2-5
3. Swing the Docking Lever outward a full 90 degrees from the side of the MPB.
4. Slide the notebook into the MPB, right side first, as shown in Figure 2-3.
Ensure that the docking guides on both the notebook and the MPB are
securely hooked.
5. Rest the notebook on the MPB. Then press and hold the notebook against
the MPB and swing the Docking Latch inward until the Lever Release Latch
locks.

Open the expansion door Slide release latch on MPB


1 on bottom of notebook 2 forward; swing the docking
level outward 90 degrees

Slide notebook into MPB, Press and hold down


3 right side first; ensure 4 notebook and swing the dock
docking guides are hooked lever in until the release latch
locks

Figure 2-3 Docking the Notebook into the MPB

2.4.1.2 Cabling to the MPB


Refer to Figure 2-4 (MPB Port Assignments) and then connect all desktop devices to the
MPB instead of directly to the notebook as described in Paragraphs 2.4.2 through 2.4.5.

2-6 Installation
Mic
In

Line
In
Line
Out
PS/2
Keyboard Advanced
Port PCI
VGA
PS/2 Serial Port
Mouse Port
Port Parallel
Port

Figure 2-4 MPB Port Assignments

Installation 2-7
Battery Pack

Figure 2-5 MPB Battery Pack Removal/Installation Installation

2.4.2 Installing Ext. Keyboard/Mouse/Numeric Keypad


A PS/2 compatible Keyboard, mouse or an optional PS/2-compatible numeric keypad
may be installed on the notebook via the mouse connector on the left rear port as shown
in Figure 2-6.

Note: Refer to Figure 2-4 for port assignments if using the MPB option.

2-8 Installation
Figure 2-6 PS/2 Port Connections

2.4.3 Installing an External Parallel Printer


The Notebook is equipped with an external, bidirectional, ECC/EPP compatible, 25-pin
parallel printer port. The connector pinouts and connector location are shown in
Figure 2-7.

Note: Refer to Figure 2-4 for port assignments if using the MPB option.

Installation 2-9
PARALLEL PORT PINOUTS

SIGNAL SPP Mode

1 Strobe* STB*
2 Data Bit 0 PD0
3 Data Bit 1 PD1
4 Data Bit 2 PD2
5 Data Bit 3 PD3
6 Data Bit 4 PD4
7 Data Bit 5 PD5
8 Data Bit 6 PD6
9 Data Bit 7 PD7
10 Acknowledge* ACK*
11 Busy BUSY
12 Paper Out PE
13 Select SLCT
Auto Line Feed* AFD*
14
Error* ERR*
15
16 Initialize Printer* INIT*
17 Select In* SLIN*
18 LPT 18 LPT18
19 VCC VCC
20 PLP120 PLP120
PLP121 PLP121
21
PLP122 PLP122
22 FDD 5V FDD 5V
23 FDD 5V FDD 5V
24
LP125 LP125
25
26 Ground Ground

Note: * Denotes
Active Low

Figure 2-7 Parallel Port Pinouts

2.4.4 Installing an External Serial Port Device


The notebook contains an external RS-232 serial port with a 9-pin, male DB-9 connector
as shown in Figure 2-10 (25-pin cables require the use of an adapter for use with the
9-pin port). The serial ports are used to interconnect such devices as:

♦ External Modem
♦ Serial Mouse
♦ Serial Printer

2-10 Installation
♦ Any device that uses an RS-232 interface

Note: Refer to Figure 2-4 for port assignments if using the MPB option.

Caution: Never connect a parallel device to a serial port or a serial device


to a parallel port or video port; this may cause damage to the notebook
and/or external device. If you are uncertain of what type connector the
external device has, refer to the technical manual for the external device.

Figure 2-8 Serial Port Pinouts

2.4.5 Installing an External VGA Monitor


The notebook (and optional MPB) contain an external CRT port that can drive one of
a variety of monitor resolutions and colors as summarized in Section 1. The associated
connector location and pinouts for the notebook are shown in Figure 2-9.

Note: Refer to Figure 2-4 for port assignments if using the MPB option.

Installation 2-11
Figure 2-9 External VGA Pinouts

Use the following procedure to install an external monitor:

1. Turn off power to both the notebook and monitor.


2. Connect the 15-pin external VGA cable from the monitor to the VGA connector
on the notebook computer (Figure 2-9) or MPB (Figure 2-4).
3. Power up the notebook computer first; then, turn on power to the monitor.
4. Setup the notebook display mode for LCD only, simultaneous LCD and CRT
or CRT only (under Windows 95, select the Change Display Utility; under

2-12 Installation
Windows for Workgroups, use the WinMode Utility).
5. Install the correct driver, if required (refer to the Monitor Installation
Instructions supplied by the CRT vendor).

2.5 Primary Battery Pack Installation


1. Turn off the computer and disconnect the AC adapter if attached to the
computer.
2. Unlatch the end locks by pushing the endcaps outward with your thumbs.
3. Align battery connector to connector on notebook and insert the battery pack
into the battery compartment; then push the battery in completely until you
feel the contacts engage.
4. Relatch the battery locks on both ends of the battery.

Unlock Battery Pack

Remove Battery
from Front of Notebook

Flush
If Battery Lock comes off,
reinstall as shown
Slide

Figure 2-10 Notebook Battery Removal/Replacement

2.6 Installing the AC Power Adapter


Use the following procedures to connect the AC adapter to the system:

Caution: Use only the AC adapter supplied with the computer; other
adapters can damage the unit.

Installation 2-13
1. Remove the AC adapter from the packaging. Connect the round coaxial
connector supplied with the notebook to the DC IN power receptacle on the
left rear of the notebook as shown in Figure 2-9.
2. Connect the female side of the AC power cord to the AC adapter and connect
the male end to a grounded AC outlet.

DC-IN Connector

AC Adapter

Figure 2-11 Installing the AC Adapter

2.7 Initial Software Load


After unpacking and setting up the notebook for the first time, you must perform an
initial software load that takes approximately 30 minutes.

Because of the way Windows 95 structures its files, stopping in the middle of the setup
process can cause irreversible file damage.

2-14 Installation
Before starting the initial software load process, ensure that you have the following:

♦ Extensa 900 User’s Guide - Contains latest software installation instructions.


♦ AC Adapter/Access to AC power - Although the battery pack may have some
charge, it may be insufficient for the entire set up. Loss of power during setup
can cause irreversible file damage.

♦ Certificate of Authenticity - You will need to enter the number from your
Windows 95 Certificate of Authenticity during Windows 95 Setup. This
certificate is part of the Windows 95 documentation kit. You need this number
even if you are installing Windows for Workgroups.

♦ Language - During initial setup you choose the following:


- Language for Windows displays
- Language for keyboard installed
♦ Printer type - As part of the Windows setup, you are prompted to choose a
printer. Microsoft® includes the files for many different printers. If you cannot
find your printer in the list, you will need the floppy disk with the printer driver
provided by the printer manufacturer. If you do not want to install a printer at
this time, you can skip this part of the setup. Which operating system to load
♦ Operating System Type - During initial setup you must choose which
operating system to load, either Windows 95 or MS-DOS and Windows for
Workgroups (DOS+WFW). This choice is final. You will not be able to change the
operating system after installation is complete. For most users Windows 95 is
the better choice. You might want to load DOS+WFW under the following
circumstances.
- Your corporation or workgroup may have guidelines that require use of
DOS+WFW. Check with your manager to determine the policy at your
company.
- The software that controls your local area network may not be compatible
with Windows 95. Check with your network administrator to determine
whether Windows 95 is compatible.
- Although most software that is compatible with DOS+WFW is also
compatible with Windows 95, it is possible that the existing software you
are using will not run in Windows 95. If you have a critical software
application that you intend to copy to your new computer, check with
the manufacturer of the software to determine whether your application
is compatible with Windows 95.

2-15 Installation
3
Operating Instructions
3.1 Introduction
This section contains a summary of notebook operating procedures useful for
maintenance operations. For additional detail, refer to the Extensa 900 Series Notebook
Computer User’s Guide supplied with the notebook.

3.2 Controls/Indicators
The operating controls and indicators for the 900 Series Notebooks are shown in Figure
3-1 and briefly described in the following paragraphs.

Disk Media
Battery Charging
Standby Mode
Pwr/Batt Low
Caps Lock
Num Lock
Power
Switch

Figure 3-1 Operating Controls and Indicators

Operating Instructions 3-1


3.2.1 Power On/Off Switch
The notebook contains an alternate action power switch located center of the notebook
near the status indicators as shown in Figure 3-1. The first time you press the power
switch, power is turned on to the notebook. The next time you press the power switch,
power is turned off.

3.2.2 Notebook LEDs


The notebook contains the following LED Indicators:

♦ Disk Media Indicator


♦ Battery Charging Indicator
♦ Standby Mode Indicator
♦ Power On/ Battery Low (Blinking) Indicator
♦ Caps Lock Indicator
♦ Num Lock Indicator

3.2.3 LED Icons


Table 3-1 contains a listing and description of Extensa LED Icons:

Table 3-1 LED Icon Descriptions

Icon Description

Disk Media Indicator


Lights when the computer writes to or reads from the floppy disk drive,
or reads from the CD-ROM drive.

Battery Charging Indicator


Lights when a powered AC adapter connected to the computer is
charging the battery.
Flashes when there is a problem with the battery or the battery is not
recognized by the smart charger.
Turns off when there is no battery or the battery is fully charged.

3-2 Operating Instructions


Table 3-1 LED Icon Descriptions

Icon Description

Standby Mode Indicator


Lights when the computer is in Standby mode. Flashes when the
computer is in the 5V Suspend mode.
The computer enters Standby Mode if the Standby hot key (Fn+F4) is
pressed or the Standby Timeout parameter in Setup is enabled and
expires.
The computer enters 5V Suspend Mode if the Suspend hot key
(Fn+F3) is pressed or the 5V Suspend Timeout parameter in Setup
is enabled and expires or the display is closed.

Power/Battery-low Indicator
Lights when the computer is on and there is power to the computer.
Flashes when the battery power is low. Connect a powered AC
adapter to the computer as soon as possible.

Caps Lock Indicator


Lights when the caps lock function is toggled ON using the Caps Lock
Key.

Num Lock Indicator


Lights when the embedded numeric keypad is toggled ON using the
Num Lock hot key (Fn+F7). Refer to Using the Internal Numeric
A Keypad section in the Extensa 900 Series User’s Guide for further
details.

3.2.4 Keyboard Hot Key Sequences


Table 3-2 contains a summary of keyboard hot key sequences useful when performing
maintenance operations.

Table 3-2 Summary of Notebook Hot Key Sequences

Function Key Sequence


CMOS Setup Fn+F1

Enter 0V Suspend Mode Fn+F2

5 Volt Suspend Fn+F3

Enter Standby Mode Fn+F4

Resume from Standby Mode Press any key

Scroll Lock Fn+F6

Numeric Lock Fn+F7

Turn off the LCD backlight Fn+F11

Turn on the LCD backlight Press any key

Operating Instructions 3-3


Table 3-2 Summary of Notebook Hot Key Sequences

Function Key Sequence


Alternate between display modes (LCD, Ext.l CRT or both) Fn+F12

Decrease LCD screen brightness Fn+Down Arrow

Increase LCD screen brightness Fn+Up Arrow

Lighten LCD screen contrast Fn+Right Arrow

Darken the LCD screen contrast Fn+Left Arrow

Exit 0V Suspend Mode Press Power switch

Toggle speaker output on/off Fn+End

Stop a command or application Ctrl+Pause

Resume a command or application Press any key

Send the contents of the screen to the printer Shift+PrtSc

Sets the notebook to echo keystrokes to the printer; prints a line when Ctrl+P
you press Enter; continues until you press Ctrl+P

Enable/disable the internal keypad Fn+T

Warm boot Ctrl+Alt+Del

Start Windows logo key

Display the application’s context menu Application key

Table 3-3 Hot Keys Available on Attached External keyboard

Function Key Sequence


System Setup Ctrl+Alt+F1

0V Suspend Ctrl+Alt+F2

5V Suspend Ctrl+Alt+F3

LCD/CRT Toggle Ctrl+Alt+F12

Speaker Toggle Ctrl+Alt+S

3-4 Operating Instructions


3.2.4.1 Windows 95 Special Keys
Pressing the Windows Logo Key acts as the Start button. Pressing this key in
combination with other keys performs special functions. Table 3-4 contains several
examples of using the Windows 95 special keys.

Table 3-4 Windows 95 Special Keys

Hot Key Function


Windows Logo Key+Tab Activates next Taskbar button

Windows Logo Key+E Explore my Computer

Windows Logo Key+F Find Document

Windows Logo Key+M Minimize All

Windows Logo Key+R Display Run dialog box

Pressing the Application Key displays the context menu for an application. This is the
same as clicking the secondary (right) mouse button.

Please refer to your Windows 95 manual for more information on these Windows 95-
specific keys and their functions.

3.2.4.2 DOS Special Keys


Table 3-5 contains a list of the DOS special keys.

Table 3-5 DOS Special Keys

Hot Key Function

Ctrl+Pause Stops a command or application; primarily used


to stop the screen from scrolling; pressing any
other key resumes the execution of the command
or application.

Shift+Prt Sc Sends the contents of the screen to the printer


port; prints only text characters unless you have
run the Graphics.com utility to enable printing
graphics.

Ctrl+Break Terminates the current command or application.

Ctrl+P Sets the computer to echo keystrokes to the


printer; prints a line when you press Enter;
continues until you press Ctrl-P again.

Ctrl+Alt+Del Terminates all programs, reloads MS-DOS and


executes the Autoexec file; also called the “warm
start” or “warm boot”.

Operating Instructions 3-5


3.3 Configuring the Touchpad
You can personalize the control of the touchpad by configuring various settings using
the Synaptics® Touchpad utility. Configure the touchpad using the Mouse utility located
in the Control Panel Window. Follow these steps to configure the Touchpad:

In Windows 95
1. Select the Start button, then select Settings.
2. Select Control Panel to display the Control Panel window.
3. Double-click on the Synaptics Touchpad icon.
4. Select the touchpad tab to customize the touchpad to your preference.
5. Click on Enhancements to bring up additional features and to get to the
online help for the Synaptics Touchpad drivers.

In Windows for Workgroups


1. From the Program Manager double-click on the Main program group.
2. Double-click on the Control Panel icon.
3. Double-click on the Synaptics Touchpad icon.
4. Select the touchpad tab to customize the touchpad to your preference.
5. Click on Help for the Synaptics Touchpad drivers online documentation.

3.4 Using a CD-ROM Drive (MPB Option Only)


An optional CD-ROM drive installed in the modular bay of a docked Mobile Productivity
Base option provides fast access to text, programs, graphics, sound, animation and
video on a standard CD. (With an optional MPEG PC Card installed, you can play back
approximately 75 minutes of MPEG1-compressed, full-motion video from a CD.)

3.4.1 Inserting a CD (MPB Option Only)


1. With the system powered up, press the eject button on the front of the
CD-ROM drive to eject the disc tray.
2. Slide out the disc tray.
3. Place the CD, label side up, in the depression on the disc tray.
4. Slide the disc tray into the drive.

3.4.2 Handling CDs (MPB Option Only)


Follow these guidelines to avoid damaging your CDs:

♦ When removing a CD from its protective case or loading a CD into a drive, hold
the CD by its central hole and outer edge. Never touch the data surface (non-
label side).

3-6 Operating Instructions


♦ To protect the CD against scratches and dirt when not in use, keep the CD in
its protective case.

♦ Clean a CD with a clean, dry, lint-free cloth. Always wipe from the center to
the edge. Don’t wipe the CD in a clockwise or counterclockwise direction.

♦ Keep CDs away from high temperatures and direct sunlight.

3.5 Built-In Sound System


The Extensa 900 Series Notebook comes with an internal microphone and stereo
speakers. These features give direct sound generation and recording capability in the
system.

3.5.1 Turning Sound On/Off


To mute or restore sound, press the following keys:

♦ Fn+PgUp: Turns mute On/Off

3.5.2 Sound Software


The computer has pre-installed sound support utilities in the AudioRack32 group.
These include:

♦ AudioRack™32
♦ Audio Recorder

Operating Instructions 3-7


3.5.3 External Sound Equipment
You can improve the quality of sound production and increase convenience by
connecting external sound equipment.

The computer has the following jacks for connecting to external sound equipment:

♦ Microphone Input
♦ Stereo Headphone/Speaker Line Output
♦ Stereo Line Input

3.6 Using Remote Connections


The computer can send and receive e-mail, surf the Internet, connect to one of the
online services or share files with other office employees.

The Extensa communicates with the outside world in one of the following ways:

♦ Over a telephone line using a PC Card modem installed in the computer


♦ Over a network using a network adapter

Note: You can purchase compatible modems and network adapters from your
dealer or directly from Texas Instruments.

3.6.1 Using the Fast Infrared (FIR) Port


The FIR port, located on the rear of the computer, offers wireless communication with
other Texas Instruments notebook computers or a variety of IRDA™-compliant devices.
Without a physical connection, you can print remotely, transfer files between
computers, use a remote mouse during a presentation or receive information from a
PDA or pocket organizer. To transfer a file follow these steps:

Align the FIR ports of the two devices making sure that the distance separating them
is between six inches and three feet (one meter).

After the devices are aligned, use the TranXit™ software, located in the TranXit group,
to complete the communication process. (For further information, refer to the online
TranXit Quick Reference Guide.)

3-8 Operating Instructions


3.7 Using Zoomed Video Features
Your computer supports Zoomed Video (ZV) PC Cards through the PC Card slots. ZV
PC Cards connect to the internal ZV port, allowing advanced multimedia capabilities
such as video conferencing and on-screen television at full, smooth motion. The Zoomed
Video port adds a dedicated video bus that provides a direct link between a PC Card
and the VGA accelerator or audio DAC. This “detour” lets video and audio data bypass
the PCI bus, reducing bandwidth impositions and improving system performance for
more fluid audio and video.

3.7.1 MPEG PC Card


The optional MPEG PC Card uses the Zoomed Video port built into the computer to
display MPEG video and audio on the computer. The MPEG card features MPEG-1
video playback with 16.7 million colors, MPEG-1 audio layers I and II, is MPC3
compliant and Windows 95 Plug and Play. With this option you can run full-motion
video, combined with digital audio, graphics, text and data, enabling you to create far
more effective presentations or play the most advanced video games.

3.8 Battery Saving Tips


There are a number of actions you can take to reduce the rate at which your computer
depletes the battery. By taking some or all of these actions, you can substantially
increase the time you can operate on battery power before recharging the battery:

♦ Reducing screen brightness — Although the screen controller uses new


technology to increase brightness without increasing energy consumption, the
screen is still the largest single consumer of the battery charge. Reducing the
brightness to the lowest acceptable level increases battery life. To reduce the
brightness, press Fn+↓.

♦ Caching the hard disk drive -— By caching the hard disk drive, you can reduce
the length of time the hard disk drive is rotating and using energy. Both
Windows 95 and Windows for Workgroups use a disk-caching program by
default. As long as you have not disabled these programs, you can take
advantage of the battery savings.

3.8.1 Lowering Inactivity Timeouts


Inactivity timeouts turn off devices in the computer when you are not using them.
Lowering the inactivity timeouts shortens the period of time the computer waits before
turning off the device.

Operating Instructions 3-9


3.8.2 Suspending Operation While Idle
Although the computer goes into Suspend mode automatically after a defined period of
inactivity, you can reduce energy consumption even further by pressing either Fn+F3
(Suspend) or Fn+F4 (Standby) as soon as you no longer need the computer to be active.

♦ Pressing Fn+F4 (Standby) turns off the screen.


♦ Pressing Fn+F3 (Suspend) turns off the screen, stops the hard disk drive, and
reduces energy usage to the lowest level possible without turning off the
computer.

♦ Pressing the Shift key resumes activity after the notebook has been in either
the Suspend or Standby modes.

3.8.3 Responding to a Low Battery Condition


When you are operating the computer on battery power and the charge remaining is
down to between 10% and 20%, the battery-low indicator blinks and an audible alarm
sounds. When this happens you should take the following actions to conserve battery
power and reduce the possibility of data loss.

♦ Saving files — Save all open files frequently while the computer is in a
low-battery condition.

♦ Turning off the alarm — Turn off the audible alarm by pressing Fn+End
(Mute).

♦ Reducing screen brightness — Reduce screen brightness by pressing Fn+↓.

♦ Connecting the AC adapter — If you have access to AC power, connect the


computer to the AC adapter. You can do this without turning off the computer.

♦ Suspending operations — Press Fn+F3 or Fn+F4 to put the computer into


Suspend or Standby mode whenever you are not actively using the computer.
Press the Shift key to bring the computer out of Suspend or Standby mode.

3-10 Operating Instructions


3.8.4 Replacing the battery
If you have a spare, charged battery, you can do one of the following.

♦ Insert a secondary battery into the MPB option (if installed).


♦ If you already have a battery in a docked MPB, you can replace the primary
battery without turning off the computer.

♦ If you cannot insert the spare battery, suspend operations to disk by pressing
Fn+F2 and replace the battery. When you turn on the computer, the computer
returns to the saved state.

3.8.5 Saving to Disk


When the battery power becomes critically low (less than 5% charge remaining), the
computer saves the current state of the computer to disk and turns off. When you turn
the computer on again, the computer restores the state that was saved to disk.

Operating Instructions 3-11


4
Theory of Operation
4.1 Introduction
This section contains a general block diagram theory of operation description of the
Extensa 900 Series Notebook Computers.

Note: Various internal components may change on future models and


busses/bus speeds are subject to change.

4.2 Notebook Functional Overview


The Extensa 900 Series Notebooks consist of eight major functions or sections
including:

♦ System Processor — implemented on the Main Board Assembly


♦ Memory Subsystem — implemented on the Main Board Assembly
♦ I/O Subsystem — implemented on the Main Board Board
♦ Keyboard Subsystem — implemented on the Main Board Assembly and the
Keyboard Assembly

♦ Video Subsystem — implemented on the Main Board and LCD Display Panel
assemblies

♦ Sound Subsystem — implemented on the Main Board Assembly


♦ Touchpad Mouse Subsystem — implemented on the Touchpad assembly and
on the Main Board Assembly

♦ Hard Disk Drive Subsystem — implemented on the Main Board Assembly and
the Hard Disk Drive Assembly

♦ Floppy Disk Drive Subsystem — implemented on the Main Board Board and
Floppy Disk Drive Assembly

♦ PCMCIA Controller and Sockets — implemented on the PCMCIA Module and


on the Main Board

♦ Power Subsystem — implemented on the Main Board, the battery pack, and
the AC adapter

Theory of Operation 4-1


586
CPU

CPU Bus

DRAM
SRAM M1521 MPB
BGA Graphic
controller

PCI Bus

IDE Master
M1523
CD HDD

ISA Bus

Figure 4-1 Extensa Functional Block Diagram

4-2 Theory of Operation


4.2.1 System Processor
The System Processor function for the notebook is implemented on the Main Board in
the form of an Intel Pentium P54-C Superscalar 586 Processor Chip. The processor
operates in conjunction with RAM and ROM Memory and other control logic to process
software instructions (BIOS, DOS, Windows, and applications). The processor
communicates with the hard disk drive and the memory components using high speed
busses.

The Processor also interacts with other hardware logic to provide the power savings
features for the notebook. These features include controlling CPU clock speeds,
reducing clock speeds whenever possible, e.g., when performing floppy disk drive
accesses, powering down unused devices, etc. A detailed block diagram of the Extensa
900 Series Notebook is shown in Figure 4-2.

The IRQ assignments for the 900 Series Notebooks is provided in Table 4-1.

Table 4-1 Interrupt Channel map

Priority Interrupt Number Interrupt Source


1 SMI Power management unit
2 NMI Parity error detected, I/O channel error
3 IRQ 0 Interval timer, counter 0 output
4 IRQ 1 Keyboard
IRQ 2 Interrupt from controller 2 (cascade)
5 IRQ 8 Real-time clock
6 IRQ 9 Cascaded to INT 0AH (IRQ 2)
7 IRQ 10 Audio (option) / PCMCIA
8 IRQ 11 Audio (option) / PCMCIA
9 IRQ 12 PS/2 mouse
10 IRQ 13 INT from coprocessor
11 IRQ 14 Hard disk controller
12 IRQ 15 CD-ROM controller
13 IRQ 3 Serial port 2, 4
14 IRQ 4 Serial port 1, 3
15 IRQ 5 Parallel port 1 / audio (option)
16 IRQ 6 Diskette controller
17 IRQ 7 Parallel port 2 / audio (option)

NOTE: A PCMCIA card can use IRQ 3, 4, 5, 7, 9 and 11 as long as


it does not conflict with the interrupt address of any other device.

Theory of Operation 4-3


Notebook MPB
$CPU_A(31:3)
$CPU_D(63:0)
$CPU_D(63:0) $MD(63:0) Advanced
$CPU_D(63:0) PCI Card
CPU $MA(11:0) M1521

4-4 Theory of Operation


$CPU_A(31:3) L2 CACHE

$CPU_A(17:3) AD(31:0)
16MB AD(31:0) Y(7:0)
DIMM*1
PCI BUS HOST BUS RAM UV(7:0)

AD(31:0) AD(31:0) AD(31:0)


AD(31:0) AD(31:0)

VIDEO
RAM

M1523 PCI1130 65550/S3 PCI0643


PCI0643
Y(7:0)
SA(16:0),LA(23:17)
UV(7:0)
SD(15:0)
BIOS

PCMCIA CRT LCD HDD

ISA BUS
CD-ROM
SA(11:0) SA2 SD(15:0) SA(9:0)
SD(15:0) SA(9:0) SD(15:0)
SD(15:0)

RDATA#,WDATA#
FDD
ESS1878S M38813 M6377 87338
MEDIA BAY

Figure 4-2 Detailed System Block Diagram


INTERNAL TOUCH PARALLEL SERIAL SERIAL PARALLEL
PS2 PORT FIR PORT
KB PAD PORT PORT
4.2.2 Memory Subsystem
The memory subsystem comprises the following components:

♦ Main memory
♦ L2 Secondary Memory (cache)
♦ Flash ROM
The Extensa Series uses fast Extended Data Out (EDO) DRAM for main and video
memory and high-speed synchronous, pipelined burst SRAM for L2 cache memory.
Main BIOS and Video BIOS are stored in Flash ROM.

The Extensa 900 Series Memory Address Map is shown in Table 4-2.

Table 4-2 Memory Address Map

Address Range Definition Function


000000 - 09FFFF 640 KB memory Base memory
0A0000 - 0BFFFF 128 KB video RAM Reserved for graphics display buffer
0C0000 - 0CBFFF Video BIOS Video BIOS
0E0000 - 0EFFFF 128 KB system BIOS System BIOS
0F0000 - 0FFFFF System BIOS
100000 - FFFFFF Extended memory Onboard memory
FE0000 - FFFFFF 256 KB system ROM Duplicate of code assignment at 0E0000-0FFFFF

The DMA Channel Map is listed in Table 4-3.

Table 4-3 DMA Channel Map


Controller Channel Address Function
1 0 0087 Audio (option)
1 1 0083 ECP/FIR/Audio
1 2 0081 Diskette
1 3 0082 ECP/FIR/Audio
2 4 Cascade Cascade
2 5 008B Spare
2 6 0089 Spare
2 7 008A Spare

4.2.2.1 Main Memory


The standard 900 Series notebook comes with 16 MB of Main memory installed on the
Main Board. Memory expansion accommodations are provided via a standard soDIMM
connector on the bottom of the Main Board Assembly. By installing a 64 MB soDIMM
module, the basic memory size can be expanded to a maximum of 80 MB.

Theory of Operation 4-5


4.2.2.2 Flash ROM
All versions of the Extensa notebook family use a "Flash" ROM that contains both the
main system BIOS and the VGA BIOS. The Flash ROM contains "Boot Block" logic that
allows downloading new versions of BIOS without destroying the Boot Load area.

The Flash ROM execution is 8 bits wide. However, better performance can be attained
by enabling the Shadow ROM in the CMOS setup routine or by selecting the Windows
Control Panel Applet. When the Shadow ROM is enabled, BIOS is copied into a 32-bit,
high-speed system.

4.2.3 System Controller Function


The Extensa 900 Series notebook design uses two chips, the ALI M1521 (memory, Cache
and DRAM Controller for the Pentium System and the M1523 (PCI to ISA Bridge chip)
combine to provide the 586 system controller function for the new multimedia/
multithreading operating system, Windows 95.

The notebook utilizes the BGA package to improve the AC characterization, resolves
system bottleneck and make the system manufacturing easier. The system architecture
includes the UMA, ECC, PBSRAM, SDRAM/BEDO, and multi-bus with highly efficient,
deep FIFO between the buses, such as the HOST/PCI/ISA dedicated IDE bus.

The I/O Address Map for the 900 Series Notebook is provided in Table 4-4.

4-6 Theory of Operation


Table 4-4 I/O Address Map

Address Range Device


000 - 00F DMA controller-1
020 - 021 Interrupt controller-1
022 - 023 M1523 registers
040 - 043 Timer 1
048 - 04B Timer 2
060 - 06E Keyboard controller
070 - 071 Real-time clock and NMI mask
080 - 08F DMA page register
0A0 - 0A1 Interrupt controller-2
0C0 - 0DF DMA controller-2
178 - 17A 6377 registers
1F0 - 1F7 Hard disk select
170 - 177 CD-ROM
3F6, 3F7
220 - 22F Audio (option)
240 - 24F Audio (option) - default
260 - 26F Audio (option)
280 - 28F Audio (option)
278 - 27F Parallel port 1
2E8 - 2EF COM 4
2F8 - 2FF COM 2
378 - 37A Parallel port 2
3B4, 3B5, 3BA Video subsystem
3C0 - 3C5
3C6 - 3C9 Video DAC
3C0 - 3CF Enhanced graphics display
3D0 - 3DF Color graphics adapter
3E0 - 3E1 PCMCIA controller
3E8 - 3EF COM3
3F0 - 3F7 Floppy disk controller
3F8 - 3FF COM 1
CF8 - CFF PCI configuration register

Theory of Operation 4-7


4.2.3.1 ALI M1521 (Memory, Cache and DRAM Controller)
The M1521 provides the system controller and data path components for the Extensa
900 Pentium-based system. It provides 64-bit CPU bus interface, 32-bit PCI bus
interface, 64/72 DRAM data bus with ECC or parity, secondary cache interface
including pipeline burst SRAM or asynchronous SRAM, PCI master to DRAM interface,
four PCI master arbiters, and a UMA arbiter. The M1521 bus interfaces are designed
to interface with 3V and 5V buses. It directly connects to 3V CPU bus, 3V or 5V tag,
3V or 5V DRAM bus, and 5V PCI bus.

4.2.3.1.1 Features of the ALI M1521


♦ Supports all Intel/Cyrix®/AMD 586-class processors (with host bus of 66 MHz,
60 MHz and 50 MHz at 3V)

♦ Supports M1/K5/Dakota™ CPUs


♦ Supports linear wrap mode for M1
♦ Supports asynchronous/pipeline-burst SRAM
♦ Write-back/dynamic write-back cache policy
♦ Built-in 8K* 2-bit SRAM for MESI protocol to cost and enhance performance
♦ Cacheable memory up to 512 MB with 11-bit tag SRAM
♦ Supports 3V/5V SRAMs for tag address
♦ Supports FPM/EDO/BEDO/SDRAM DRAMs
♦ RAS lines
♦ 64-bit data path to memory
♦ Symmetrical/asymmetrical DRAMs
♦ 3V or 5V DRAMs
♦ Duplicated MA[1:0] driving pins for burst access
♦ No buffer needed for RASJ and CASJ and MA[1:0]
♦ CBR and RAS-only refresh
♦ Supports 64M-bit (16M* 4, 8M* 8, 4M*16) technology DRAMs
♦ Supports programmable-strength MA buffer
♦ Supports error checking and correction (ECC) and parity for DRAM

4-8 Theory of Operation


♦ Supports the most flexible six 32-bit populated banks of DRAM (to spare
12 MB for Windows 95)

♦ Supports SIMM and DIMM


♦ UMA (unified memory architecture)
♦ Dedicated UMA arbiter pins
♦ Supports several protocols from major graphics vendors
♦ SFB size : 512 KB/1 MB/2 MB/3 MB/4 MB
♦ CPU could access frame buffer memory through system memory controller
♦ Alias address for frame buffer memory
♦ Fully synchronous 25/30/33 MHz 5V PCI interface
♦ PCI bus arbiter: five PCI masters and M1523 supported
♦ DWORDs for CPU-to-PCI Memory write posted buffers
♦ Convert back-to-back CPU to PCI memory write to PCI burst cycle
♦ DWORDS for PCI-to-DRAM write-posted/Read-prefetching buffers
♦ PCI-to-DRAM up to 133 MB/sec bandwidth (even when L1/L2 write-back)
♦ L1/L2 pipelined snoop ahead for PCI-to-DRAM cycle
♦ Supports PCI mechanism #1 only
♦ PCI spec. 2.1 support (N(16/8)+8 rule, passive release, fair arbitration)
♦ Enhanced performance for memory-read-line, memory-read-multiple, and
memory-write-multiple

♦ Invalidates PCI commands


♦ DRAM refresh during 5V system suspend
♦ I/O leakage stopper for power saving during system suspend
4.2.3.2 ALI M1523 (PCI-ISA Bridge)
The M1523 provides a bridge between the PCI bus and the ISA bus and ensures full
compatibility between the PCI and ISA functions. The M1523 has an Integrated System
Peripherals (ISP) chip that provides advanced DMA controller features. This chip
contains the keyboard controller, real time clock and IDE master controller. This chip
also supports the Advanced Programmable Interrupt controller (APIC) interface.

Theory of Operation 4-9


One eight-byte bidirectional line buffer is provided for ISA/DMA master memory read/
writes. One 32-bit wide posted-write buffer is provided for PCI memory write cycles to
the ISA bus. It also supports a PCI to ISA IRQ routing table and level-to-edge trigger
transfer.

The chip has two extra IRQ lines and one programmable chip select for motherboard
Plug-and-Play functions. The interrupt lines can be routed to any of the available ISA
interrupts.

The on-chip IDE controller supports two IDE connectors for up to four IDE devices
providing an interface for IDE hard disks and CD-ROMs. The ATA bus pins are dedicated
to improve the performance of IDE master.

The M1523 supports the Super Green feature for Intel and Intel compatible CPUs. It
implements programmable hardware events, software event and external switches (for
suspend/turbo/ring-in). The M1523 provides CPU clock control (STPCLKJ). The
STPCLKJ can be active (low) or inactive (high) in turn by throttling control.

4.2.3.2.1 M1523 Features Summary


♦ Provides a bridge between the PCI bus and ISA bus
♦ PCI interface
♦ Supports PCI master and slave interface
♦ Supports PCI master and slave initiated termination
♦ PCI spec. 2.1 compliant (delay transaction support)
♦ Buffers
♦ 8-byte bidirectional line buffers for DMA/ISA memory read/write cycles to PCI
bus

♦ 32-bit posted-write buffer for PCI memory write and I/O data write (for sound
card) to ISA bus

♦ Provides steerable PCI interrupts for PnP PCI devices


♦ Up to eight PCI interrupts routing
♦ Level-to-edge trigger transfer
♦ Enhanced DMA controller
♦ Provides seven programmable channels (four for 8-bit data size, three for
16-bit data size)

♦ 32-bit addressability
♦ Provides compatible DMA transfers

4-10 Theory of Operation


♦ Provides type F transfers
♦ Interrupt controller
♦ Provides 14 interrupt channels
♦ Independently programmable level/edge triggered channels
♦ Counter/Timers
♦ Provides 8254 compatible timers for system timer, refresh request, speaker
output use

♦ Keyboard controller
♦ Built-in PS2/AT keyboard controller
♦ The specific I/O is used to save the external TTL buffer
♦ Real time clock
♦ Built-in real time clock
♦ 128-byte CMOS RAM with 2
♦ Plug-and-Play port support
♦ Programmable chip select
♦ Steerable interrupt request lines
♦ PMU interface
♦ Supports CPU SMM mode, SMI feature
♦ Supports programmable stop clock throttle
♦ Supports the APM control
♦ Provides external suspend mode switch/turbo switch/ring-in switch
♦ Provides four system states for power saving (on, doze, standby, suspend)
♦ Provides three timers from 1 second to 300 minutes to individually monitor
VGA, MODE, IN status

♦ Supports RTC alarm wake up control


♦ IDE interface
♦ Built-in PCI IDE master controller

Theory of Operation 4-11


♦ Supports PIO modes up to mode 5 timings, and multiword DMA mode 0, 1, 2
♦ 8 x 32-bit pre-read and posted-write buffers
♦ Dedicated pins for ATA interface
♦ Supports up to 256 KB ROM size decode
♦ Reserved USB interface
♦ 208-pin PQFP package

4.2.4 Video Subsystem


The video subsystem is implemented on the VGA Video Board and on the Main Board
Assemblies.

The notebook contains a built-in LCD and features simultaneous LCD and external
VGA display.

The video subsystem includes a 1.5 MB DRAM memory, 32-bit DRAM bus, and separate
display and memory clocks. An additional frame buffer/accelerator DRAM increases
the available memory band width for CPU accesses. The video section also uses
additional levels of write FIFOs, a read cache, page mode DRAM.

Control of the video subsystem is provided by the C&T 65550 High Performance Flat
Panel/CRT VGA Controller chip. The C&T65550 multimedia flat panel/CRT GUI
accelerators provide 64-bit high performance and new hardware multimedia support
features as described in the following paragraphs.

4.2.4.1 C&T 65550 Features


The C&T65550 integrates a powerful 64-bit graphics accelerator engine for Bit Block
Transfer (BitBLT), hardware cursor, and other functions intensively used in graphical
User Interfaces (GUls) such as Microsoft Windows. Superior performance is also
achieved through a direct 32-bit interface to the PCI Local Bus.

4.2.4.1.1 Hardware MultiMedia Support


The C&T65550 implements independent multimedia capture (and display systems) on-
chip. The capture system places data in display memory (usually off screen) and the
display system places it in a window on the screen.

The capture system can receive data from either the system bus or from the ZV enabled
video port in either RGB or YUV format. The input data can also scaled down before
storage in display memory (e.g., from any size larger than 320 x 240 down to
352 x 248). Capture of input data may also be double-buffered for smoothing and to
prevent image tearing.

The display system can independently place either RGB or YUV data from anywhere in
display memory into an on-screen window which can be any size and located at any

4-12 Theory of Operation


pixel boundary (YUV data is converted to RGB "on-the-fly" on output). Non-rectangular
windows are supported via color keying. The data can be functionally zoomed on output
up to 8x to fit the onscreen window and can be horizontally and vertically interpolated
to scale or zoom artifacts. Interlaced and non-interlaced data are supported in both
capture and display systems.

4.2.4.2 Versatile Panel Support


The C&T65550 supports a wide variety of monochrome and color Single-Panel,
Single-Drive (SS) and Dual-Panel, Dual Drive (DD) standard and high-resolution passive
STN and active matrix TFT/MIM LCD, and EL panels. For monochrome panels, up to
64 gray scales are supported. Up to 4096 different colors can be displayed on passive
STN LCDs and up to 16M colors on 24-bit active matrix LCDs. The C&T65550 offers a
variety of programmable features to optimize display quality. Vertical centering and
stretching are provided for handling modes with less than 480 lines on 480-line panels.
Horizontal and vertical stretching capabilities are also available for both text and
graphics modes for optimal display of VGA text and graphics modes on 800 x 600 and
1024 x 768 panels. Three selectable color-to-gray scale reduction techniques and
SMARTMAP© are available for improving the ability to view color applications on
monochrome panels. CHIPS®' polynomial FRC algorithm reduces panel flicker on a
wider range of panel types with a single setting for a particular panel type.

4.2.4.3 Low Power Consumption


The C&T65550 employs a variety of advanced power management features to reduce
power consumption of the display sub-system and extend battery life. Although
optimized for 3.3V operation, the C&T65550 controller's internal logic, memory
interface, bus interface, and panel interfaces can he independently configured to
operate at either 3.3V or 5V.

4.2.4.4 Software Compatibility/Flexibility


The C&T65550 are fully compatible with VGA at the register and BIOS levels. CHIPS
and third-party vendors supply fully VGA-compatible BIOS, end-user utilities and
drivers for common application programs.

4.2.5 Sound Subsystem


The Extensa Series Notebook is equipped with an ESS1878 sound chip that is Sound
BlasterTM and Sound Blaster Pro compatible. Internal stereo speakers provide the
Notebook with sound generation capabilities. A set of 3.5 mm connectors allow for
external microphone and line inputs and headphone/speaker outputs.

The sound subsystem also includes a variety of sound utilities that combine to provide
additional multi-media functions.

4.2.5.1 ESS1878 Audio Controller with Interface to Expansion


Audio Mixer
The ES1878 is a member of the ESS family of audio controllers that includes the
ES1868. It shares most of the features of the ES1868 and includes new features, such

Theory of Operation 4-13


as support for the expansion audio mixer chip, the ES978, and a new IIS serial port
and stereo D/A converter. A 4-wire expansion analog bus and 2-wire serial control bus
connect the ES1878 and the ES978.

4.2.5.2 ES1878 Features


♦ Hot-dock interface to expansion audio mixer (ES978)
♦ Plug-and-Play support using internal resource ROM
♦ Monophonic full-duplex using two DMA channels
♦ Self-timed joystick port ("digital joystick")
♦ Support for up to 7 general purpose outputs and 7 general purpose inputs that
can be slaved with corresponding pins of ES978 in expansion unit

♦ IIS interface to intemal stereo D/A for external ZV port or MPEG audio
♦ Completely general interrupt mapping, including sharing all interrupts

4.2.6 Keyboard Subsystem


The keyboard subsystem, implemented on the Keyboard Assembly and the Main Board
Assemblies Board, consists of the following major sections:

♦ Keyboard Assembly
♦ Keyboard Scanner
♦ Status LED Interface

4.2.7 I/O Subsystem


The I/O subsystem is implemented with an NS87338VJG Super I/O Controller and the
associated peripherals.

4.2.7.1 NS87338VJG Super I/O Controller


The PC87338VJG is a single chip solution for most commonly used I/O peripherals in
ISA, and EISA based computers. It incorporates a Floppy Disk Controller (FDC), two
full featured UARTs, and an IEEE 1284-compatible parallel port Standard PC-AT
address decoding for all the peripherals and a set of configuration registers are also
implemented in this highly integrated member of the Super I/O family. Advanced power
management features, mixed voltage operation and integrated Serial-lnfrared (both
IrDA and Sharp) support makes the PC87338 an ideal choice for low-power and/or
portable personal computer applications.

The PC87338 FDC uses a high performance digital data separator eliminating the need
for any external filter components. It is fully compatible with the PC8477 and
incorporates a superset of DP8473, NEC PD765 and N82077 floppy disk controller

4-14 Theory of Operation


functions. All popular 5.25-inch and 3.5-inch floppy disk drives, including the 2.88 MB,
3.5-inch floppy disk drive, are supported. In addition, automatic media sense and
2 Mbps tape drive support are provided by the FDC.

The two UARTs are fully NS16450 and NS16550 compatible. Both ports support MIDI
baud rates and one port also supports IrDA 1.0 SIR (with data rate of 115.2 Kbps), IrDA
1.1 MIR and FIR (with data rate of 1.152 Mbps and 4.0 Mbps respectively), and Sharp
SIR (with data rate of 38.4 Kbps respectively) compliant signaling protocol.

The parallel port is fully IEEE 1284 level 2 compatible. The SPP (Standard Parallel Port)
is fully compatible with ISA and EISA parallel ports. In addition to the SPP, EPP
(Enhanced Parallel Port) and ECP (Extended Capabilities Port) modes are supported by
the parallel port.

A set of configuration registers are provided to control the Plug and Play and other
various functions of the PC87338. These registers are accessed using two 8-bit wide
index and data registers. The ISA I/O address of the register pair can be relocated using
a power-up strapping option and the software configuration after power-up.

When idle, advanced power management features allows the PC87338 to enter
extremely low power modes under software control. The PC87338 operates at a 3.3/5V
power supply.

4.2.7.1.1 PC87338 Features


♦ 100% compatible with ISA, and EISA architectures
♦ Floppy Disk Controller
♦ Software compatible with the DP8473, the 765A and the N82077
♦ 16-byte FlFO (disabled by default)
♦ Burst and Non-Burst modes
♦ Perpendicular Recording drive support
♦ New high-performance internal digital data separator (no external filter
components required)

♦ Low-power CMOS with enhanced power-down mode


♦ Automatic media-sense support, with full IBM TDR (Tape Drive Register)
implementation

♦ Supports fast 2 Mbps and standard 1 Mbps/500 kbps/250 kbps tape drives
♦ Bidirectional Parallel Port
♦ Enhanced Parallel Port (EPP) compatible

Theory of Operation 4-15


♦ Extended Capabilities Port (ECP) compatible, including level 2 support
♦ Bidirectional under either software or hardware control
♦ Compatible with ISA, and EISA, architectures
♦ Ability to multiplex FDC signals on parallel port pins allows use of an external
Floppy Disk Drive (FDD)

♦ Includes protection circuit to prevent damage to the parallel port when a


connected printer is powered up or is operated at a higher voltage

♦ UARTs
♦ Software compatible with the PC16550A and PC16450
♦ MIDI baud rate support
♦ Infrared support on UART2 (IrDA 1.0 SIR, IrDA 1.1 MIR and FIR, and Sharp SIR)
♦ Address Decoder
♦ 6 bit or 10 bit decoding
♦ External Chip Select capability when 10 bit decoding
♦ Full relocation capability (no limitation)
♦ Enhanced Power Management
♦ Special configuration registers for power-down
♦ Enhanced programmable power-down FDC command
♦ Auto power-down and wake-up modes
♦ 2 special pins for power management
♦ Typical current consumption during power-down is less than 10 µA
♦ Reduced pin leakage current
♦ Voltage support
♦ 3.3/5V operation
♦ General Purpose Pins
♦ 1 pin, for 2 separate programmable chip select decoders, can be programmed
for game port control

♦ Plug and Play Compatible

4-16 Theory of Operation


♦ 16 bit addressing (full programmable)
♦ 10 selectable IRQs
♦ 4 selectable DMA Channels
♦ 3 SIRQ Inputs allows external devices to mapping IRQs
♦ 100-pin TQFP package - PC87338VJG

4.2.8 Hard Disk Drive Subsystem


The Hard Disk Drive Subsystem, implemented on the Main Board Board and on the
associated hard disk drive module(s), provides disk storage for all system software and
user files.

The notebook is equipped with a high-capacity hard disk drive. The hard disk drive also
features built-in power conservation features configured from the standard CMOS
Setup Routine. An Automatic Power Down mode can be selected which powers down
the drive motor during periods of inactivity. An additional level of power conservation
may also be selected which powers down the motor plus all control circuits.

The hard disk drives are factory formatted as a single drive (Drive C:) and are preloaded
with installation versions of Windows 95 or Windows for Workgroups (in dual load
versions, the user selects operating system during software installation).

The Hard Disk Controller is implemented with the PCIO643 Controller Chip described
in greater detail in the following paragraph.

4.2.8.1 PCI0643 Features


♦ Capable of 16 MB/second transfer rates in DMA mode - up to 20 MB/second
in PIO mode

♦ Supports bus master DMA at 133 MB/second PCI burst rate


♦ Support PCI DMA transfers for both DMA-capable and PIO-only drives
♦ Fully supports ATAPI DMA/PIO transfers
♦ 2 channels - supports up to 4 IDE drives
♦ Surpasses and supports Enhanced IDE Mode 3, Mode 4 and propose Mode 5
timing from the widest range of disk drive manufacturers

♦ Supports multi-word and single-word DMA modes 0, 1 and 2


♦ Fully supports the latest PCI-IDE specification and all the Plug-and-Play (PnP)
specifications.

♦ Supports Windows 95, Windows NT 3.1 and 3.5 (Daytona), and OS/2™

Theory of Operation 4-17


♦ CMD's complete set of 32-bit drivers handle both DMA and PIO
♦ Fully compatible with the latest PCI, PCI IDE, ATA-2, Enhanced IDE, Fast IDE,
ATAPI, plug and play, and ATA-2 Power Management Feature Set

♦ Fully supports all ATAPI-compatible devices, including CD-ROM, tape, MO, and
other devices

♦ Fully supports legacy (IRQ 14 and 15)


♦ Hardware and software mode switching and chip enable/disable capabilities
♦ Programmable read-ahead and write-back buffers enhance transfer rates
♦ Fully compatible with all major operating systems
♦ 100-pin PQFP

4.2.9 Floppy Disk Drive Subsystem


The Extensa 900 is equipped with a 3.5-inch floppy disk drive that can read/write
standard 3.5-inch disks (either1.44 MB or 2 MB capacity). The drive can also read a
720 KB disk (for interchange of data with other computers).

The data transfer rate for the floppy disk drive is 500 Kbits per second for high-density
disks and 250 Kbits per second for double-density disks.

The floppy drive controller is implemented on the PC87338 Super I/O Controller chip
described in the previous paragraphs.

4.2.10 PCMCIA Subsystem


The notebook is equipped with a PCMCIA subsystem that accomodates either two
Type I or Type II PCMCIA cards or one Type III card. The heart of the PCMCIA Subsystem
is the TI PCI 1130 high-performance PCI-to-PC Card controller that supports two
independent PC Card sockets compliant with the 1995 PC card standard. The PCI 1130
provides a set of features that make it ideal for bridging between PCI and PC Cards in
both notebook and desktop computers. The 1995 PC Card standard retains the 16-bit
PC Card specification defined in PCMCIA release 2.1 and defines the new 32-bit PC
Card, called CardBus, capable of full 32-bit data transfers at 33 MHz. The PCI 1130
supports any combination of 16-bit and CardBus PC Cards in its two sockets, powered
at 3.3V or 5V as required.

The PCI 1130 is compliant with the PCI local bus specification revision 2.1, and its PCI
interface can act as either a PCI master device or a PCI slave device. The PCI bus
mastering is initiated during 16-bit PC Card DMA transfers or CardBus PC Card bus
mastering cycles.

All card signals are internally buffered to allow hot insertion and removal without
external buffering. The PCI 1130 internal data path logic allows the host to access

4-18 Theory of Operation


8-, 16-, and 32-bit cards using full 32-bit PCI cycles for maximum performance.
Independent 32-bit write buffers allow fast-posted writes to improve system-bus
utilization.

An advanced CMOS process is used to achieve low system-power consumption while


operating at PCI clock rates up to 33 MHz. Several low-power modes allow the host
power-management system to further reduce power consumption.

4.2.10.1 PCI 1130 Features


♦ 3.3V core logic with universal PCI interface compatible with 3.3V or 5V PCI
signaling environments

♦ Supports PCI Local Bus specification 2.1


♦ Mix and match 3.3V/5V PC card 16 cards and 3.3V CardBus cards
♦ Supports two PC card or CardBus slots with hot insertion and removal
♦ 1995 PC Card standard compliant
♦ Low-Power advanced submicron CMOS technology
♦ Uses serial interface to Texas Instruments (TI) tps2202a dual power switch
♦ System interrupts can be programmed as PCI-Style or ISA IRQ-Style interrupts
♦ ISA IRQ interrupts can be serialized onto a single IRQSER pin
♦ Independent read and write buffers for each direction
♦ Supports burst transfers to maximize data throughput on the PCI and CardBus
bus

♦ Multifunction PCI device with separate five PCI Memory Windows and two I/O
Windows available to each PC Card 16 socket

♦ Two l/O Windows and two memory windows available to each CardBus socket
♦ CardBus Memory Windows can be individually selected prefetchable or non-
PREFETCHABLE

♦ ExchangeableCard (ExCAT)-compatible registers are mapped in memory and


I/O space

♦ TI extension registers are mapped in the PCI configuration space


♦ Intel 82365SL DF register compatible
♦ Supports 16-bit distributed Direct Memory Access (DMA) on both PC Card
sockets

Theory of Operation 4-19


♦ Supports PC/PCI DMA on both PC Card sockets
♦ Supports Zoom Video Mode
♦ Supports Ring Indicate
♦ Packaged in 208-pin Thin Plastic Quad Flatpack (PDV)

4.2.11 Power Subsystem


The notebook is equipped with a software/hardware monitored/controlled Power
Subsystem that minimizes battery usage for prolonged battery operation and
automatically recharges the batteries when the notebook is used with an AC adapter.

The control for the power subsystem is implemented with the ALI M6377 Power
Management Unit chip as described below.

A simplified block diagram of the power subsystem is shown in Figure 4-3.

4-20 Theory of Operation


Notebook MPB

UMA
DCBATOUT

AD+ AD+
CHARGER DC/DC CONVERTER M+12V
CHARGER
BAT+
M+2.9V
BAT+
M+5V M+7V
SW
LCD M+3.3V
SW
SW SW SW
M+5V
CD/DC2
M 6375 SW +2.9V AUDIO_VDD
+12V
+12V +5V
+3.3V
9088MAL CPU ES1878S
M+3.3V +3.3V
M 38813
SW
+3.3V ADVANCED
PCI CARD
65550/S3 VGA_VDD
+5V
M 1521 FLASH
M+5V L2 CACHE
ROM
PCI0643
VRAM +3.3V

+5V
M+5V M 1523 HDD +5V CD_5V
8MB
HDD/ SW
DRAM /
+5V CD
DIMM *1
PCI1130 PCI0643 87338
RESUME
GLUE FDD
LOGIC M+5V M+5V
SW

M AX213

Figure 4-3 Power Subsystem Simplified Block Diagram

Theory of Operation 4-21


4.2.11.1 ALI M6377 Power Management Unit
The major features of the ALI M6377 Power Management Unit include:

♦ Three operation states


— ON state
— DOZE state
— SLEEP state

♦ Programmable DOZE and SLEEP timers


♦ Programmable EL timer for backlight control
♦ Three output pins depending on operation state, each pin is programmable and
power configurable.

♦ Provide system activity monitoring, including:


♦ Video
♦ Hard disk drive
♦ Floppy disk drive
♦ Serial port
♦ Keyboard
♦ Parallel port
♦ Two programmable I/O groups activity monitor, each group contains 16/8
I/O addresses.

♦ One predefined I/O group activity monitor


♦ Multiple external wake up events from DOZE and SLEEP states
♦ External push button
♦ RTC alarm
♦ Two levels battery warning monitor

Port definitions for the M6377 Chip are provided in Table 4-5.

4-22 Theory of Operation


Table 4-5 M6377 GPIO Port Definitions

Item Description
GPIO17 1: Connect serial BUS with charger ROM.
(W/R) 0: Disconnect serial BUS with charger ROM.
GPIO20 is the CLK and GPIO21 is the DATA for the serial BUS.
GPIO16 Reserved
GPIO15 1: CPU high temperature SMI is allowed.
(W/R) 0: CPU low temperature SMI is allowed.
GPIO14 1: Connect the ZV BUS with PCMCIA card.
(W/R) 0: Connect the ZV BUS with Feature board.
GPIO13 1: Force the system to enter 0V suspend or power down mode, and then could press power
(W) button to turn on system again.
0: Normal
GPIO12 1: Force FAN on
(W/R) 0: Normally
GPIO11 1: Enable+12V power foor FLASH ROM.
(W/R) 0: Disable+12V power.
GPIO10 1: Disable FIR VCC.
(W/R) 0: Enable FIR VCC.
GPIO27 1: CPU high temperature.
(R) 0: CPU low temperature.
GPIO26 1: notebook’s SMBUS is accessible.
(W/R) 0: MPB’s SMBUS is accessible.
GPIO25 1: Brightness level is fixed
(W/R) 0: Brightness is trimable via GPIO22 & GPIO20.
The current brightness level is stored when PIO25 low to high transations.
GPIO24 For DSTN LCD only.
(W/R) 1: Contrast level is fixed.
0: Contrast is trimable via GPIO22 & GPIO20.
The current brightness level is stored when PIO25 low to high transations.
GPIO23 1: Normally
0: Ready to transations.
GPIO22 The Brightness & Contrast for LCD system is devided into 32 scale by programing GPIO22 &
(W/R) GPIO20.
1: Brightness is incremented with GPIO23 “L” and GPIO20 high to low transations.
Contrast is incremented with GPIO24 :L” and GPIO20 high to low transations.
0: Brightness is decremented with GPIO24 “L” and GPIO20 high to low transations.
Contrast is decremented with GPIO23 “L” and GPIO20 high to low transations.
GPIO21 The system provide a serial BUS while wired to Inverter ROM, notebook’s Charger ROM, MPB’s
(W/R) Charger ROM and Uma’s dock ROM.
GPIO21 is the serial DAT and GPIO20 is the serial CLK.

Theory of Operation 4-23


Table 4-5 M6377 GPIO Port Definitions (Continued)

Item Description
GPIO20 GPIO20 is the common CLK for below serial BUS:
(W/R) A. For Charger ROM, Inverter ROM, MPB ROM serial BUS.
B. For Brightness & Contrast control.
C. For Feature board.
GPIO37 GPIO37 is serial DATA for Feature board serial BUS, and GPIO20 is the serial CLK.
(W/R)
GPIO36 1: Normally
(W/R) 0: Disable MPB power.
GPIO35 The system use 3-wire BUS to communicate with thermal sensor (DS1620). These functions are
GPIO34 shown as below:
GPIO33 GPIO35 1: Enable DS1620.
(W/R) 0: Disable DS1620.
GPIO34 is CLK for 3-wire BUS .
GPIO33 is DATA, must be valid during the rising edge of CLK(GPIO34).
GPIO32 1: Normally
(W/R) 0: System into STANDBY mode.
GPIO31 1: Enable 1394 power.
(W/R) 0: Disable 1394 power.
GPIO30 1: Go to 5V suspend.
(W/R) 0: Normally
SE12 1: Normally
(W) 0: Disable notebook’s OP amplify.
SE11(W) Reserved
SE10(W)
GPIO7 1: Media bay switch is unlocked.
0: Media bay switch is locked.
GPIO6 1: MPB is connected.
0: MPB is disconnected.
GPIO5 received
GPIO2 1: No FDD connected.
0: FDD connected.
GPIO1 0: No 2nd channel IDE device connected
1: 2nd channel IDE device connected.
GPI00 1: Parallel port connected with FDD while the parallel port SMI occured.
0: Parallel port connect with printer.

4-24 Theory of Operation


4.2.11.2 AC Power Adapter
The computer is equipped with a universal AC power adapter that converts AC voltage
into DC voltage (approx. 46 Watts of power) used to operate the notebook and charge
the batteries. The specifications for the AC adapter include:

♦ Input Voltage: 100 to 250 VAC

♦ Input Current: Approximately 1.5 Amps

♦ Input Frequency: 50 to 60 Hz

4.2.12 Mobile Productivity Base Interface

Notebook MPB
ZV
65550/S3 SW
ZV

M1521
M1523 SW PCI
PCI Advanced
PCI1130
PCI0643 PCI Card

DPCIRST#

PCICLK1 PCI0643
M6377 CLOCK
GEN. PCICLK2

HDD/
IDE CD/MO

RDATA#, SW
WDATA# SW
FDD
87338

Figure 4-5 MPB Interface Diagram

Theory of Operation 4-25


5
Troubleshooting Procedures
5.1 Introduction
This section provides an overview of the fault isolation process, provides guidelines for
isolating 900 Series computer malfunctions to replaceable subassemblies and provides
instructions for executing diagnostics and interpreting error messages.

5.2 Overview of Fault Isolation Process


The fault isolation process (summarized in Figure 5-1) consists of the following steps:

♦ Checking the Notebook power system (including battery packs and AC adapter
connections) - refer to Paragraph 5.4.

♦ Checking Switch settings (ensuring Power is On and notebook correctly


configured)
- Pressing the Shift key to ensure that Notebook is not in Suspend mode
- Verifying if computer is configured to boot from the A: Drive or C: Drive
- Checking LCD brightness adjustment (press Fn-Up Arrow keys to
increase brightness)
- Ensuring that computer is not set for external monitor (press Fn-F12 to
select internal screen)

♦ Undocking from the Mobile Productivity Base (if installed) and running
diagnostics to isolate problem to either the base or the notebook.

♦ Recording and attempting to resolve any displayed error messages or error


beeps (refer to Paragraph 5.3.3.1 and Tables 5-1 and 5-2)

♦ Rebooting the system (Ctrl-Alt-Del)


♦ If the computer is capable of running the Setup program; checking the serial
and parallel port configurations, Sound System enable/disable, and other
features that may affect system operation.

♦ Running PC-Doctor Diagnostics to further isolate problem area (refer to


Paragraph 5.5). For indicated hardware failures, cycling power and repeating
self test to verify that a hard failure has occurred.

♦ Removing and replacing suspect hardware (as described in Section 6 of this


manual) and retest the system using the diagnostic tests as described in
Paragraph 5.4.5.

Troubleshooting Procedures 5-1


®

START

COMPUTER NO MPB NO
TROUBLE TROUBLE
INDICATION INDICATION
? ?

When Power button


is pressed, no indication DEAD YES See Paragraphs
of power is present (dark COMPUTER 5.3.1 & 5.3.2
LCD, no Status icons lit, SYMPTOMS
no disk drive activity, etc.) ?

NO See Paragraph
Press Power button; 5.4
Selftest automatically RUN
SELF TEST
runs when power turned on.

ERROR YES
MESSAGE See Paragraphs
? 5.3.3.1 and 5.3.3.2

NO

MODEM YES
See Paragraph
PROBLEM 5.3.5
?

NO

RUN
DIAGNOSTICS

YES
DIAGNOSTICS See Paragraph
ERROR MSG 5.5
?

NO

Figure 5-1 Notebook Computer Troubleshooting Flow Chart

5-2 Troubleshooting Procedures


5.3 Troubleshooting Procedures
The built-in self test program and the disk resident diagnostics program (PC-Doctor)
are useful tools in computer troubleshooting. However, if the computer has a power,
keyboard or display problem, you must first solve this problem before running
diagnostics. If the computer powers up and displays messages on the LCD or emits a
series of beeps, skip to Paragraph 5.3.3.1 for further instructions.

5.3.1 Troubleshooting a Power Supply Problem


If the computer does not power up when the Power Switch is pressed, you most likely
have a malfunction in the power subsystem (loss of power at the AC outlet, faulty AC
adapter, discharged Battery Packs, or faulty Power Supply on the Main Board). With a
power problem, all LEDs are extinguished, the LCD screen is blank, the system does
not respond when the suspend switch is pressed several times consecutively and no
drive activity can be heard. The computer is unable to load software and displays no
visible signs of activity. To fault isolate a power problem, check the following:

♦ AC adapter and Battery - Plug in the AC adapter and double-check all


connections on the adapter and computer. Ensure that the Notebook Power
switch is set to the On position and that the system is not in Suspend or Sleep
mode.

♦ Measure the voltage at the AC outlet or plug in a known good appliance (e.g.,
a lamp) to verify that voltage is present. If the voltage is okay, try replacing the
AC adapter.

♦ Check to see that a charged battery pack is installed correctly; also attach the
AC adapter and connect to live wall outlet. If the AC outlet voltage, AC adapter,
and battery packs test normal but the computer will not power up, try the DC-
In PWB, Power Supply PWB, Main Board PWB or LED PWB.

5.3.2 Troubleshooting a Display Problem


If the LCD remains blank when you turn on the computer, and the status indicators
light, check the following controls on the display:

♦ LCD suspend mode - Press Shift to terminate Suspend mode.


♦ Brightness set too low - Press Fn-Up Arrow keys to increase screen brightness
♦ Notebook Set for External Monitor - Press Fn-F12 to switch to the internal
screen.

♦ Faulty LCD - Replace the cover-display assembly as described in Section 6 of


this manual.

♦ Low battery - Use a fully charged battery and/or plug in the AC adapter.

Troubleshooting Procedures 5-3


Table 5-1 contains fault isolation information for Display Problems on the notebook.
Symptoms are listed along the left side of the chart and the various Display FRUs are
listed along the top of the chart. Within the body of the table are the probabilities of
each of the FRUs causing that particular problem. For example, a single display line
on the screen is most likely caused by the LCD Panel or Display Cable; other components
have a low probability of causing the problem.

Table 5-1 Display Troubleshooting Guide

Problem Description Inverter LCD Display Mother BIOS


Board Panel Cable Board
Single line on LCD display (horizontal Low High Medium Low Low
or vertical)

Multiple lines on display (horizontal or Low Medium Medium Low Low


vertical)

Sections of the display are missing Low Medium Medium Low Low
characters

Scrambled Display Low Medium Low Medium Medium

Intermittent characters on display Low Medium Medium Medium Low

Bright display, no visible characters Low Medium Medium Medium Low

Brightness level fluctuating or display High Low Medium Low Low


blinking on/off

Display goes dim over time High Medium Low Low Low

Dim display but characters very Medium Medium Low Low Low
visible

Very dark display and characters are High Low Low Low Low
slightly visible when a light is directed
at surface of the display

Very dark display and no characters Low High High Medium Low
are visible

5.3.3 Fault Isolation Using Power On Self Test


When the computer is first powered up, it automatically performs a Power On Self Test
(POST) that checks the notebook’s central hardware and memory functions. During
POST (which lasts for a few seconds), the display shows copyright and version number
information.

Note: Some procedures in this paragraph require you to use keystroke


sequences, such as Ctrl-Alt-Del. To execute a keystroke sequence such as this,
you must press all three keys simultaneously.

5-4 Troubleshooting Procedures


5.3.3.1 POST Error Messages
Upon successful completion of Power On Self Test, the computer automatically loads
its operating system and other built-in utilities. If POST fails to complete successfully,
the display shows one of the error messages described in Table 5-2.

Note: In the event of a hardware problem that affects the display, the Notebook
also communicates errors via a series of beeps. The interpretation of the beep
codes is provided in Table 5-3.

Note: Refer to Appendix C for POST BIOS listing.

Troubleshooting Procedures 5-5


Table 5-2 Power On Self Test Error Messages

Message Possible Cause Action


Diskette drive A failure The drive failed or is missing. Check the drive to determine the
problem.
Diskette read failure - press The disk is either not Replace the disk with a bootable
F1 to retry boot, F2 for formatted or is defective. disk and retry.
SETUP utility
Display adapter failed, The primary video adapter Check the primary video
using alternate failed. adapter.
Gate A20 failure The keyboard controller is Check the keyboard controller
not accepting command, and system board. Turn the
specifically, the enable and power off, then back on again. If
disable A20 command. the problem persists contact
qualified service personnel .
Fixed disk configuration The specified configuration is Correct the fixed diskette
error not supported or doesn't configuration.
match the actual hardware
installed.
Fixed disk controller failure The fixed diskette may be Try rebooting. If that doesn't
defective. work, replace the fixed diskette.
Fixed disk read failure- The fixed diskette may be Check the drive type selected in
press F1 to retry boot, F2 configured incorrectly or is Setup. Try rebooting. If that
for SETUP utility defective. does not work, replace the fixed
diskette.
Pointer device failure The PS/2-style mouse failed. Try rebooting. If problem
persists, check the mouse, cable
and connector.

5-6 Troubleshooting Procedures


Table 5-2 Post Error Messages (continued)
Message Possible Cause Action
No boot device available - Either disk drive A:, the fixed Try rebooting. If the problem
press F1 to retry boot, F2 diskette, or both the disk and persists, replace the disk or the
for SETUP utility fixed diskette are defective. fixed diskette.
No boot sector on fixed The C: drive is not formatted Format the C: drive and make it
disk - press F1 to retry or is not bootable. bootable.
boot, F2 for SETUP utility
Not a boot diskette - press The disk in drive A: is not Replace the disk with a bootable
F1 to retry boot, F2 for formatted as a bootable disk. disk and try rebooting.
SETUP utility
No timer tick interrupt The timer chip has failed. Check the system board. Turn
the power off, then back on
again. If the problem persists,
contact qualified service
personnel.
Shutdown failure Either the keyboard controller Check the keyboard controller
is not accepting the reset and system board. Turn the
command or the associated power off, then back on again.
reset logic has failed. If the problem persists, contact
qualified service personnel.
Time of day not set - run Real time clock not set. Run the Setup utility.
SETUP program
Timer 2 failure The timer chip has failed. Check the system board. Turn
the power off, then back on
again. If the problem persists,
contact qualified service
personnel.
F2 to enter ROM-based Invalid configuration You must run the Setup utility
SETUP information must be and correct configuration
changed. information.
Invalid configuration Display adapter is configured Run the Setup utility.
information - please run incorrectly.
SETUP Memory size is incorrect.
Wrong number of disk drives.
Other configuration errors.

Troubleshooting Procedures 5-7


Table 5-2 POST Error Messages (continued)
Message Possible Cause Action
Keyboard clock line failure The keyboard, the keyboard Make sure the keyboard cable
cable connection, or the and keyboard are connected
keyboard controller is properly. Check the keyboard
defective. controller and the system board.
Turn the power off, then back on
again. If the problem persists,
contact qualified service
personnel.
Keyboard data line failure The keyboard controller Check the keyboard controller
firmware has failed. and system board. Turn the
power off, then back on again.
If the problem persists, contact
qualified service personnel.
Keyboard stuck key failure A key is jammed. Locate the jammed key and fix it.
Make sure the keyboard cable
and keyboard are connected
properly. Turn the power off,
then back on again. If the
problem persists, contact
qualified service personnel.
Memory failure at hex- Circuitry associated with the Turn the power off, then back on
value, read hex-value, memory chips has failed. again. If the problem persists,
expecting hex-value contact qualified service
personnel.
Unexpected interrupt in Hardware interrupt or NMI Check the timer chip or the
protected mode occurred while in protected interrupt controller on the system
mode. board.
Real time clock failure The RTC or battery failed. Run Setup and turn the power
off and on. If the problem
persists, replace the RTC
battery. If the problem remains,
contact qualified service
personnel.

5.3.3.2 POST Beep Error Messages


In the event of a hardware problem that affects the display, the Notebook also
communicates errors via a series of beeps. These codes may be heard over the system's
speaker as a series of beeps (long and short duration). The interpretation of the beep
codes is provided in Table 5-3.

To recover from a self test error, try cycling power to the computer. Also, press
Ctrl-Alt-Esc to ensure that the Setup configuration is correct. In general, most of the

5-8 Troubleshooting Procedures


failures are associated with the Upper and Lower Electronics Boards and may require
board removal/replacement.

Try running PC-Doctor (Paragraph 5.5) if possible to verify the source of problem.

Table 5-3 Self Test Beep Messages

Beep Code Description


VGA Failures

1 Long, 2 Short Horizontal Retrace Failed

1 Long, 3 Short DAC Test Failed

1 Long, 4 Short Monitor Sense Failed

1 Long, Five Short Vertical Retrace Failed

1 Long, 6 Short DVideo Memory Test Failed

System Failures

2 Short Battery Low 1

3 Short Battery Low 2

5.3.4 Run-Time Error Messages


In the event of a hardware/software error that occurs after completion of POST, the
error messages listed and described in Table 5-4 may occur.

Troubleshooting Procedures 5-9


Table 5-4 Run-Time Error Message Troubleshooting
Message Cause Action
I/O card parity interrupt at Memory on a peripheral card Check the memory cards
address. Type (S)hut off NMI, has failed. installed in the system.
(R)eboot, other keys to
continue
Memory parity interrupt at A memory chip(s) has failed. Check the memory on the
address. Type (S)hut off NMI, system board.
(R)eboot, other keys to
continue
Unexpected HW interrupt, Hardware problem. Not Check all hardware in the
interrupt at address. Type displayed if the expected system.
(R)eboot, other keys to interrupt handler is not enabled.
continue
Unexpected SW interrupt, Error(s) in the software Turn the machine off and then
interrupt at address. Type program. Not displayed if the on again. If doesn’t work, check
(R)eboot, other keys to extended interrupt handler is the program.
continue not enabled.
Unexpected type 02 interrupt at A parity error occurred, but the Turn the power off and then on
xxxxh. Type (S)hut off NMI, source can not be determine. again.
(R)eboot, other keys to
continue

5.3.5 PCMCIA Modem Problems


If an optional PCMCIA modem does not work properly, check the following items:

♦ Dialing problem or wrong number - Try dialing a number that you have
previously dialed successfully.

♦ Faulty phone line - Connect a telephone to the line and listen for a dial tone.
♦ Software program - Check to ensure that you have installed the software
correctly.

5.4 General Fault Isolation Procedures


If troubleshooting a sytem containing a docked MPB, try undocking the Notebbok and
tracing the malfunction to either the notebook or the MPB.

Table 5-5 contains a summary of general problems that may occur during operation of
the notebook and the appropriate corrective actions that should be taken for each. For
other symptoms, go on to Paragraph 5.5 and troubleshoot the notebook using PC Doctor
Diagnostics.

5-10 Troubleshooting Procedures


Table 5-5 General Troubleshooting Procedures

Problem Corrective Actions


No power 1. Check that the AC adapter is plugged into
the power connector of the system. Also,
check that the AC adapter is plugged into a
properly grounded AC power outlet.
2. If using the battery as main power source,
check if the battery pack is of the right type,
charged, and is inserted correctly.
3. Check the powerboard of the system. Is it
inserted into the motherboard connector
properly? Otherwise, replace the powerboard.
Data on the LCD is unreadable 1. Adjust the brightness and contrast display
controls.
2. Check if the LCD cables are inserted
properly. Check connections inside the LCD
panel.
3. Verify if installed VGA driver is correct.
4. Check VGA controller chip on the
motherboard to see if there is any cold or
loose soldering.
5. Replace the motherboard.

Troubleshooting Procedures 5-11


Table 5-5 General Troubleshooting Procedures (continued)

LCD screen does not show data 1. Check the LCD Status Bar if Suspend mode is
activated. Press any key or press the power
button to resume operation and display.
2. Check if LCD cables are disconnected or loose.
3. Check if the display output is switched to the
external monitor.
4. Verify that the Contrast level is set to minimum.
5. Check if there is power.
6. Replace the LCD Inverter board found inside the
LCD Panel.
Battery Power does not last 1. Make sure that the power management features
are enabled.
2. Recharge the battery pack for 1.5 hours before
using again.
3. Replace the battery pack.
System halts during boot sequence 1. Check condition of selected bootload device (disk
or hard disk) for bad boot track or incorrect OS
files.
2. Try booting from a new bootable disk and recopy
or repartition hard disk drive.
3. Check for any BIOS error messages on the
display screen.
4. Replace motherboard.
I/O processing malfunctions 1. Check the connections of all internal devices.
2. Replace motherboard.
Diskette drive does not work 1. Check if floppy disk drive cable is connected
properly.
2. Check disk type if correct and not faulty.
3. Replace disk drive.
4. Replace motherboard.
Hard disk drive malfunction 1. Check if hard disk drive is set properly on CMOS
Setup.
2. Check drive cables and connections.
3. Check if hard disk drive is good.
4. Replace the motherboard.

5-12 Troubleshooting Procedures


Table 5-5 General Troubleshooting Procedures (continued)

Memory malfunction 1. Check if the memory module is inserted properly.


2. Replace the memory module.
3. Replace the motherboard.
External keyboard or PS/2 mouse doesn’t 1. Check if the keyboard or the mouse are
work connected properly. Check if the Y-cable is being
used. Power off system first before plugging in
the device.
2. Replace the keyboard or mouse.
3. Replace the motherboard.
PCMCIA card does not work 1. Check the PCMCIA driver installation for any IRQ
or I/O address conflicts.
2. Check if the PCMCIA card is inserted properly
and all connections are set.
3. Replace the PCMCIA card.
4. Replace the motherboard.
Mouse doesn’t work 1. Check if PS/2 mouse driver is properly installed.
2. Check the keyboard controller chip for any cold or
loosed soldering.
3. Replace the motherboard.
Serial device does not work 1. Check if serial driver is correctly configured.
2. Check if serial device is connected properly.
3. Replace serial device.
4. Check the I/O controller chip on the motherboard
for any cold or loosed soldering.
5. Replace the motherboard.
Parallel device does not work 1. Check if all connections are properly set.
2. Check if external device is turned on.
3. Check I/O controller chip on the motherboard for
any cold or loose soldering.
4. Replace the motherboard.

Troubleshooting Procedures 5-13


5.5 Fault Isolation Using Diagnostics
PC-Doctor, supplied with the Extensa Series Notebooks, is a powerful diagnostics tool
that can help you determine the hardware configuration of a local or remote system,
benchmark its performance, analyze the performance of all subsystems, and perform
a suite of interactive and non-interactive tests on attached devices (such as printers,
joystick devices, VGA monitors, SCSI® devices, CD-ROM drives). The test results are
stored in a log which can be printed out or saved in a disk file.

5.5.1 PC-Doctor (In DOS Mode or DOS Window)


Features of the diagnostic program are accessed through a series of pull-down menus
and basic keyboard keys (cursor keys to move highlighted pointer, Enter key to select
a highlighted feature, Esc key to cancel a function and move back one level.

PC-Doctor is typically user friendly but if you don't understand a feature, context-
sensitive "help" information is available at any time by pressing the F1 function key;
pressing the F1 function key twice accesses the online Technical Reference Manual for
PC-Doctor.

A powerful set of utilities within PC-Doctor (that can be run locally or remotely) simplify
the task of determining system configuration data, allocating and using system memory,
IRQ and DMA use, what device drivers are installed, what COM and LPT ports are
assigned and what ports are available, identifying partitioning data for fixed disk
drive(s), determining the VGA setup information, reading the software interrupts/
interrupt vectors, etc.

Functionally, PC-Doctor includes the following:

♦ Group of non-Interactive diagnostic tests that perform a non-destructive test


of the major hardware functions in the notebook (Processor, Memory, System
board, video section, serial and parallel ports (when loopback adapters are
installed), hard disk drive and floppy disk drive).

♦ Group of Interactive tests (require operator input) for testing the keyboard, video
sections, sound subsystem, mouse, joystick, disk drive, printer subsystem and
the SCSI/CD-ROM Drive subsystems supported by the docking station options.

♦ Utility that provides detailed system information such as configuration data,


allocation and use of system memory, IRQ and DMA use, what device drivers
are installed, what COM and LPT ports are assigned and what ports are
available, partitioning data for fixed disk drive(s), VGA setup information,
software interrupts and interrupt vectors, and installed SCSI options.
♦ Group of special purpose utilities to run other tests from PC-Doctor, perform a
virus scan of the system, edit configuration files, surface scan hard drives,
measure system performance, open a DOS prompt, provides terminal access
to devices connected to serial ports, supports memory debug operations,
enables remote operations, permits deep discharge of notebook batteries and
provides an extensive test reporting function.

5-14 Troubleshooting Procedures


5.5.2 Supporting Online Documentation
The PC-Doctor Diagnostic contains the following online information sources:

♦ Online Technical Manual - Selected at any time by pressing F1 key twice or


by clicking on the Question Mark in the upper left hand corner of any
PC-Doctor Menu

♦ On-line Help system - Provides context sensitive information from every


PC-Doctor screen- accessed by pressing F1 key once (pressing F1 twice gets
you into the online manual)

5.5.3 User Interface to PC-Doctor


PC-Doctor is structured as a text-mode, windowed user interface with pull-down
menus. Program operation requires the use of the following keys:

♦ Cursor Keys - Moves the highlighted pointer


♦ Enter Key - Selects the highlighted option
♦ Esc Key - Cancels current function and goes back one step
♦ F1 Key - Activates the context-sensitive help feature (pressing F1 twice in a row
calls up the online Technical Reference Manual for PC-Doctor)
Scrolling windows, which show the results of various operations, use the following keys:

♦ Page Up/Page Down - Moves the screen one page at a time


♦ F2 - Prints the log to PRN
♦ F3 - Saves the log to a file
You can also use the mouse or Point to interact with PC-Doctor. The leftmost Select
key is used to choose objects (menu entries and action codes typically enclosed in
brackets). The rightmost Select key is equivalent to the Esc key which takes you back
to your previous step.

5.5.4 Quitting PC-Doctor


To exit PC-Doctor, select the Quit pull down menu and then select the Quit option.

Note: For additional information, access the Online Reference Manual for
PC-Doctor.

Troubleshooting Procedures 5-15


6
Field Service
6.1 Introduction
This section contains general preventive and corrective maintenance procedures that
apply to all members of the Extensa 900 Notebook family. The first part of the section
describes the computer cleaning procedures and preferred handling procedures for
sensitive components (e.g., disk drives, batteries).

The second part of the section identifies all field-replaceable parts; the remainder of the
section contains removal and replacement procedures for the field-replaceable parts.

6.2 Preventive Maintenance


Preventive maintenance is limited to cleaning the plastic case, keyboard and the display
screen.

6.2.1 Cleaning the Computer


When it is necessary to clean the plastic case and keyboard use a soft, lint-free cloth,
slightly dampened with a mild detergent solution or use the contents of any
commercially available computer cleaning kit.

Caution: Never spray any liquids directly on the computer case, keyboard,
or screen. If the liquid-crystal display (LCD) screen has become smeared
or dusty, clean the screen first with a soft, clean, lint-free cloth and gently
wipe the glass. If the glass is still smeared, use distilled water or a 25%
solution of alcohol and distilled water.

Caution: Do not use paper towels to clean the display screen. Paper can
scratch the display screen matte.

Field Service 6-1


6.2.2 Handling the Computer
The notebook computer requires reasonable care and handling for extended life. Some
of the precautions to follow to protect your computer against accidental damage include:

♦ Never pick up or carry the unit by the cover


♦ Do not force the cover beyond its fully opened position (about 180 degrees)
♦ Never subject the computer to harsh environments (dusty areas or areas of
rapidly changing temperatures)

♦ Never place anything on top of the computer, particularly when it is operating


or charging (could result in overheating and damage to the computer).

♦ Never move the computer while the hard drive is rotating (press the Suspend
button to put the computer in a Sleep mode before closing cover).

♦ Never expose the computer hard disk drive(s) or disks to strong magnetic fields
such as those generated by transformers, speakers, or telephone handsets.

6.2.3 Handling the Computer Battery Pack


The battery pack furnished with the computer requires reasonable care and handling
to ensure efficient operation and maximum life. Periodically inspect the battery
terminals and the batteries for evidence of corrosion and oxide build-up; clean if
necessary.

To ensure that the battery packs endure normal life cycle, always observe the following
precautions when handling the battery packs:

♦ Do not drop the battery pack or subject it to excessive shock and vibration.
♦ Do not expose the battery pack to direct sunlight, moisture, or chemical
compounds.

♦ Do not disassemble the battery pack.


♦ Do not use the battery pack to power other devices.
♦ Do not short the battery leads or connect the battery with reversed polarity.
♦ Never attempt to charge the battery pack in any way other than as described
in this manual.

♦ Always charge the battery pack as soon as possible after a low battery
indication.

6-2 Field Service


6.2.4 Password Caution
The notebook computer can be password protected to prevent unauthorized use.
However, if the password is lost, the notebook must be returned to the Texas
Instruments manufacturing facility in Temple, Texas U.S.A. to restore access. This
service is not covered by warranty.

6.3 Required Tools and Equipment


All Extensa Notebook corrective maintenance procedures can be performed using the
following tools:

♦ Tweezers
♦ Plastic Stick
♦ Small flat-blade screwdriver
♦ Small Phillips® screwdriver
♦ 5 mm Nut Driver

Caution: All boards, options and peripherals contain components that are
sensitive to static electricity. When handling any of these items, protect
against static electricity by using wrist grounding straps and grounded
working mats. When moving or storing items, use the anti-static bags
supplied with the items.

6.4 Notebook FRUs


Table 6-1 lists and describes the various FRUs for the Extensa 990 Series. As shown
in Figure 6-1, all members of the Extensa 900 Series Notebook Computers contain two
major assemblies:

♦ Notebook Assembly

- Cover-Display Assembly
- Base Assembly

♦ Mobile Productivity Base Assembly

Field Service 6-3


Notebook Assemblies
Cover-Display Assembly

Base Assembly

Mobile Productivity
Base Assembly

Figure 6-1 Extensa 900 Series Assemblies

6.4.1 Cover-Display Assembly


The Cover-Display Assembly shown in Figure 6-2, contains the LCD screen, DC-AC
Inverter Board, DC-DC Inverter Board, bezel LCD cover and various other components
as listed in Table 6-1.

6-4 Field Service


.

DC-AC Inverter
Board Assembly
(large PWB)

CN2

LCD
Assembly

Latch Securing
Inverter Boards
LCD Inverter
Board (smaller
PWB)

Figure 6-2 Display FRUs

Table 6-1 Top Cover Assembly Field-Replaceable Units (FRUs)

FRU Description Assembly/ TI Part No.


Disassembly
Paragraph
PWB INVERTER, DSTN, EXT. 90X 6.5.19 9813635-0001

BEZEL, DISPLAY DSTN 12.1", EXT. 90X 6.5.17 9813636-0001

LCD PANEL, DSTN, 12.1",SHARP, EXT. 90X 6.5.18 9813637-0001

DISPLAY ASSY. DSTN, 12.1", SHARP, EXT. 90X 6.5.7 9813638-0001

CABLE, DISPLAY, DSTN, FJ, EXT. 90X 6.5.7 9813678-0001

PWB INVERTER, TFT, EXT. 90X 6.5.19 9813639-0001

BEZEL, DISPLAY TFT, FJ, EXT. 90X 6.5.17 9813640-0001

LCD PANEL, TFT, 11.3", FJ, EXT. 90X 6.5.18 9813641-0001

DISPLAY ASSY, TFT, 11.3", SHARP, EXT. 90X 6.5.7 9813642-0001

CABLE, INVERTER WIRE 12P, EXT. 900 6.5.19 9813680-0001

Field Service 6-5


6.4.2 System Base Assembly
As shown in Figure 6-3, the System Base Assembly houses a variety of field-replaceable
subassemblies and components. The various assemblies and reference paragraph
numbers containing removal/replacement procedures are listed in Table 6-2.

LCD Microphone

Keyboard
Assembly
Speaker
Battery

Heatsink
Speaker PC Card
Assembly
Module
Power Supply
Board
Main Board

Notebook with Keyboard


and Battery Removed

Battery Connector
Cable Assembly
LED Board

CPU TOP Cover


Board

VGA Video Touchpad


Board Assembly

Figure 6-3 Notebook Base Assembly Major FRUs

6-6 Field Service


Table 6-2 Base Assembly Field-Replaceable Units (FRUs)

Base Assembly FRU Description Assembly/ TI Part No.


Disassembly
Paragraph
PWB Assemblies

PWB ASSY, MAIN BOARD W/O CPU, EXT. 90X 6.5.15 9813651-0001

PWB ASSY, VGA BOARD, EXT.90 X 6.5.11 9813652-0001

PWB ASSY, LED BOARD, EXT. 90X 6.5.8 9813653-0001

PWB ASSY, CPU BOARD, EXT. 90X 6.5.9 9813654-0001

PWB ASSY, DC-IN BOARD, EXT. 90X 6.5.13 9813655-0001

PWB ASSY, BATTERY BOARD, EXT. 90X 6.5.12 9813656-0001

PWB, POWER SUPPLY, EXT. 90X 6.5.12 9813643-0001

Keyboards

KEYBOARD, US, EXT. 90X 6.5.5 9813648-0001

KEYBOARD, UK, EXT. 900 6.5.5 9813648-0002

KEYBOARD, GER, EXT .900 6.5.5 9813648-0003

KEYBOARD, FRA, EXT. 900 6.5.5 9813648-0004

KEYBOARD, SPA, EXT. 900 6.5.5 9813648-0005

KEYBOARD, SWI/GER/FRA, EXT. 900 6.5.5 9813648-0006

KEYBOARD, ITA, EXT. 900 6.5.5 9813648-0007

KEYBOARD, POR, EXT. 900 6.5.5 9813648-0008

KEYBOARDS, SWE, EXT. 900 6.5.5 9813648-0010

KEYBOARD, DEN, EXT. 900 6.5.5 9813648-0012

KEYBOARD, NOR, EXT. 900 6.5.5 9813648-0013

KEYBOARD, FIN, EXT. 900 6.5.5 9813648-0014

KEYBOARD, BEL, EXT. 900 6.5.5 9813648-0015

KEYBOARD, CHI, EXT. 900 6.5.5 9813648-0019

KEYBOARD, KOR, EXT. 900 6.5.5 9813648-0020

Peripherals/Cables

HDD, 1.4GB, IBM, EXT.90X 6.5.4 9813645-0001

CABLE, FLEX, HDD, EXT.90X 6.5.4 9813644-0001

TOUCHPAD 6.5.16 9813516-0001

CABLE ASSY., TOUCHPAD, EXT. 90X 6.5.16 9813679-0001

Field Service 6-7


Table 6-2 Base Assembly Field-Replaceable Units (FRUs)

Base Assembly FRU Description Assembly/ TI Part No.


Disassembly
Paragraph
FDD, EXT. 90X Ref 9813649-0001

HDD BRACKET ASSY, EXT. 900 6.5.4 9813683-0001

Other Major Assemblies

CASE, UPPER, EXT. 90X 6.5.10 9813646-0001

CASE, LOWER, EXT. 90X 6.5.10 9813647-0001

BATTERY, LI-ION, EXT. 90X 6.5.1 9813633-0001

HEAT SINK, MAIN, EXT. 900 6.5.6 9813685-0001

AC ADAPTER, 45W, ADP-45HP, EXT. 6XX Ref 9813497-0004

PCMCIA MODULE, EXT. 900 6.5.14 9813716-0001

Service Manual Ref 9813715-0001

Dummy Battery (case only) EXT. 90X 6.5.1 9813717-0001

Doors, Access Covers, misc

COVER MEMORY, EXT. 900 2.3.1 9813663-0001

BRACKET HINGE, EXT. 900 Ref 9813664-0001

SPRING, EXT. SWP, EXT 900' SPG EXT SWP 0.2*2.0*17 Ref 9813665-0001

HINGE, RIGHT, EXT. 900 Ref 9813666-0001

HINGE, LEFT, EXT. 900 Ref 9813667-0001

KNOB BATTERY, EXT. 900 Ref 9813668-0001

COVER, HDD, EXT. 900 Ref 9813669-0001

TUBE FOR LCD ABS 072 EXT. 900 Ref 9813674-0001

BATTERY LOCK, RIGHT, EXT. 900 Ref 9813675-0001

BATTERY LOCK LEFT, EXT. 900 Ref 9813676-0001

DOOR SLIDE PC+FB 082 EXT. 900 Ref 9813677-0001

ASSY CORE UPPER CASE, EXT. 900 Ref 9813681-0001

HEAT PLATE ASSY., EXT. 900 6.5.6 9813682-0001

COVER, KEYBOARD, EXT. 900 6.5.5 9813684-0001

HOLDER ,TOUCHPAD, EXT.900 6.5.16 9813686-0001

SPRING LCD LOCK WPS EXT.900 Ref 9813687-0001

HOLDER DOCK CONNECTOR , EXT. 900 Ref 9813688-0001

RUBBER FOOT CR EXT.900 Ref 9813689-0001

6-8 Field Service


Table 6-2 Base Assembly Field-Replaceable Units (FRUs)

Base Assembly FRU Description Assembly/ TI Part No.


Disassembly
Paragraph
TOUCHPAD, GND PLATE, EXT. 900 6.5.16 9813690-0001

CABLE, FLEX, LED BOARD, EXT. 90X 6.5.8 9813691-0001

6.4.3 Mobile Productivity Base Assembly


The FRU list for the MPB is provided in Table 6-3. The major MPB FRUs are identified
in Figure 6-4.

Table 6-3 Mobile Productivity Base FRUs

FRU Description Assembly/ TI Part No.


Disassembly
Paragraph
PWB ASSY, CHARGER BOARD, MPB, EXT. 90X Ref 9813657-0001

CASE, BOTTOM, MPB, EXT. 90X Ref 9813658-0001

PWB ASSY, MAIN BOARD, MPB, EXT. 90X 6.6.7 9813661-0001

PWB ASSY, DC-IN BOARD, MPB, EXT. 90X 6.6.6 9813662-0001

PWB ASSY, BATTERY BOARD, EXT. 900 Ref 9813656-0001


(same as used in Notebook)

CASE, UPPER, MPB, EXT. 90X Ref 9813659-0001

CABLE ASSY, DOC, MPB, EXT. 90X Ref 9813660-0001

KNOB HAND LEVER LOCK, MPB, EXT. 900 Ref 9813670-0001

KNOB, MODULE LATCH, MPB, EXT. 900 Ref 9813671-0001

LOCK HAND LEVER, MPB, EXT. 900 Ref 9813672-0001

LATCH MODULE, MPB, EXT. 900 Ref 9813673-0001

CD-ROM DRIVE, EXT. 90X 6.6.1 9813650-0001

Field Service 6-9


Upper Cover of
Mobile Productivity Base
Dock Release
Lever Lever Release
Latch

DC-DC Converter

Main Board
Assembly

Dock
Mechanism MPB with Upper Cover
Removed

Figure 6-4 Mobile Productivity Base Major FRUs

6.5 Notebook FRU Replacement Procedures


The following paragraphs contain field service-level removal/replacement procedures
for the 900 Series Notebook Computers.

Most FRU removal/replacement procedures involve connecting and disconnecting cable


connectors. The Extensa series uses two types of connectors including:

♦ Locking-type connectors - Use a plastic stick to unlock and lock these type of
connectors as shown in Figure 6-5.

♦ Non-locking connectors

6-10 Field Service


Unplugging the Connecting the
Cable Cable

Figure 6-5 Removing/Installing Cables with Locking-Type Connectors

6.5.1 Removing/Replacing the Notebook Battery Pack


Before performing any of the assembly/disassembly procedures, always disconnect the
AC adapter from the notebook and remove all battery packs. The procedure for removing
and replacing the notebook battery pack is as follows:

1. Turn off the computer and disconnect the AC adapter from the computer.
2. Unlock the battery on each side of the notebook and pull the battery out of
the front of the notebook as shown in Figure 6-6.
3. Replacement is essentially the reverse of Steps 1 and 2 (connector side of
battery goes up).

Field Service 6-11


Unlock Battery Pack

Remove Battery
Unlock the Battery
from Front of Notebook

Pull Battery Out of Unit

Flush
If Battery Lock comes off,
reinstall as shown
Slide

Figure 6-6 Notebook Battery Removal/Replacement

6.5.2 Removing/Replacing PCMCIA Options


The procedure for removing and replacing the PCMCIA options is as follows:

1. Turn off the computer and remove the battery pack(s) as described in
Paragraph 6.5.1.
2. Press the upper card eject button to eject the upper card, lower button
controls the lower card and use both buttons for Type III devices.
3. To replace the PCMCIA device, remove any filler cards present and insert the
device. Reinstall any external cabling required for the device.

6-12 Field Service


Figure 6-7 Installing/Removing PCMCIA Options

6.5.3 Installing/Removing the Mobile Productivity Base


The procedure for removing and replacing the Mobile Productivity Base assembly is as
follows:

1. Power down the notebook and disconnect the AC adapter if installed.


2. Slide the lever release latch to the front of the MPB to release the docking
lever (refer to Figure 6-8).
3. Swing the Docking Lever outward a full 90 degrees from the side of the MPB.

Field Service 6-13


Docking/
Undocking
Lever Lever Release
Latch

Left Side
Right
Side

Figure 6-8 Removing/Replacing the MPB

4. The swing lever also pushes the computer up slightly off the MPB allowing
you to grasp the computer on the left hand side.
5. Lift the computer up slightly on the left hand side. Hold the computer securely
on both ends and pull the computer out of the MPB, left side first as shown
in Figure 6-8
6. Close the lever and close the expansion door on the bottom of the computer.
7. To replace the notebook in the MPB, turn the notebook over and open the
expansion door (slide the door toward the center of the notebook).
8. Slide the Release latch toward the front of the MPB to release the lever; then
swing the lever completely away from the MPB until the lever is 90 degrees
open from the side of the MPB.

6-14 Field Service


9. Slide the computer into the MPB, right side first, ernsuring that the guides
on both the computer and the docking base are securely hooked; then rest
the computer on the base.
10. Press and hold down the computer; then swing the lever toward the MPB
until the latch release locks the computer in place.

6.5.4 Removing/Replacing the Hard Disk Drive Assembly


The procedure for removing and replacing the Hard Disk Drive assembly is as follows:

1. Power down the notebook, disconnect the AC adapter, if installed, and remove
the battery pack as described in Paragraphs 6.5.1 and 6.5.2.
2. Disconnect the Mobile Productivity Base and any installed PCMCIA options.
3. Turn the computer over and remove the hard disk drive bay cover (refer to
Figure 6-9).
4. Grasp the drive loop and remove the drive from the notebook.

HDD
Access
Cover

Drive
Removal
Loop

Figure 6-9 Removing/Replacing the Hard Disk Drive Module

Field Service 6-15


5. Store the HDD in an antistatic bag.
6. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 5.

6.5.5 Removing/Replacing the Keyboard Assembly


The procedure for removing and replacing the keyboard assembly is as follows:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Remove the four screws near the display hinges (rear of the notebook) as
shown in Figure 6-10.
3. Snap out and pull up the Status Panel (refer to Figure 6-10).

1 Remove Status
Panel Screws Snap out and
2
pull up Status
Panel

Lift up and flip Unplug Keyboard


3 4 Connectors
Keyboard to the left

Figure 6-10 Removing the Keyboard Assembly

4. Lift up the Keyboard Assembly to free it from the notebook and then flip the
keyboard to the left side of the notebook as shown in Figure 6-10.

6-16 Field Service


5. Unplug the keyboard connectors (CN5 and CN14) and set aside the Keyboard
Assembly.
6. Replacement is essentially the reverse of Steps 1 through 5.

6.5.6 Heat Sink Assembly Removal/Replacement


To remove and replace the Heat Sink Assembly, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Remove the Keyboard Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.5.
3. Remove the four screws securing the Heat Sink Assembly to the notebook
and remove the heat sink.
4. Replacement of the Heat Sink Assembly is the reverse of Steps 1 through 3.

1 Remove Keyboard

2 Remove four screws


and remove Heat Sink
Assembly

Figure 6-11 Heat Sink Assembly Removal/Replacement

Field Service 6-17


6.5.7 Display Assembly Removal/Replacement
To remove and replace the Display Assembly, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Remove the Keyboard Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.5.
3. Remove the Heat Sink Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.6.
4. Refer to Figure 6-12 and remove the two rear screws that secure the Display
to the notebook housing. Note: You don’t have to remove the leftmost screw.

1 Remove Rear
Display Screws

2 Remove Display Cable


Screw And Unplug Two
Cables (CN1, CN8)

CN8
CN1

Figure 6-12 Removing/Replacing the Display Assembly

5. Remove the screw securing the Display Cable to the Main Board and unplug
the Display Cable (CN1) and the Inverter Cable (CN8).
6. Remove the Display Assembly from the Base Assembly.
7. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 6.

6-18 Field Service


6.5.8 Removing/Replacing the LED/Microphone Board
Assembly
To remove and replace the LED Board Assembly, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Remove the Keyboard Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.5.
3. Remove the Heat Sink Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.6.
4. Remove the Display Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.7.
5. Remove the two screws that secure the LED Board Assembly and unplug
cable connector CN7; remove the LED Board Assembly.
6. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 5.

1 Remove Keyboard

2 Remove Heat Sink


3 Remove two screws
and Connector CN7

CN7

Figure 6-13 Removing/Replacing the LED/Microphone Board Assembly

Field Service 6-19


6.5.9 Removing/Replacing the CPU Board
To remove and replace the CPU Board Assembly, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Remove the Keyboard Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.5.
3. Remove the Heat Sink Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.6.
4. Remove the screw securing the CPU Board to the Main Board and pull up to
remove the board from connector J1.
5. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 4.

1 Remove Keyboard and


Heat Sink Assemblies

2 Remove screw and


Cable Connector at J1

J1

Figure 6-14 CPU Board Assembly Removal/Replacement

6-20 Field Service


6.5.10 Removing/Replacing the Top Cover
To remove and replace the Top Cover Assembly, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Remove the Keyboard Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.5.
3. Remove the Heat Sink Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.6.
4. Remove the Display Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.7.
5. Remove four screws from the bottom of the base assembly.
6. Turn the base assembly over and remove Touchpad/Speaker connector
CN19.
7. Remove four screws from the four corners of the top cover (Figure 6-14).
8. Beginning from the left side of the unit, unsnap the top cover from the base
assembly.
9. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 8.

Field Service 6-21


Remove keyboard and
1 Heat Sink Assemblies
3 Unplug Speaker
Remove four Screws Connector CN19 an
2
at Bottom of Main Unit remove screws at fo
corners

4 Beginning at left side,


unsnap top cover
from base assembly

Figure 6-15 Removing/Replacing the Top Cover

6-22 Field Service


6.5.11 Removing/Replacing the VGA Video Board
To remove and replace the VGA Video Board Assembly, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Remove the Keyboard Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.5.
3. Remove the Heat Sink Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.6.
4. Remove the Display Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.7.
5. Remove two screws and unplug the VGA Video Board from the Main Board
as shown in Figure 6-16.
6. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 5.

1 Remove Keyboard,
Heat Sink and Top
Cover Assemblies
2 Remove Two Screws
and Unplug VGA Board
from Main Board

Figure 6-16 Removing/Replacing the VGA Video Board Assembly

Field Service 6-23


6.5.12 Removing/Replacing the Power Supply Board
To remove and replace the Power Supply Board Assembly, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Remove the Keyboard Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.5.
3. Remove the Heat Sink Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.6.
4. Remove the screw that secures the Power Supply Board Assembly to the Main
Board and remove the board from the base assembly.
5. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 4.

Power Supply
Board

CN22 and CN20


CN1
Battery Connector
Cable Assembly

Figure 6-17 Removing/Replacing the VGA Video Board Assembly

6-24 Field Service


6.5.13 Removing/Replacing the DC-In Board Assembly
To remove and replace the DC-In Board Assembly, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Remove the Keyboard Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.5.
3. Remove the Heat Sink Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.6.
4. Unplug cable connectors CN9 and CN10 and remove the board.
5. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 4.

CN10 DC-In
Board

CN9

Figure 6-18 Removing/Replacing the DC-In Board Assembly

Field Service 6-25


6.5.14 Removing/Replacing the PC Card Module
To remove and replace the PC Card Module Assembly, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Remove the Keyboard Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.5.
3. Remove the Heat Sink Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.6.
4. Remove the Display Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.7.
5. Remove the four screws that secure the PC Card Module to the Main Board
(refer to Figure 6-19).
6. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 5.

PC Module

Main Board
Assembly

Figure 6-19 Removing/Replacing the PC Card Module

6-26 Field Service


6.5.15 Removing/Replacing the Main Board Assembly
To remove and replace the Main Board Assembly, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Remove the Keyboard Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.5.
3. Remove the Heat Sink Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.6.
4. Remove the Display Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.7.
5. Remove the Top Cover Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.10.
6. Remove fourteen screws from the bottom assembly as shown in Figure 6-20.
7. Remove the top cover as described in Paragraph 6.5.10.
8. Remove the Main Board Assembly.
9. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 8.

Main Board Assembly

Figure 6-20 Removing/Replacing the Main Board Assembly

Field Service 6-27


6.5.16 Removing Touchpad and Speakers
To remove and replace the Touchpad and Speakers, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Remove the Keyboard Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.5.
3. Remove the Heat Sink Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.6.
4. Remove the Display Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.7.
5. Remove the Top Cover Assembly as described in Paragraph 6.5.10.
6. Remove the connectors on both sides of the Touchpad Assembly and detach
speakers from the top cover.
7. Remove the two screws that secure the Touchpad Assembly to the Top Cover
and remove the Button Assembly, Metal Plate, and Touchpad Main Sensor
as shown in Figure 6-21.
8. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1-7.

Connector Button Assembly

Metal Plate

Touchpad

Figure 6-21 Removing Touchpad Assembly

6-28 Field Service


6.5.17 Removing/Replacing the Display Bezel
To remove and replace the Display Bezel Assembly, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Use a sharp object to remove the six bezel screw covers and remove the six
screws.
3. Pull out and remove the Display Bezel.
4. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 3.

Figure 6-22 Removing/Replacing the Display Bezel

Field Service 6-29


6.5.18 Removing/Replacing the LCD
To remove and replace the LCD, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Remove the Display Bezel as described in Paragraph 6.5.17.
3. Remove three screws securing the LCD Assembly and pull up on the LCD
Panel (Figure 6-23).
4. Tilt the LCD Panel away from the display cover; unplug the LCD Panel from
the Display Cable Assembly (Figure 6-23) and remove the LCD Assembly.
5. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 4.

Figure 6-23 Removing/Replacing the LCD Assembly

6-30 Field Service


6.5.19 Removing/Replacing the Display Inverter Boards
To remove and replace the Display Inverter Boards, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Remove the Display Bezel as described in Paragraph 6.5.17.
3. Gently fold back the foil around the display and unplug the inverter cable,
CN2.
4. Next, remove the screw securing the DC-AC Inverter Board (larger of the two
PWBs) and the LCD ID Board (smaller of the PWBs) to the display back cover.
5. Press down on the latch (refer to Figure 6-24) and remove the Inverter Boards.
6. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 5.

CN2

Figure 6-24 Removing/Replacing the Display Inverter Boards

Field Service 6-31


6.6 Removing/Replacing MPB FRUs
6.6.1 Removing/Replacing the Media Bay Device
To remove and replace a MPB Modular Bay Device (e.g., CD-ROM Drive or Floppy Disk
Drive), use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Unlatch the module by pressing the latch at the base of the MPB toward the
unlock icon (rear of MPB) (refer to Figure 6-25).
3. Simultaneously, grasp the recessed grip area on the module and pull module
out of the MPB.
4. Installation is the reverse of Steps 1 through 3.

Modular Bay
Mobile Productivity Release
Base Latch

CD-ROM
Drive

Figure 6-25 Installing/Removing Media Bay Devices

6-32 Field Service


6.6.2 Removing/Replacing the MPB Battery
To remove and replace an MPB battery pack or dummy battery pack, use the following
procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Using your thumbs, unlock the two battery locks at each side of the MPB
(refer to Figure 6-26).
3. Pull the module out of the MPB.
4. Installation is the reverse of Steps 1 through 3.

Unlocking the Battery

Battery Groove

Removing the Battery

Figure 6-26 Installing/Removing Battery Pack in MPB

Field Service 6-33


6.6.3 Removing/Replacing the MPB Housing
To remove and replace the MPB housing, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Using your thumbs, unlock the two battery locks at each side of the MPB
(refer to Figure 6-26).
3. Pull the module out of the MPB.
4. Slide the Lever Release Latch forward to release the Docking Lever; extend
Docking Lever 90 degrees from the side of the MPB.
5. Remove fourteen screws from the top of the MPB as shown in Figure 6-27.
6. Lift up on the top section of the MPB Housing (from the left side as shown in
Figure 6-27) then pull to remove the top section of the MPB.
7. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 6.

1 Extend Dock
B Release lever
A
Dock Release
Lever Lever Release
Latch
Upper Cover of
Mobile Productivity Base

14 Screws

2 Remove Screws

Lift and Pull Out


3 Upper Cover

Figure 6-27 Removing/Replacing the MPB Housing

6-34 Field Service


6.6.4 Removing/Replacing the Docking Cable
To remove and replace the MPB Docking Cable, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Using your thumbs, unlock the two battery locks at each side of the MPB
(refer to Figure 6-26); pull the battery pack out of the MPB.
3. Remove the MPB Housing as described in Paragraph 6.6.3.
4. Remove two screws securing the Docking Cable to release the assembly (refer
to Figure 6-28).
5. Remove the four screws securing the Docking Cable assembly to the Docking
Mechanism and remove the Docking Cable.
6. Replacement is essentially the reverse of Steps 1 through 5.

Release Docking Cable

Remove Docking Cable Screws

Figure 6-28 Removing/Replacing the MPB Docking Cable

Field Service 6-35


6.6.5 Removing/Replacing the Docking Mechanism
To remove and replace the MPB Docking Mechanism, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Using your thumbs, unlock the two battery locks at each side of the MPB
(refer to Figure 6-26); pull the battery pack out of the MPB.
3. Remove the MPB Housing as described in Paragraph 6.6.3.
4. Remove the Docking Cable as described in Paragraph 6.6.4.
5. Remove the two screws that secure the Docking Mechanism to the bottom
section of the housing and remove the Docking Mechanism.
6. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 5.

Docking Mechanism

Figure 6-29 Removing/Replacing the Docking Mechanism

6-36 Field Service


6.6.6 Removing/Replacing the MPB DC-DC Converter
To remove and replace the MPB DC-DC Converter Assembly, use the following
procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Using your thumbs, unlock the two battery locks at each side of the MPB
(refer to Figure 6-26); pull the battery pack out of the MPB.
3. Remove the MPB Housing as described in Paragraph 6.6.3.
4. Remove the screw that secures the DC-DC Converter to the bottom section
of the MPB housing and remove the DC-DC-Converter.
5. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 4.

DC-DC Converter

CN8, CN9

Figure 6-30 Removing/Replacing the MPB DC-DC Converter Board

Field Service 6-37


6.6.7 Removing/Replacing the MPB Main Board Assembly
To remove and replace the MPB Main Board Assembly, use the following procedure:

1. Turn off the computer; disconnect the AC power adapter (if it is attached),
and remove the battery pack and PCMCIA cards as described in Paragraphs
6.5.1 and 6.5.2. Also disconnect the MPB (Paragraph 6.5.3) if attached.
2. Using your thumbs, unlock the two battery locks at each side of the MPB
(refer to Figure 6-26); pull the battery pack out of the MPB.
3. Remove the MPB Housing as described in Paragraph 6.6.3.
4. Remove the MPB Docking Cable and Docking Mechanism as described in
Paragraphs 6.6.4 and 6.6.5.
5. Remove the screw that secures the DC-DC Converter to the bottom section
of the MPB housing and remove the DC-DC-Converter.
6. Remove the DC-In and Battery Charger Cable Connectors (CN 13 and CN10).
7. Remove the 12 screws that secure the Main Board to the bottom section of
the housing. Then pull up on the main board and remove it from the unit.
8. Replacement is the reverse of Steps 1 through 7.

CN10

CN13

Main Board
12 Screws
Assembly

Figure 6-31 Removing/Replacing the MPB Main Board Assembly

6-38 Field Service


A
Notebook Schematic Diagrams
A.1 Introduction
This section contains schematic diagrams for the Extensa 900 Series Notebook
Computer. Logic schematics for the Mobile Productivity Base are provided in Appendix
B of this manual.

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-1


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 1 of 30)

A-2 Notebook Schematic Diagrams


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 2 of 30)

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-3


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 3 of 30)

A-4 Notebook Schematic Diagrams


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 4 of 30)

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-5


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 5 of 30)

A-6 Notebook Schematic Diagrams


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 6 of 30)

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-7


DIMM SOCKET
DRAM_VCC

2 $MA[0..11]
$MD[0..63]
2,6 $MD[0..63]
CN12
145

1 2
$MD0 3 4 $MD32
$MD1 5 6 $MD33
$MD2 7 8 $MD34
$MD3 9 10 $MD35
11 12
$MD4 13 14 $MD36
$MD5 15 16 $MD37
$MD6 17 18 $MD38
$MD7 19 20 $MD39
21 22
$CAS#0 23 24 $CAS#4
$CAS#1 25 26 $CAS#5
27 28
$MA0 29 30 $MA3
$MA1 31 32 $MA4
$MA2 33 34 $MA5
35 36
$MD8 37 38 $MD40
$MD9 39 40 $MD41
$MD10 41 42 $MD42 M+5V
$MD11 43 44 $MD43
45 46 1
$MD12 47 48 $MD44 R202
$MD13 49 50 $MD45 100KR3
$MD14 51 52 $MD46
$MD15 53 54 $MD47 2
55 56
DIMM_IN# 9
57 58
59 60

61 62
63 64
65 66
67 68
2 $MWE#
69 70
2 $RAS#2
71 72
2 $RAS#3 73 74
75 76
77 78
79 80
81 82
$MD16 83 84 $MD48
$MD17 85 86 $MD49
$MD18 87 88 $MD50
$MD19 89 90 $MD51
91 92
$MD20 93 94 $MD52
$MD21 95 96 $MD53
$MD22 97 98 $MD54
$MD23 99 100 $MD55
101 102
$MA6 103 104 $MA7
$MA8 105 106 $MA11
107 108
$MA9 109 110
$MA10 111 112
113 114
$CAS#2 115 116 $CAS#6
$CAS#3 117 118 $CAS#7
119 120
$MD24 121 122 $MD56
$MD25 123 124 $MD57
MOS_ON# 23
$MD26 125 126 $MD58
$MD27 127 128 $MD59 M+3.3V
129 130
$MD28 131 132 $MD60 1
$MD29 133 134 $MD61 R154 M+3.3V
$MD30 135 136 $MD62 100KR3 1 1U51C
$MD31 137 138 $MD63 0 4
R81 139 140 2
1 2 141 142 8 9
19 DIMM_DATA ID_CLK 19
143 144
2KR3 1
R82 146 7SOLCX125M
3K3R3
SDIMM144
2

$CAS#[0..7]
2 $CAS#[0..7]

DRAM_VCC DRAM_VCC

C171 C166 C167 C168 C169 C172 C179 C180 C176 C177 C178
SC10U16V SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U

Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 7 of 30)

A-8 Notebook Schematic Diagrams


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 8 of 30)

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-9


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 9 of 30)

A-10 Notebook Schematic Diagrams


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 10 of 30)

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-11


Figure A-1 Motherboard PWB Logic Diagrams (Sheet 11 of 23 )

A-12 Notebook Schematic Diagrams


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 12 of 30)

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-13


SB: ADD DUMMY RESISTER TO
U40 PIN 22
+5V

1
R105
+5V
RTC
10KR3
CX21
2 SCD1U SD[0..7]
SD[0..7] 4,14,15,17,19,20,25

U40
24 VCC 11 SD7
AD7
PWRGOOD# 13 10 SD6
23 PWRGOOD# CS$ AD6
4 RTCAS RTCAS 14 9 SD5
AS AD5
RTCRW 15 8 SD4
19 RTCRW R/W$ AD4
19 RTCDS RTCDS 17 7 SD3
DS AD3
G1 18 6 SD2
RST$ AD2
RX13 1 2 21 5 SD1
RCL$ AD1
14 ENEXTCMOS 1 2 22 4 SD0
EXTRAM AD0
GAP-OPEN 20 19 IRQ#8
BC INT$ @IRQ8# 20,23
DUMMY-R3 2 23
X1 SQW 1
MOT
3 12 1
1 X2 VSS
16 R101
VSS
BT1 DUMMY-R3
BR1225-H1A BQ3285E
2 X4
1 4 2
2 3 +5V
CAN32768
4 5 6
D16
C213 RB731U
SCD1U
BIOS ROM 3 2 1

4 SA[0..15]
U45
SA0 12
A0 32
VCC
SA1 11
A1
SA2 10
A2 13 SD0
DQ0
SA3 9 14 SD1
A3 DQ1
SA4 8 15 SD2
A4 DQ2
SA5 7 17 SD3
A5 DQ3
SA6 6 18 SD4
A6 DQ4
SA7 5 19 SD5
A7 DQ5
SA8 27 20 SD6
A8 DQ6
SA9 26 21 SD7
A9 DQ7
SA10 23
A10
SA11 25
A11
SA12 4 31 MEMW#
A12 PGM MEMW# 4
SA13 28
+5V A13
SA14 29
A14
1 U44A SA15 3 16
A15 VSS
4 19 XSA16 2 A16
RTCROMCS# 1 SB:ADD 100KR3 FOR QUICK DISCHARGE
4 RTCROMCS# 19 XSA17
3 22
CE 1
VPP
DISROM 2 MEMR# 24 30 1
25 DISROM 4 MEMR# OE A17/N.C
RX21
7 SSHC32 S128K8-150 100KR3 C226
SCD1U
2
3
2 Q6
S2N3906
1

1 M+12V
R147
10KR3

2
3
FLASH_ON 2 Q7
19 FLASH_ON
RN1424
1

Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 13 of 30)

A-14 Notebook Schematic Diagrams


KBC_5V
KEYBOARD CONTROLLER KBC_5V

+5V
C154 C153
4,13,15,17,19,20,25 SC1KP SCD1U M+5V

1 1
KKKKKKKKKKKK KKKK R87 R84
SD[0..7] CCCCCCCCCCCC CCCC 10KR3 100KR3
SD[0..7]
O O O OO OO O O O OO OO O O 1
L L L LL LL L L L LL LL L L RY1 2 2
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 47KR3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
2 SW1
SC:ADD RY1 PULLED-UP 1 4
4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 U28 2 3
KBC_5V M+5V 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
LSM702
PPPPP PPPPPPPPPPP
L12 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
1 2 KROW8 49 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 32 HOTKEY#
P37 P20 HOTKEY# 19
KROW7 50 31
P36 P21 3.3V/5V# 10
SCHOKE-D KROW6 51 30 X2
P35 P22
KROW5 52 29 1 1
P34 P23 SUSPEND# 10,11,15
KROW4 53 28 R83 M+5V
KROW3
KROW2
KROW1
54
55
56
P33
P32
P31
M38813 P24
P25
P26
27
26
25
CLLED#
NLLED#
CLLED#
NLLED#
28
28
DUMMY-R3 2

1
P30 P27
57 24 2 3 RESON-8MHZ RX08
58 VCC VSS
TDATA 23 KBC_5V 20KR3
26 TDATA P61/CNTR0 P XOUT
TCLK 59 4 22 R79
26 TCLK P60/INT5/OBF2 XIN
SD7 60 5 21 B_SMB_DATA 1 2 R76 2 SB: ADD 20K PULL-UP TO @SUSRST#
DQ7 / P40
SD6 61 I 20 B_SMB_CLK 1 2
DQ6 P41/INT0
SD5 62 P B 19 DUMMY-R3
DQ5 5 P P P FPP RESET# @SUSRST# 20
SD4 63 18 DUMMY-R3
DQ4 3 5 PP 4 4 0 4 4 CNVSS
SD3 64 DQ3 / 2 5 5 7 6 # 4 3 P42/INT1 17 KBDATA
S / 1 0 / / / / / +5V KBDATA 21,26
R S / / I I OO I
D D D WR C D C TR N N BBN
QQQRD SAY L XX T T FF T 1
2 1 0 # # # 0 # K DD 4 3 1 0 2 RX09
M38813 20KR3
1 1 1 1 1 1 1
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 SB: ADD IRQ1 PULL-UP
2
SD2
SD1
KBCLK
IRQ1
KBCLK 21,26 PIN1,4
ON PASSWORD ENABLE
IRQ1 4
SD0 IRQ12
IRQ12 4
4 IOW#
IOW#
IOR#
OFF PASSWORD DISABLE
4 IOR#
@KBCS#
20 @KBCS#
SA2
4 SA2

MATRIX1 KB TYPE
13 ENEXTCMOS
ANYKEY
23 ANYKEY 0 TYPE 0
EN_213RI
EN_213RI
PS2DATA SB: M+5V CHANGED TO +5VSB
21,26 PS2DATA 1 TYPE 1
PS2CLK
21,26 PS2CLK
+5VSB

CN14
KCOL1 1
2 KCOL2
KCOL3 3 1 U25A
4 KCOL4 4 RX26
KCOL5 5 B_SMB_DATA 1 2 1 2
SMB1_DATA 27
6 KCOL6
KCOL7 7 470R3
8 KCOL8
KCOL9 9 19 7 1 SOHC4066
3
10 KCOL10 SMB_SEL
KCOL11 11
12 KCOL12
KCOL5 13 1 U25B
14 KCOL13 4 RX27
KCOL14 15 B_SMB_CLK 11 10 1 2
SMB1_CLK 27
16 KCOL15
KCOL16 17 470R3
18
7 1 SOHC4066
2
ELCO-CONN18 SMB2_DATA 21
SMB2_CLK 21
KBC_5V KBC_5V U25C
1
4
4 3

+5V
RP21 1 U61F
KROW4 1 10 4 7 5 SOHC4066
KROW3 2 9 KROW8
KROW2 3 8 KROW7 13 12
KROW1 4 7 KROW6
5 6 KROW5 U25D
1
7 SSHC14 4
SRP10K 8 9
1
SMB_SEL=1 : SELECT SHIVA BATTERY R68
100KR3
SMB_SEL=0 : SELECT UMA BATTERY 7 6 SOHC4066
2

CN5
KROW1 1
2 KROW2
KROW3 3
4 KROW4
KROW5 5
6 KROW6
KROW7 7
8 KROW8

ELCO-CONN8

Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 14 of 30)

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-15


SUPER I/O CONTROLLER
16,21,22 PD[0..7]
PP PP PPPP
DD DD DDDD
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

8 7 6 5 8 7 6 5
RP12 RP11
SRN33 SRN33

RP10
R42 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 8 ACK# 16,22
1 2 2 7
16,22 STROB# BUSY 16,22
3 6 PE 16,22
33R3 4 5
4 IRQ[3..7] SLCT 16,22
I I I I I SRN33
+5V RR RRR RP9
QQ QQ Q 1 8
2 7 SLCTIN# 16,22
3 4 5 6 7 INIT# 16,22
3 6
4 5 ERROR# 16,21
4 RSTDRV AUTOFD# 16
C112 1
SCD1U 0 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 7 7 7 7 SRN33 U23
0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6

MI I V I I I SPP PPVPPPPA BP S SI EA
RRRDRRR T DD DDS DDDDC UE L L N RF
Q Q D Q QQ B0 1 2 3 S4 5 6 7 K S/ CI I RD
$SIO_24M 3 4 5 6 7 / / / / / / / / / / Y WT N T / /
/ WI T WR D M D M D / D/ / / HD
1 A RNR PD SSRSR WA W S D DS 75
D I DK A KE AE 1 AT GT I ST DCD1 DCD1# 20
R57 R T E0 T CNT N I AAER ER 74 DSR1#
DSR1
47R3 A EX A H0 E 1 T T P LB 73 SIN1
T G 0 / E/ / SIN1
E M A D 72 RTS1#
RTS1/BADDR0
2 0 T S E 71 SOUT1
R T N SOUT1/BOUT1/BADDR1
70 CTS1#
1 R S CTS1
C125 B E 69 DTR1#
L DTR1
SC39P 1 68 RI1#
4 0WS# CS1/ZWS RI1 RI1# 20
2 67 SA15
4,19 DRQ2 DRQ2 DCD2/A15
R52 3 66
4 DACK#2 DACK2 DSR2/IRQ12/IRRX2/IRSL0 IRRX2 16
1 2 4 65
4 TC TC SIN2/IRRX1 IRRX1 16
NOT INSTALLED $SIO_24M 5 64 SA14
8 $SIO_24M X1 RTS2/A14
100R3 6 63 IRTX
IRSL1 IRSL1 SOUT2/BOUT2/CFG0/IRTX IRTX 16
C118 7 62 SA13
VSS CTS2/A13
SC47P SD7 8 D 61 SA12
D7 R DTR2/A12
SD6 9 60 SA11
D6 A RI2/A11

PC87338
SD5 10 D T 59
D5 VSS
SD4 11 R E 58
D4 V 1 IRQ15/SIRQI1/DRQ3 DRQ3 4,19 SA[11..15] 4
SD3 12 2 / 57
D3 IRQ11 IRQ11 4
SD2 13 D2 / M IRQ10 56 IRQ10 4
SD1 14 P S 55
D1 N E IRQ9 IRQ9 4
SD0 15 F N 54
D0 / 1 DRQ0 DRQ0 4,19
16 53
4 IOW# WR D / DACK0 DACK#0 4
17 R C 52
4 IOR# RD M 2 S DACK1 DACK#1 4
18 51
4 AEN AEN T D 3 0 IOCHRDY IOCHRDY# 4
SA9 19 R E / /
A9
SA8 20 1 N S SD
4,13,14,17,19,20,25 SD[0..7] A8 / S I I R
SA7 21 I E R RA
A7
SA6 22 D L Q QT
A6 L / 1 I E
SA5 23
E
A5 A 3 2 0
SA4 24 A4 D / D D / / /
SA3 25 S HR WW I R I R I DM
A3 K DDD T GDS R 1 MNA R AS
AC RSA RAAT DV S D/ T DT SVCE
AAA1 H Q E T WK T T E I S L R P R E E LDKN
2 1 0 0 G 1 L AP 0 E AP RS 2 0 D0 X1 2 D3 0
PC87338VJG
2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 5
6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
SA2
SA1 +5V
DACK#3 4
SA0
SA10 PNF 16
C151 C155 C159
RPM
SCD1U SC10U16V SC1KP
4 SA[0..10] INDEX# 22
MTR0#
MTR0# 22

22 DSKCHG# DR0# 22
4,19 DRQ1 IRSL2
22 HDSEL
22 RDATA#
22 WRTPRT#
22 TRK0#
22 WGATE#
22 WDATA#
22 STEP#
22 FDIR

M+5V

SB: CHANGE MAX213 TO MAX3243


C62

U7
C61 SCD1U 28 26 C81
24 C1+ VCC 27 C82
C1- V+
1 C2+ 3
V-
SCD1U 2 SCD1U
C2-
SOUT1 14 T1IN 9 SCD1U
T1OUT PSOUT1 16,21
RTS1# 13 10
T2IN T2OUT PRTS1# 16,21
DTR1# 12 T3IN 11
T3OUT PDTR1# 16,21
20
R2OUTB
SIN1 19 4
R1OUT R1IN PSIN1 16,21
DSR1# 18 5
R2OUT R2IN PDSR1# 16,21
CTS1# 17
R3OUT 6
R3IN PCTS1# 16
16 7
20,23 @RI1# R4OUT R4IN PRI1# 16,21
20 @DCD1# 15 R5OUT 8 16,21
R5IN PDCD1#
23
FORCEON
22
14 SUSPEND# 21 FORCEOFF#
25
INVALID# GND
MAX3243

CX13
SCD1U

1
RX35
1MR3

Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 15 of 30)

A-16 Notebook Schematic Diagrams


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 16 of 30)

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-17


)

Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 17 of 30)

A-18 Notebook Schematic Diagrams


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 18 of 30)

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-19


)

Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 19 of 30)

A-20 Notebook Schematic Diagrams


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 20 of 30)

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-21


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 21 of 30)

A-22 Notebook Schematic Diagrams


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 22 of 30)

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-23


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 23 of 30)

A-24 Notebook Schematic Diagrams


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 24 of 30)

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-25


DEBUG-BD GOLDEN FINGER +5V +5V

SD[0..15]

RP49
SD0 1 10
+5V SD1 2 9 SD4
+5V SD2 3 8 SD5
SD3 4 7 SD6
5 6 SD7

GF1 SRP10K
41 1 SD4 +5V +5V
A1 B1
42 2 SD3
A2 B2
43 3 SD2
A3 B3
RSTDRV 44 4 SD1
4 RSTDRV A4 B4
IOCHRDY# 45 5 SD0
4 IOCHRDY# A5 B5 RP46
AEN 46 6 MEMW#
4 AEN A6 B6 SD8 1 10
IOW# 47 7 MEMR#
4 IOW# A7 B7 SD9 2 9 SD15
IOR# 48 8 RTCROMCS#
4 IOR# A8 B8 RTCROMCS# 4 SD10 3 8 SD14
49 9 XSA17
A9 B9 XSA17 19 SD11 4 7 SD13
4 BALE BALE 50 A10 B10 10 XSA16 XSA16 19
51 11 SBHE# 5 6 SD12
A11 B11 SBHE# 4
IRQ11 52 12 LA19
4 IRQ11 A12 B12 LA19 4 SRP100K
LA23 53 13 LA18
4 LA23 A13 B13 LA18 4 +5V +5V
4 LA22 LA22 54 A14 B14 14 LA17 LA17 4
4 LA21 LA21 55 A15 B15 15 SA16
LA20 56 16 SA15
4 LA20 A16 B16
MEMR* 57 17 SA14
4 MEMR# MEMW* 58
A17 B17
18 SA13
4 MEMW# A18 B18 RP47
DISROM 59 19 SA12
13 DISROM A19 B19 SBHE# 1 10
FLASH_ON 60 20 SA11
19 FLASH_ON A20 B20 LA19 2 9 LA23
PWRGIN 61 21 SA10
23 PWRGIN A21 B21 LA18 3 8 LA22
62 22 SA9
A22 B22 LA17 4 7 LA21
63 23 SA8
A23 B23 5 6 LA20
SD15 64 24 SA7
A24 B24
SD14 65
A25 B25
25 SA6
SD13 66 26 SA5 SRP100K
A26 B26
SD12 67
A27 B27
27 SA4
SD11 68 28 SA3
A28 B28
SD10 69 29 SA2
A29 B29
SD9 70 30 SA1
A30 B30
SD8 71 31 SA0
A31 B31
SD7 72 32
A32 B32
SD6 73
A33 B33
33 +5V +5V
SD5 74 34
A34 B34
75 35 SA[0..16]
A35 B35 SA[0..16] 4
76 36
A36 B36
77 37
A37 B37
78 38 RP45
A38 B38
79 39 IRQ11 1 10
A39 B39
80 40 IRQ10 2 9 IRQ3
A40 B40 4 IRQ10 IRQ3 4
IRQ9 3 8 IRQ4
MS-DBG-GF80 4 IRQ9 IRQ4 4
4 IRQ7 4 7 IRQ5
IRQ7 IRQ5 4
5 6 IRQ6 IRQ6 4
SRP10K
+5V +5V

RP48
MEMR# 1 10
MEMW# 2 9
IRQ15 4
IOR# 3 8
IRQ14 4
IOW# 4 7
RSTDRV IRQ12
5 6 4

SRP10K

RP36
4,19 DRQ1 1 10
DRQ1
DISROM 2 9 DRQ0
DRQ0 4,19
DRQ3 3 8 DRQ5
4,19 DRQ3 DRQ5 4,19
DRQ2 4 7 DRQ6
4,19 DRQ2 DRQ6 4,19
5 6 DRQ7 DRQ7 4,19
SRP4K7

+5V

RP41
1 8 MEMCS16#
MEMCS16# 4
2 7 IOCS16#
IOCS16# 4
3 6 REFRESH# REFRESH# 4
4 5

SRN100K
+5V

R258
1 2 IOCHRDY#

1KR3

+5V

R263
1 2
IOCHK# 4
10KR3

Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 25 of 30)

A-26 Notebook Schematic Diagrams


PS2 INTERFACE
+5V
F1 L9
1 2 1 2

8 7 6 5 SPOLY100 MLB321611
RP3
SRN10K

CN9
1 2 3 4 7
R1 L4
1 2 1 2
14,21 KBCLK R2 L5 6
1 2 47R3 1 2 MLB321611 5
14,21 PS2CLK
R3 L6 4
47R3 1 2 MLB321611
1 2 3
14,21 KBDATA
R4 L7 2
1 2 47R3 1 2 MLB321611 1
14,21 PS2DATA
47R3 MLB321611
8
C79 C78 C77 C76
SC47P SC47P SC47P SC47P SD5339810-6

+5V

8 7 6 5
RP31
SRN10K

1 2 3 4
+5V
TOUCHPAD CONNECTOR

CN19
17 18

1
2
3
18 SPK_R1 4
5
14 TCLK
6
TDATA 14
7
8
9
10
11
18 SPK_L1
12
13
14

C234 15 16 C224
SC47P SC47P
SD5255917-14

AUD_GND

SB: CHANGE CN19 PIN DEFINITION

Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 26 of 30)

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-27


BAT+
CHARGER INTERFACE CIRCUIT
CN21
+5VSB
+5VSB

1
BAT_VS 2 +5VSB
3 1 +5VSB
4 R253
14 SMB1_CLK 47KR3 U86F
5 1
14 SMB1_DATA AD+ 4
BAT_TH 6
7 2
C351 C352 AD_IN#
8 13 12 AD5V
SCD1U SC1KP AD5V 23
R252 3
1 22 Q9 7 SSHC14
MOLEX-CON8 RN1424
150KR3 1

BATTERY CONNECTOR
ADAPTOR PLUG-IN DETECTION CIRCUIT

BAT+ BAT+
SMB1_CLK, SMB1_DATA: CHARGER SMB I2C
+5VSB

1
R251
CN22 10KR3
1 2 CSI, CSO:CHARGER HANDSHAKING
3 4 2 SIGNALS
5 6
SMB1_CLK 7 8 SMB1_DATA
9 10 ADAPTOR/BATTERY INTERFACE
21 CSO CSI 21
BAT_VS 11 12
13 14
19 CHGR_CLK CHGR_DATA 19 DCBATOUT AD+
15 16 BAT_TH
28 CHARGE_LED
17 18 D28
19 20 CHGR_CLK,CHGR_DATA: CHARGER SEEPROM'S CLOCK & DATA 1 2

MOLEX-CONN20A NSQ03A04-1
D27
1 2

CHARGER CONNECTOR NSQ03A04-1


BAT+
U94
1 8
2 7
1 3 6
1 3 R270 4 5
DY6 DY1 240KR3
MBR0540T1 BZX84C4V3L 330KR3 SI4435DY DCBATOUT
2
CY14 2 1 D22
SCD1U50V3ZY 2
1
R269 3
100KR3
3 82KR3 1
1 QY1 2
2N7002 BAV99
2 2.2KR3
RY23 RY16
1 2 1 2
Q13
220KR3 4K7R3 3 R242
1 BL3# 1 2
DK_ADBATON
CY13
SCD1U50V3ZY 2 2N7002 560R3

+5V

+5VSB
DCBATOUT DCBATOUT

CN20
1 2
AD+ 3 4
5 6
7 8
19 BL2# BL1# 19
9 10
11 12
29 ON/OFF# 13 14
15 16 BL3#
17 18 AD5V
19 20
6/18 MOVE BL3# FROM PIN 10 TO PIN 16
MOLEX-CONN20A

1
R272 CHARGER CONNECTOR
0R3

2
CHARGER SEEPROM
ADDRESS SELECT
SHIVA:PULL LOW(ADDRESS 0)
UMA:OPEN(ADDRESS 1)
INTERNAL PULLED HIGH AT CHARGER BOARD

Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 27 of 30)

A-28 Notebook Schematic Diagrams


LED INTERFACE
CHARGE_LED#

3 3
2 Q1 2 Q2
27 CHARGE_LED 21 DK_CHG_LED
RN1424 RN1424
1 1

+5VSB M+5V +5V

C74 C72 C73


SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U

M+5V +5V

+5VSB

CN7
19 20

1
2
3 SB: ADD LOWBAT_LED
4
LOWBAT_LED 19
COVER_SW 5
20 @COVER_SW
6 POWER_SW2
POWER_SW2 29
7
8
CHARGE_LED# 9
10 HDD/FDD_LED#
14 NLLED# NLOCK_LED# 11
12 STANDBY_LED#
CLOCK_LED# 13
14 CLLED#
14 MIC_R
15
18 INTMIC 16

17 18
AUD_GND
SD5255917-16

+5V
CLOSE TO CONNECTOR
1
R141
10KR3

2
24 HDD_LED# HDD/FDD_LED# 19
21 DK_DISKLED#

19 STNDBY#

+5V +5V +5V

U8E U8D U56D CLOSE TO AUDIO CHIP


1 1 1 1
4 4 4 3

11 10 9 8 12 11 STANDBY_LED#

1
7 SSHC14 D7 7 SSHC14 7 SSHC125
S1N4148
1
R14 2
2MR5
1
2 R26
220KR3

2 C59

SC1U10V5JY

Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 28 of 30)

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-29


Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 29 of 30)

A-30 Notebook Schematic Diagrams


M+5V +5V +5V M+5V M+5V M+5V M+5V
1 U34A 1 U53E 1 U53F 1 U34E 1 U34F 1 U11A 1 U11B
4 4 4 4 4 4 4

1 2 11 10 13 12 11 10 13 12 1 2 3 4

7 SSHC14 7 SSHC14 7 SSHC14 7 SSHC14 7 SSHC14 7 SSHC14 7 SSHC14

M+5V M+5V +5V +5V +5V


1 U1E 1 U1F 1 U8F 1 U12D 1 U19F
4 4 4 4 4

11 10 13 12 13 12 9 8 13 12

7 SSHC14 7 SSHC14 7 SSHC14 7 SSHC14 7 SSHCT04

+5V

M+5V M+5V M+5V U64A


4
1 U67B 1 U67C 1 U67D
4 4 4 14 5
VCC P Q
4 9 12 2 R
6 8 11 D
5 10 13 3
CLK
6
C Q
7 SSHC32 7 SSHC32 7 SSHC32 7 GND L
SSHCT74
1
+5V

+5V +5VSB +5VSB


1 U54A 1 U91C 1 U91D +5V
4 4 4 1 U14A
1 9 12 4
3 8 11 1
2 10 13 3
2
7 SSHC08 7 SSHC08 7 SSHC08
7 TSHCT00

+5V
1 U48D
4
12
11 +5V
13

7 SSHC08 AUDIO_+5VA

1 U43B
0
1 U75D
14 9 4
VCC P Q
12 R 8 9
D
11
CLK
8
C Q 7 6
7 SOHC4066
GND L
SSHC74
1
3
+5V
AUD_GND

M+3.3V M+3.3V M+3.3V M+3.3V M+3.3V

1 1 U62C 1 1 U62D 1 U51A 1 U51B 1 1 U51D


4 0 4 3 4 1 4 4 4 3

9 8 12 11 2 3 5 6 12 11

7 SOLCX125M 7 SOLCX125M 7 SOLCX125M 7 SOLCX125M 7 SOLCX125M

Figure A-1 Notebook Main Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 30 of 30)

Notebook Schematic Diagrams A-31


B
MPB Schematic Diagrams
B.1 Introduction
This section contains schematic diagrams for the Extensa 900 Mobile Productivity Base.
Logic schematics for the MPB are provided in Appendix A of this manual.

MPB Schematic Diagrams B-1


CPU_VCC NF2
STC222B
1 2 VCC_CPU

C15 3 C18
SC1KP SC1KP

NF3 C20 C46 C37 C44


STC222B C49 C51
1 2 SC22U10V0JY SC22U10V0JY SC22U10V0JY SC22U10V0JY SC22U10V0JY
SC22U10V0JY
P

C27 C50
C33 3 C53 C34 C45 C54 C48
SC1KP SC1KP SC22U10V0JY SC22U10V0JY SC22U10V0JY SC22U10V0JY SC22U10V0JY SC22U10V0JY

VCC_3V VCC_3V VCC_I/O


NF1
STC222B

1 2
3 C3
J1A
C32 C14 C38
SC22U10V0JY
1 51 SC1KP SC1KP SC22U10V0JY
2 52
3 CPU_VCC
53
4 54
$CPU_A25 5 55 $CPU_A30
$CPU_A26 6 56 $CPU_A29
$CPU_A27 7 57 $CPU_A21
$CPU_A28 8 58 $CPU_A22 J1B
$CPU_A3 9 59 $CPU_A23 101 151
$CPU_A4 10 60 $CPU_A24 102 152
$CPU_A5 11 61 103 153
$CPU_A6 12 62 104 154

B-2 MPB Schematic Diagrams


$CPU_A7 CPU_VOLT1 3 105 155
13 63
$CPU_A8 14 CPU_VOLT0 3 106 156
64 CPU_THMG
$CPU_A9 15 65 3 $CPU_D33 107 157 CPU_VOLTAGE1
CPU_THM 3
16 66 $CPU_D32 108 158 CPU_VOLTAGE2
2 $NMI $CPU_A31 17 67 109 159 CPU_VOLTAGE3
18 68 CPU_VEND 3 $CPU_D31 110 160 CPU_VOLTAGE4
$CPU_A10 19 69 CPU_ID3 3 $CPU_D30 111 161
$CPU_A11 20 70 CPU_ID2 3 $CPU_D29 112 162 $CPU_D63
$CPU_A12 21 71 CPU_ID1 3 $CPU_D28 113 163 $CPU_D62 1 1 1 1
$CPU_A13 22 72 CPU_ID0 3 $CPU_D27 114 164 $CPU_D61 R28 R29 R30 R31
$CPU_A14 23 73 $CPU_D26 115 165 $CPU_D60 0R3 0R3 0R3 0R3
$CPU_A15 24 $INV 2 $CPU_D25 116 166 $CPU_D59
74 $IGNNE#
$CPU_A16 25 75 2 $CPU_D24 117 167 $CPU_D58 2 2 2 2
$CPU_A17 26 76 $FERR# 2 118 168 $CPU_D57
$CPUADS# 2
$CPU_A18 27 77 $CPU_D23 119 169 $CPU_D56
$MIO# 2
$CPU_A19 28 78 $CPU_D22 120 170
$CPU_A20 $DC# 2
29 79 $WR# $CPU_D21 121 171 $CPU_D55 FOR SHIVA
30 80 2 $CPU_D20 122 172 $CPU_D54
$BRDY# 2 $CPU_D19 123 173
31 81 $CPU_D53
2 $STPCLK# 32 82 $CPU_D18 124 174 $CPU_D52
33 $NA# 2 $CPU_D17 125 175 $CPU_D51
83 $KEN# SB
2 $CPUCLK 34 84 2 $CPU_D16 126 176 $CPU_D50
$WB/WT# 2
$BE#7 35 85 127 177 $CPU_D49
$EADS# 2
$BE#6 36 86 $CPU_D15 128 178 $CPU_D48
$HITM# 2
37 87 $CPU_D14 129 179
2 $SMI# $CACHE# 2
38 88 $CPU_D13 130 180 $CPU_D47
2,3 $CPUINIT $BOFF# 2 $CPU_D12 131 181 $CPU_D46
39 89
2,3 $CPURST 40 $CPU_D11 132 182 $CPU_D45
90
$BE#5 $HOLD 2 $CPU_D10 133 183 $CPU_D44
41 91
$BE#4 42 92 $HLOCK# 2 $CPU_D9 134 184 $CPU_D43
$HLDA 2
$BE#3 43 93 $CPU_D8 135 185 $CPU_D42
$SMIACT# 2
$BE#2 44 94 136 186 $CPU_D41
$AHOLD 2
$BE#1 45 95 $CPU_D7 137 187 $CPU_D40
$A20M# 2 $CPU_D6 138 188
$BE#0 46 96
$INTR 2 $CPU_D5 139 189 $CPU_D39
47 97
48 98 $CPU_D4 140 190 $CPU_D38
49 99 $CPU_D3 141 191 $CPU_D37
50 100 $CPU_D2 142 192 $CPU_D36 |LINK
$CPU_D1 143 193 $CPU_D35 |CPU1.SCH
$CPU_D0 144 194 $CPU_D34 |CPU2.SCH
WR200PVFWA1 145 195
146 196
147 197
148 198
149 199
150 200

2 WR200PVFWA1 CPU BOARD CONNECTOR

Figure B-1 MPB CPU Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 1 of 3)


$CPU_A[3..31]

$BE#[0..7]
2
2 $CPU_D[0..63]
Figure B-1 MPB CPU Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 2 of 3)

MPB Schematic Diagrams B-3


VCC_CPU

C19 C43 C4 C2 C9 C21 C16 C12 C6


SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U

VCC_CPU

C30
SCD1U

C22 C13 C29 C40 C25 C36


SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U

1 CPU_VOLT0
1
R25
1 CPU_VEND 36KR3D

1 CPU_ID3 2
1 CPU_VOLT1
1 CPU_ID2
1 CPU_ID1

1 CPU_ID0
1 CPU_THM
1 1 1 1 1 1
R11 R12 R3 R2 R14 TH1
0R3 0R3 0R3 0R3 0R3 TH301
2 2 2 2 2 2
1 CPU_THMG

FOR SHIGA
Not Installed
SHIVA NOT INS.

CPU_THM

SHIVA SHIGA SHIGA 1


CPU R26 C47
CLOCK RATIO 10KR3 SCD1U
R11 R12 R11 R12 R3 R2 2 U2
CPU_VOLT0 1
CPU_VOLT1 DQ VDD 8
50MHz X O X O X1.5 O O CPU_THMG 2
3 CLK/CONV# THIGH 7 CPU_VEND
6 CPU_ID3
RST# TLOW 5 CPU_ID2
60MHz O X X X X2.0 X O GND TCOM
4
66MHz X X O X X2.5 O X DS1620

O : Install X : Not install FOR SHIVA


SHIGA NOT INS.

VCC_I/O
J2
20
VCC_I/O
1
R8 2
1 $CPUINIT R9 1 2 3
1 2 4
1 $CPURST 33R3 5
2 $RS# 33R3 R27 6 C31 C42 C52 C10 C35 C39
C11
2 $PRDY 1 2 7
$TDI R22 8 SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U
2 $TDO 1 2 33R3 9
2 $TMS 10
33R3 11
2 $TCK 12
13
2 $TRST# 14
15
16
17
18

19 C24
C28 C41 C5 C23 C8 C17
HRS-CON18 SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U
SHIVA & SHIGA NOT INS.

THERMAL SENSOR

Figure B-1 MPB CPU Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 3 of 3)

B-4 MPB Schematic Diagrams


CLOSE BATTRY CONN. PIN1
CN1

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8

AMP-CON8

CN2

1
2
3
4
C2 5
SC1000P50V3MX 6
7
8
C3
SC1000P50V3MX

C4 MOLEX-CON8
SC1000P50V3MX
C1
SC1000P50V3MX

C5 C6
SC1000P50V3MX SC1000P50V3MX

Figure B-2 MPB Battery Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 1 of 1)

MPB Schematic Diagrams B-5


T163 T151 T171 T60 T54 T375 T161 T262
TP163 TP151 TP171 TP60 TP54 TP375 TP161 LOOPBACK

TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1


T160 T147 T65 T28 T69 T67 T149 T61
TP160 TP147 TP65 TP28 TP69 TP67 TP149 TP61

TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1


T144 T148 T66 T53 T376 T68 T150
TP144 TP148 TP66 TP53 TP376 TP68 TP150

TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 CN2


T24 T141
TP24 TP141 RP10
AD[0..31]
2,8,10 AD[0..31] REQ#1 5 4 TP67 61 1 TP65
2 REQ#1
TP-1 TP-1 DCBATOUT CN1 PAR 6 3 TP68 62 2 $PCICLK0
2,8,10 PAR $PCICLK0 2,10
T162 T145 INTC# 7 2 TP69 63 3 TP171 RP5
8 INTC# INTB# 8 1 R119 TP66 64 4 TP146 4 5 AD8
TP162 TP145 INTB#
61 1 1 2 TP28 65 5 TP145 3 6 AD9
2,8 PERR#
TP-1 TP-1 62 2 $PCICLK1 SRN10 66 6 TP148 2 7 AD10
8,10 $PCICLK1
T154 T146 63 3 RP1 10R3 TP141 67 7 TP147 1 8 RP6 AD11
TP154 TP146 64 4 AD0 8 1 TP60 68 8 TP151 4 5 AD12
65 5 AD1 7 2 TP53 69 9 TP150 SRN10 3 6 AD13
TP-1 TP-1 66 6 AD2 6 3 TP54 70 10 TP149 2 7 AD14
T153 67 7 AD3 5 4 RP2 TP55 71 11 TP161 1 8 AD15
TP153 68 8 AD4 8 1 TP61 72 12 TP173 RP7
69 9 AD5 SRN10 7 2 TP56 73 13 TP166 4 5 SRN10 AD24
TP-1 70 10 AD6 6 3 TP57 74 14 TP167 3 6 AD25
71 11 AD7 5 4 TP58 75 15 TP168 2 7 AD26
R153 72 12 RP3 TP177 76 16 TP165 1 8 RP8 AD27
LOOPBACK 1 2 TP248 73 13 AD16 5 4 SRN10 TP59 77 17 TP164 4 5 AD28
LOOPBACK DK_LINEIN_L 4
74 14 AD17 6 3 TP62 78 18 TP170 SRN10 3 6 AD29
DK_LINEIN_R 4 AD18 7 2 TP63 79 19 TP162 2 7 AD30
3K3R3 75 15
76 16 AD19 8 1 RP4 TP64 80 20 TP172 1 8 AD31
DK_SOUND_R 4,10 AD20 8 1 TP77 81 21 TP160 R120
77 17 DK_SOUND_L 4,10
TP375 78 18 AD21 SRN10 7 2 TP76 82 22 TP163 1 2 SRN10 R122
4 DK_MIC DK_PJIN# 4 FRAME# 2,8,10
79 19 AUD_GND AD22 6 3 TP75 83 23 TP153 R121 1 2
3 AUDIO_CD_L DK_MIC_PJIN 4 SERR# 8,10
80 20 AD23 5 4 TP74 84 24 TP24 0R3 1 2 R123
STOP# 2,8,10

B-6 MPB Schematic Diagrams


81 21 AD+ RP9 TP175 85 25 TP154 R118 10R3 1 2
3 AUDIO_CD_R DOCKPWOK 6 C/BE#0 8 1 SRN10 TP73 86 26 TP144 1 2 10R3 TRDY# 2,8,10
82 22 C/BE#[0..3] IRDY# 2,8,10
6 CD/FDD_RDY# ON/OFF# 6 C/BE#1 7 2 TP72 87 27 TP176 0R3
83 23
6 CD_LOCK# CD_EXIST# 3 2,8,10 C/BE#2 6 3 TP71 88 28 10R3 ZV_SCLK
AUD_GND 84 24 ZV_SCLK 8
8,10 EN_FBZV# 85 25 FDD_EXIST# 3 C/BE#3 5 4 TP70 89 29 ZV_DATA
7 DK_MOSON DK_BL1# 7 ZV_DATA 8
86 26 TP152 90 30 UV0
SB 6,10 EN_1394PWR DK_BL2# 7 UV[0..7] 8
87 27 SRN10 91 31 UV1
7 CSO FLASH_ON 8,10 8 ZV_LRCLK
88 28 92 32 UV2
7,10 CSI DK_CHG_LED 7 8 ZV_MCLK Y0 93 33 UV3
89 29 8 Y[0..7]
7 SMB_CLK 77NOCON 5 Y1 94 34 UV4
90 30 R5
7 SMB_DATA EN_CHGR_ROM 7,10 Y2 95 35 UV5
91 31 TP191 1 2
8,10 FBACT# 92 32 Y3 96 36 UV6
7,8,10 I2C_CLK DK_HDLED# 3 Y4 97 37 UV7
R2 93 33 0R3
7,10 I2C_DATA FBDATA 8,10 Y5 98 38
1 2 TP46 94 34
PRI1# 5 Y6 99 39 ZV_HREF
3 DSKCHG# 95 35 5 ZV_HREF 8
0R3 96 36 PDTR1# Y7 100 40 ZV_VREF
3,10 HDSEL PCTS1# 5 ZV_VREF 8
97 37 TP103 101 41
3 RDATA# PSOUT1 5 DDC_CLK 5
98 38 ZV_PCLK 102 42
3 WRTPRT# PRTS1# 5 8 ZV_PCLK CRT_SW1 5
99 39 103 43
3 TRK0# PSIN1 5 5 CRT_SW3 CRT_SW2 5
100 40 5,10 CRT_B 104 44
3,10 WGATE# PDSR1# 5 105 45
101 41 CRT_HS 5,10
3,10 WDATA# PDCD1# 5 106 46
102 42 5,10 CRT_G
3,10 STEP# 103 43 AUTOFD# 5 107 47
3,10 FDIR ERROR# 5 CRT_VS 5,10
104 44 108 48 LOOPBACK
3,10 MTR0# INIT# 5 5,10 CRT_R
105 45 109 49
3,10 DR0# SLCTIN# 5 110 50
3 INDEX# R1 106 46 SLCT 5 T248 T191 T70 T177
1 2 TP193 107 47 111 51 TP248 TP191 TP70 TP177
PE 5 112 52
108 48
5 FDD/PRT# BUSY 5 113 53
0R3 109 49 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
1,5 PD0 ACK# 5 114 54
1,5 PD1 110 50 STROB# 5 T46 T55 T63 T176
111 51 115 55
1,5 PD2 PS2CLK 9,10 TP46 TP55 TP63 TP176
112 52 116 56
1,5 PD3 PS2DATA 9,10 117 57
113 53 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
1,5 PD4 114 54 TP376 IRQ15 2 118 58
1,5 PD5 T193 T56 T64 T173
115 55 119 59
1,5 PD6 USBP1 9,10 TP193 TP56 TP64 TP173
116 56 TP182 RP11 120 60
1,5 PD7 USBP0 9,10
117 57 TP138 1 8 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
9,10 KBCLK R3 118 58 TP181 2 7 PCIRST# 2,8,10
9,10 KBDATA REQ#0 8 T15 T57 T175 T166
1 2 TP15 119 59 TP137 3 6 TP15 TP57 TP175 TP166
7,10 CHARGER_ON GNT#0 8,10
120 60 TP88 4 5 JAE-CONN120B
0R3 GNT#1 2,10
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
1 SRN10 T114 T58 T152 T167
TP114 TP58 TP152 TP167
JAE-CONN120B
R124 RGB_GND RGB_GND TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
2 10R3 T181 T59 T74 T168
TP181 TP59 TP74 TP168
2,8,10 DEVSEL#
TP114 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
T182 T73 T75 T165
TP182 TP73 TP75 TP165
+5V
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
T137 T72 T76 T164
DOCKING CONNECTOR TP137 TP72 TP76 TP164
1 1 1 1 1
NOT INSTALL R143 R18 R144 R145 R146 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
10KR3 47KR3 47KR3 47KR3 47KR3 T88 T71 T77 T170
TP88 TP71 TP77 TP170
2 2 2 2 2
PCIRST# FRAME# DEVSEL# TRDY# IRDY# TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
T138 T62 T103 T172
TP138 TP62 TP103 TP172
PAGE 1 |LINK Docking conn.
PAGE 2 |DOCKIDE.SCH UMA IDE I/F ( PCI0643Q ) TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
PAGE 3 |CD_FDD.SCH CD ,HDD & FDD I/F & QW
PAGE 4 |AUDIO.SCH AUDIO AMP. & DC_IN BD. CONN.
PAGE 5 |DOCKPORT.SCH CRT ,PRINTER ,RS-232 CONN.
PAGE 6 |POWER.SCH DC/DC ,FDD/IDE'S PWOER MOSFET & 1493'S POWER MOSFET
PAGE 7 |CHARGER.SCH CHRGER ,E2PROM & BATTRY CONN.
PAGE 8 |FEATURE.SCH Feature board conn.
PAGE 9 |PS2_CONN.SCH PS2'S MOUSE , PS2'S KEYBOARD & USB CONN.
PAGE 10 |TP.SCH

Figure B-3 MPB Main Board (Motherboard) Logic Diagrams (Sheet 1 of 10)
TP339 TP313
TP310 T310 T339 T313

TP361 T361 TP319 T319 TP-1


$PCICLK0 IRDY# TP326 TP-1 TP312 TP-1
TP354 T354 T326 T312
FRAME# DEVSEL# TP-1 TP-1
TRDY#
1 1 TP304 T304 TP29 T29
R42 R41 TP-1 TP340 TP-1 TP311 TP-1
1 1 47R3 47R3 1 TP353 T353 T340 T311
+5V R43 R44 R40 TP-1 TP-1
47R3 47R3 TP323 2 TP357 2 47R3 T357 T267
TP357 TP267 TP-1 TP325 TP-1 TP349 TP-1
TP361 TP304 TP344 TP320 T320 T325 T349
2 2 2
TP-1 TP-1
C9 C10 T344 T112
1 SC39P TP344 TP112 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
0 U5B SC39P T321 TP338 TP348
C7 C8 C11 TP321 T338 T348
14 VCC P Q 9 TP378 SC39P SC39P SC39P TP-1 TP-1
12 R Not install TP334 T334
CD_PASS# D TP-1 TP300 TP-1 TP347 TP-1
11 TP343 T343 T300 T347
CLK 8 +5V TP-1
Q 3,10
7 GND C
L R21 TP110 T110
1 U11B 1 2 IDE_DACK0# TP-1 TP297 TP-1 TP346 TP-1
4 IDE_DACK0# TP322 T322 T297 T346
1 SOHCT74
3 +5V R158 22R3 R39 TP-1
IRQ15 1 2 TP377 4 3 TP110 1 2 INTC# 8 TP293 T293 TP-1 TP298 TP-1 TP20 TP-1
+5V 1 DUMMY-R3 DUMMY-R3 TP351 T351 T298 T20
R163 7 SSHC14 GNT#1 TP-1
47KR3 GNT#1 1
TP-1 TP299 TP-1 TP323 TP-1
+5V 2 $PCICLK0 TP269 T269 T299 T323
1 $PCICLK0 TRDY# REQ#1
1,8,10 TRDY# REQ#1 1,10
1,8,10 DEVSEL# DEVSEL# TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
3 IDE_DRQ0 IDE_DRQ0 +5V TP314 TP378
U24 PERR# T314 T378
1 16 1,8,10 PERR# PAR 1
2 NC VCC 15 1,8,10 PAR STOP# 1
/1OE /4OE 1,8,10 STOP# RX6 TP-1 TP-1
3 1A 4A 14 TP380 10KR3 R24 TP380
4 13 IRDY# 1KR3 T380
5 1Y 4Y 12 1,8,10 IRDY# 2
6 /2OE /3OE 1 R20 2 2
2A 3A 11 AD24 R23 TP-1
7 10 TP112 TP293 1 2 TP351 TP377
8 2Y 3Y 9 22R3 1 IDE_RDY 3 T377
GND NC 22R3
R33 T T
QS3125 +3.3V 10KR3 P P
2 3 +3.3V SC TP-1
2 6 3
7 4
FRAME# +3.3V
FRAME# C4 C3
SC1KP SCD1U 1 C1 C2 1
0 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 7 7 7 7 U4 SCD1U SC1KP R37
0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 4K7R3
I I F S PP D DT V V P D2 DT I I P PD D 22 D 2 SB R38
D R
S DRA T
O A
RRE M
A E
VRDD
D S AN
S IC M D N R
S T
IR E Q IC C
I C
S C
S N
DN C
D H
E YM P R R SY C CI QT A 1 G R 2 3 I I R TP269 2 1 IRQ15 1,10
L # E # # Q E# L KD 2 0 # 5 N E # # OO D R22
PCIRST# R19 1 # 0 L K 1 E T Q WR Y 75 RP18 1 2 0R3 3
1 PCIRST#
1 2 TP29 2 RESET# # # E
N # # ## DIRQ1 74 TP310 1 8 IDE_D0 IDE_IRQ
+3.3V 3 PCIMODE # DSD0 2 7 IDE_D1 C6
C/BE#3 C/BE3# / DSD1 73 TP354 22R3
C/BE#2 20KR3 4 C/BE2# D DSD2 72 TP353 3 6 IDE_D2 SC470P
C/BE#1 5 M 71 TP320 4 5 IDE_D3 RP21
C/BE#0 6 C/BE1# A DSD3 70 TP321 1 8
C/BE0# C DSA2
AD31 7 AD31 K DSA1 69 TP343 SRN22 2 7 IDE_A2 IDE_A2 3,10
AD30 8 0 68 TP322 3 6 IDE_A1
AD29 9 AD30 # DSA0 67 4 5 IDE_A0 IDE_A1 3,10
AD29 VDD IDE_A0 3,10
AD28 10 AD28 VSS 66 RP19
C/BE#[0..3] AD27 11 DSD4 65 TP339 1 8 IDE_D4 1 SRN22
1,8,10 C/BE#[0..3] AD26 12 AD27 64 TP326 2 7 IDE_D5 R31
AD26 DSD5
AD25 13 AD25 DSD6 63 TP340 3 6 IDE_D6 2K2R3
AD24 14 AD24 DSD7 62 TP325 4 5 IDE_D7 NOT INSTALL
15 VSS TEST1# 61 TP20 2
16 60 TP338 SRN22
AD23 17 VDD DMARQ1 59 RP22 IDE_RST#
AD22 18 AD23 PCI0643 DRST# 58 TP300 1 8 IDE_RST# 3,10
AD21 19 AD22 DIOW# 57 TP297 2 7 IDE_IOW# 3,10
AD20 20 AD21 DIOR# 56 TP298 3 6 IDE_IOR# 3,10
IDE_D0 TP319 21 AD20 DCS1# 55 TP299 4 5 IDE_CS1# 3,10
IDE_D1 22 ENIDE DCS0# 54 RP20 IDE_CS0# 3,10
IRQ14 VSS TP314 8
IDE_D2 AD19 23 AD19 DSD8 53 1 IDE_D8 SRN22
IDE_D3 AD18 24 52 TP313 2 7 IDE_D9
IDE_D4 1 AD17 25 AD18 DSD9 51 TP312 3 6 IDE_D10
AD17 DSD10 TP311 5
IDE_D5 R32 4 IDE_D11
IDE_D6 2K2R3 A A D D
S D
SD D
S 1
IDE_D7 A A A
D D
D VA DAD D DAA S
D D DSD V V A A A A A A AA D R36 SRN22
IDE_D8 2 1 S1 1 1 1 1 1 DD 1 1 1 1 S D D D D D D D DD 1 10KR3
IDE_D9 6 S5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 5 4 3 2 SD 7 6 5 4 3 2 10 1
IDE_D10 2 +3.3V
IDE_D11 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 PCI0643Q
6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
IDE_D12 1
IDE_D13 R35
IDE_D14 1KR3
IDE_D15 T T T T
A AA A A AA P P P P 2 R34
[0..15] IDE_D[0..15] D DD D D DD AA 3 3 3 3 A AA AA A AA 1 2 IDE_IOCS16# IDE_IOCS16# 3
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 DD 4 4 4 4 D DD DD D DD
6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 6 7 8 9 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 33R3
1,8,10 AD[0..31] AD[0..31] C5
SC47P

8 7 6 5
RP17
SRN22

1 2 3 4

Figure B-3 MPB Main Board (Motherboard) Logic Diagrams (Sheet 2 of 10)
I I I I
D DD D
E EE E
_ _ _ _
IDE CONTROLLER D DD D
1 1 1 1
5 4 3 2

MPB Schematic Diagrams B-7


Figure B-3 MPB Main Board (Motherboard) Logic Diagrams (Sheet 3 of 10)

B-8 MPB Schematic Diagrams


+5V
+5V

AD+
T329
1
TP329
R102
DUMMY-R3 1
T332
R101
100KR3
TP332 TP-1
C88 C89 2 TP-1
DK_PJIN# T330
SCD1U SC1KP
DK_PJIN# 2
1,10
Q7
3
TP330 TP-1
1

2 2N7002 TP-1

TP328 TP-1

T333
AD+ TP333
CN13

2
1 +5V
LINE_OUT_L
4
3 T328
6
LINE_OUT_R
R162 5
8
1 2 7
10
DK_LINEIN_L 9
AMP_5V +5V
1 12
1KR6 11
1 DK_LINEIN_R 14
R159 13
L7
16
1 2 15 C87
DK_MIC 1 2
1 18
17
DK_MIC_PJIN SCD1U
1 20
1KR6 19
SCHOKE-D
3

D14 HRS-CONN20D
SB BZX84C4V3L

AUD_GND

C85

SC100P
R100
1 2

56KR3

AMP_5V

C84

SCD1U U19
8
R97
1 2 AUD_GND
DK_SOUND_L
1 TP329 V
2 D C82
IN_A
D
20KR3 1 TP328 1 2 LINE_OUT_L
OUT_A
TP332
R98 6 ST47U10VDM
IN_B
DK_SOUND_R 1 2
1
C83
TP330
20KR3 3 7 TP333 1 2 LINE_OUT_R
BYPASS OUT_B
DK_PJIN#
ST47U10VDM
5
SHUTDOWN

G
N
D
C81
SC1U LM4880M

4
AUD_GND

AUD_GND

R99

1 2

56KR3

C86

SC100P

AUDIO AMP.

MPB DC_IN B.D CONN.

Figure B-3 MPB Main Board (Motherboard) Logic Diagrams (Sheet 4 of 10)

MPB Schematic Diagrams B-9


Figure B-3 MPB Main Board (Motherboard) Logic Diagrams (Sheet 5 of 10)

B-10 MPB Schematic Diagrams


DCBATOUT
30V/0.75A
U15
F1 2 D6
TP249 1 TP257 1 2
1 8 +12V
1394POWER 8
2 7
3 6 SMD075
4 5 MBRS340 CD_5V
1 +5V
SC 1 T SI4435DY 1
C71
CX1 R79 P C70 R81 U16
SCD47U 470KR3 3 SCD1U 2 ST10U35VDM CD_5V 100KR3
1 8
1
2 2 2 7
8
1 3 6
TP282
R148 4 5
1 220KR3
1 R58 SI4410DY
R149 1KR3 2 3
82KR3 1 Q2
2
2N7002
2 2
T
T P
P 2
3 4
5 1
9 Q1
T249 TP305 T305 TP241 T241 3 2
TP249 Q3 +5V
3 R140
1
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP305 1 2 EN_1394PWR 1 RN1424 +5V D1 +5V
T257 T360 T83 1
TP360 TP83 3 1 2 1
TP257 2 2N7002 1 100KR3 R115
R150 D12 100KR3
U3E 1 1
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 470KR3 BAV99 4 S1N4148 U3A 4 SW1 3
T318 TP341 T341 TP308 T308 CD_LOCK# TP83 R56 2
11 1 2 TP308 2 1
TP318 2 1 2 CD_LOCK#
1,10 1
10 100KR3 2
DCBATOUT +5V
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 SSHC14 DS-1200-02
T359 TP282 T282 TP345 T345 7 C22 7
TP359 1 U12A SSHC14 R127
SCD1U
4 1 2
1
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 CD/FDD_RDY# 3
TP296 T296 10KR3
1,3,10 CD/FDD_RDY# 2 +5V

TP-1 7 SSHC32 1 CD_5V


U3F 4
TP345 13 TP296 1 R59
2

+3.3V 12
2MR5
7SSHC14
D2
2
1 1
C69 C68 C67
SCD1U SC1KP 2 ST100U16VDM CN14 S1N4148
DCBATOUT
+5V 1 C23
2 3V
SC1U
3 3V
1 1 4 5V
C59 C58 C64 C61 5 5V C106 C107
GND C108 C109 C110
2 ST100U16VDM 2 ST100U16VDM SCD1U SC1KP 6
R112 GND
1 2 7 SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U
DCBATOUT 10KR3 3V_ID
8
9 DCBATT_IN +5V
1 1 1 2 10 DCBATT_IN
R111
C66 C65 11 3.3V ON/OFF
2 2 +5V 12 PGVCC
ST22U35VDM ST22U35VDM 10KR3 PG
13
ON/OFF# ON/OFF C96 C97 C98 C99
1 14 C100
15 5VSB SCD1U SCD1U
SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U
+12V 16 12V
1 +8V 8V
R141 T62-030-C
100KR3
2
DC/DC
+12V BAT+

+5V +5V

U11A C111 C112


1 1 U11D C101 C102 C103 C104 C105
4 4 SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U
R157
1 2 TP360 2 1 TP341 8 9
1,10 DOCKPWOK
3K3R3 3
D13 7 SSHC14 7 SSHC14
BZX84C4V3L

Figure B-3 MPB Main Board (Motherboard) Logic Diagrams (Sheet 6 of 10)
DC/DC & POWER SWITCH

MPB Schematic Diagrams B-11


+5VSB

AD+

C75 C76
+5VSB
SCD1U SC1KP 1 +5VSB
R87 +5VSB
47KR3 1 U22C
R104 4 3 DK_BL3#
SC 4
TP350 1 2 2 TP292 3
DK_MOSON 1,10
1 Q4 1
560R3 2N7002 RX1
BAT+ 2 100KR3
DK_BL3# 3 SOHC4066
1 QX1 3 1 C113 7 5
2N7002 D7 R88 SCD1U RX3 2
AD5V
2 BAV99 150KR3 1 2 LOOPBACK

1 2 2 1KR3
CX3
DCBATOUT SCD1U 3
1
DX3
C72 C73 C74 BAV99
2 ST22U35VDM SCD1U SC1KP
1 2
+5VSB

BAT+ SC
DCBATOUT
D8

AD+ 2 1

B-12 MPB Schematic Diagrams


NSQ03A04-1
CN10 1 U18 D9
BAT+ R86 1 TP244
1 2 330KR3 8 2 1
2 TP292 T292
1 DX2 DX1 7
BAT_VS 2 MBR0540T1 MMBZ5230B 2 3 6 NSQ03A04-1
3 TP121 4 5
TP-1
4 2 1
1 SMB_CLK TP336 T336
5 SI4435DY
1 SMB_DATA BAT_TH 6
7
TP-1
8 1
T335
R85 TP335
CX4 82KR3
SCD1U50V3ZY 3
TP-1
MOLEX-CON8 1 QX3 2
TP337 T337
2N7002
2
RX4 RX2
2 TP327 TP-1
1 2 1
TP285 T285
Q5
220KR3 2K2R3 3
DK_BL3#
1
TP-1
CX6
BAT+ BAT+ 2 TP244 T244
SCD1U50V3ZY 2N7002 1
R91
SC 1MR3
TP-1
CN9 2 TP121 T121

20 10
19 9 TP-1
18 8 T350
SMB_CLK SMB_DATA TP350
17 7
1,10 CSO 16 6 CSI 1
BAT_VS MASTER/SLAVE SELECT
15 5 TP-1
ID_CLK 14 4 ID_DATA IN MASTER MODE PULL LOW T327
BAT_TH +5VSB TP327
1,10 DK_CHG_LED 13 3
12 2
11 1 U22A TP-1
1 T367
MOLEX-CONN20 +5V 4 1,8,10 DK_BL3#
ID_CLK
1 2 I2C_CLK
TP-1
1 ID_CLK T363
1 1 R108 7 1 SOHC4066
R107 R106 DUMMY-R3 +5V 3 1
0R3 0R3 TP-1
EN_CHGR_ROM ID_DATA T364
DCBATOUT DCBATOUT
2 2 2 U20
TP336 1 8
TP335 2 A0 VCC 7 TP-1
CN8 A1 TEST +5VSB
TP337 3 6 I2C_CLK AD5V T372
20 10 A2 SCL
4 5 I2C_DATA U22B 1,10
19 9 GND SDA 1
4
18 8 +5VSB S256K8 ID_DATA TP-1
T 11 10 I2C_DATA
DK_BL2# 17 7 DK_BL1# 1,10 1 1 1 P
16 6 R110 R109 R105
AD+ 15 5 24C02 2
DUMMY-R3 DUMMY-R3 0R3 8
CHARGER_ON 14 4 +5V
DK_BL3# 5 7 1 SOHC4066
13 3 2 2
1 12 2 AD5V
R83 2 2
11 1 1
100KR3 1
MOLEX-CONN20 R113 R142

Figure B-3 MPB Main Board (Motherboard) Logic Diagrams (Sheet 7 of 10)
2 0R3 100KR3
2 2

CHARGER I/F
FRAME# DEVSEL#
$PCICLK1

1 1 1
R48 R49 R47
47R3 47R3 47R3

2 2 2
TP355 TP356
TP309

C12 C13 C14


SC39P SC39P SC39P
+5V
+12V
+12V

CN3 1
1394-1,2,3,4 ADD GUARD TRACE. R147
10KR3
61 1 +5V
1394-2 Q8
62 2 1394-1 1 2
1394-4 63 3 1394-3 2 TP306
64 4 4 5 6
1394POWER 65 5 1394POWER 3
1394POWER 6 D10 S2N3906 1
IRDY# TRDY# 1394-6 66 6 1394-5 RB731U R116
1394-8 67 7 1394-7 10KR3
1394-10 68 8 1394-9 2N3906
1 1 3 2 1
69 9 2
R46 R45 70 10 FLASH_VPP
47R3 47R3 FBDATA 71 11 FBCLK TP342
1,10 FBDATA 72 12 Y1 I2C_CLK 1,7
Y0 1
2 2 1,10 Y0 73 13 Y3 Y1 1,10
TP358 TP302 Y2 C92 C91
1,10 Y2 74 14 Y5 Y3 1,10 2
Y4 ST10U SCD1U Q9
1,10 Y4 75 15 Y7 Y5 1,10
Y6 Y6 3
1,10 76 16 Y7 1,10 2
C15 C16 77 17 UV1 FLASH_ON
UV0
SC39P SC39P 1,10 UV0 78 18 UV3 UV1 1,10 1
UV2 Not install 1 RN1424
1,10 UV2 79 19 UV5 UV3 1,10
UV4
1,10 UV4 UV6 80 20 UV7 UV5 1,10
1,10 UV6 81 21 ZV_HREF UV7 1,10
ZV_PCLK
1,10 ZV_PCLK 82 22 3.3V ZV_HREF 1,10
3.3V
+3.3V 83 23 +3.3V
T355 FBACT# 84 24 IIMCLK
TP355 1 FBACT# ZV_MCLK 1,10
IILR 85 25 ZV_VREF
1394-8 T197 1,10 ZV_LRCLK ZV_VREF 1,10
IIDATA 86 26 IISCLK
TP-1 1,10 ZV_DATA 87 27 INTB# ZV_SCLK 1,10
1,2,10 INTC# INTC# INTB#
T356 PCIRST# 88 28 $FB_CLK
TP-1 TP356 1 PCIRST# $PCICLK1 1
89 29
1394-2 T198 90 30 REQ#0
GNT#0 REQ#0
TP-1 1 GNT#0 AD30 91 31 AD31 1,10
T309 AD28 92 32 AD29
TP-1 TP309
AD26 93 33 AD27
1394-6 T199 94 34 AD25
AD24
TP-1 95 35
T358 96 36 PCI ID AD19
TP358 1,2,8,10 C/BE#3 C/BE#3
TP-1 97 37 AD23
AD22
1394-3 T200 AD20 98 38 AD21
TP-1 AD18 99 39 AD19
T302 AD16 100 40 AD17
TP-1 TP302 101 41 C/BE#2
FRAME# FRAME#
1394-1 T201 1,2,10 3.3V 102 42 3.3V C/BE#2 1,2,8,10
TP-1 +3.3V 103 43 +3.3V
1,2,10 TRDY# 104 44 IRDY#
TP-1 TRDY# 105 45 DEVSEL# IRDY# 1,2
1,2,10 STOP# STOP# 1,2
1394-4 T202 PERR# 106 46 EN_FBZV# DEVSEL#
1,2,10 PERR# EN_FBZV# 1
C/BE#1 107 47 SERR#
FLASH_VPP T104 1,2,8,10 C/BE#1 108 48 PAR SERR# 1,10
AD15
TP-1 109 49 PAR 1,2,10
1394-9 T203 110 50
TP-1 AD13 111 51 AD14
112 52 AD12
AD11
TP-1 AD9 113 53 AD10
1394-10 T195 114 54 AD8
1,2,8,10 C/BE#0 C/BE#0
115 55
T306 116 56 AD6
TP306 AD7
TP-1 AD5 117 57 AD4
1394-5 T213 118 58 AD2
AD3
TP-1 AD1 119 59 AD0
TP342 T342 120 60
TP-1
1394-7 T214 Advanced PCI I/F
TP-1
1394POWER T124 HRS-CONN120B
TP-1

TP-1

1,2,10 AD[0..31]

Figure B-3 MPB Main Board (Motherboard) Logic Diagrams (Sheet 8 of 10)

MPB Schematic Diagrams B-13


15V/1.1A
+5V
F2 L1 2 +5V
1 2 TP117
1
1 U2B
SPOLY100 MLB321611 4
4
SMD100 6
MLB321611 8 CN11 5
L2
1 R93 2 TP42 1 2
5 7 SSHC00
1 KBCLK 3
R94 L3
1 2 TP41 47R3 2
1 1
KBDATA 9
2
47R3 MLB321611 4
1,10
6 +5V
U2C
C77
C78
7 KBMS-CONN 1
9 4
SC47P SC47P
8
KEYBOARD CONN 10

+5V 7 SSHC00
SMD100 L4
F3
2 TP38 1 2

1 U2D
SPOLY100 MLB321611 8 CN12 +5V
15V/1.1A
1
R95 TP40 1 L5 2 1
5 12
2 4
1 PS2CLK
R96 L6 3
TP39 47R3
1 MLB321611 1 11
PS2DATA 9 13
2 2
2 1
47R3 4
1,10
6 7 SSHC00
MLB321611

C79 C80 KBMS-CONN


7
SC47P SC47P
+5V
MOUSE CONN U12C
+5V 1
9 4

8
T117 10
2 TP117

15V/1.1A F4
TP-1 7 SSHC32
SPOLY100
T42
TP42
SMD100 +5V
1 U1D
TP-1
T41 1
TP41 12 4
11
1
L8 TP-1 13
MLB321611 T38
TP38
6
SSHC32
7
R151 2 5 JP1 TP-1
1 1
TP40 T40
2 2
AMP-USB-CONN
1 USBP0 3
1 USBP1 4
33R3 2 TP-1
1 +5V
C116 TP39 T39 U12D
R152
C114 C115 SCD1U 1
8
33R3 TP-1 4
SC47P SC47P 12
7 TP125 T125
11
13
TP-1
7 SSHC32
TP303 T303
+5V
+5V +5VSB TP-1
U11F
1 T352
4 TP352
U11E
13 12 1 +5V
4 U22D
8 1
11 10 4 TP-1
TP352 R25
7 9 1 2
SSHC14
7 SSHC14
7 6 SOHC4066 10KR3
4 U5A

5 14
Q P VCC
2
R D
3
6
CLK
PS/2 , USB CONN.& NO USE GATE Q C
L GND
7

SOHCT74
1 R26 2

TP303 1
10KR3

Figure B-3 MPB Main Board (Motherboard) Logic Diagrams (Sheet 9 of 10)

B-14 MPB Schematic Diagrams


T211 T268
T5 T47 T107 T156 AD25
1,2,8
1 CRT_VS 1,2,8 AD14 2 IDE_RST# 8 ZV_SCLK
TP-1 TP-1
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T212 T270
T6 T48 T108 T157 PAR IDE_D11
1,2,8 2,3
1 CRT_B 8 ZV_MCLK 6 CD/FDD_RDY# 8 ZV_DATA
TP-1 TP-1
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T215 T271
T7 T49 T109 T158 AD8 IDE_D8 T365
1,2,8 2,3
8 Y7 8 Y6 1 WGATE# 8 UV7 7 DK_BL1#
TP-1 TP-1
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T216 T272 TP-1
T8 T50 T111 T159 AD18 T366
1,2,8 2,3 IDE_D3
Y5 DK_BL2#
8 8 ZV_VREF 8 REQ#0 8 UV1 7
TP-1 TP-1
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T217 T273 TP-1
T9 T51 T113 T169 AD12 IDE_D2
1,2,8 2,3
8 Y4 8 ZV_HREF 5 77NOCON 1 $PCICLK0
TP-1 TP-1
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T218 T274
T10 T52 T115 T174 IDE_D1 T368
CD_5V 2,3
8 Y3 8 ZV_LRCLK 7 DK_MOSON 8 UV5 7 CSO
TP-1 TP-1
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T238 T275 TP-1
T11 T80 T116 T178 IDE_D0 T369
1 MTR0# 2,3
8 Y1 1 GNT#0 6 CD_LOCK# 8 UV3 7 DK_CHG_LED
TP-1 TP-1
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T240 T276 TP-1
T12 T81 T118 T179 IDE_D7 T370
+5V 2,3
Y0
8 1 GNT#1 1,2,8 AD28 1 DK_SOUND_L +5VSB
TP-1 TP-1
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T242 T277 TP-1
T14 T119 T180 IDE_D6 T371
3 CD_EXIST# 2,3
INTC# T84 CHARGER_ON
8 1,2,8 AD30 1 DK_SOUND_R 1
TP-1 TP-1
1 PS2CLK
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T243 T278 TP-1
T16 TP-1 T122 T183 IDE_D5
3 IDE_RDY 2,3
T85
1,2,8 AD15 1 CRT_HS 3 DK_HDLED#
TP-1 TP-1
1,9 PS2DATA
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T279
T17 TP-1 T123 T184 T245 IDE_D4
2,3
T86 AD16
1,2,8 AD13 1 CRT_R 1 FLASH_ON 1,2,8
TP-1
1 KBCLK
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T280
T18 TP-1 T126 T185 T246
2,3 IDE_D9
T87 FRAME#
2,8 PERR# 1 PCIRST# 1 EN_CHGR_ROM 1,2,8
1,9 TP-1
KBDATA
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T281
T19 TP-1 T127 T186 T247 IDE_D10
2,3
T90 IRDY#
1,2,8 STOP# 1 EN_1394PWR 1 EN_FBZV# 1,2
1 FBACT# TP-1
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T283
T21 TP-1 T128 T187 T250 2 REQ#1
T91 FBDATA
1,2,8 AD24 3 AUDIO_CD_R 1,7 I2C_DATA 1,8
TP-1
1,2,8 AD7
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T284
T22 TP-1 T129 T188 T251 3 IDE_DRQ0
T92
1,2,8 AD26 3 RDATA# 1 USBP1 3 IDE_IRQ
TP-1
1,2,8 AD6
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T287
T23 TP-1 T130 T189 T252 2,3 IDE_D13
1,2,8 AD10 T93 1 DR0# 1 USBP0 2 IDE_IOR#
TP-1
1,2,8 AD5
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T288
T25 TP-1 T131 T190 T253 2,3 IDE_D12
T94
1,2,8 AD11 3 INDEX# 1,7 I2C_CLK 2 IDE_A1
TP-1
1,2,8 AD4
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T289
T26 TP-1 T132 T192 T254 2,3 IDE_D14
T95
1,2,8 C/BE#0 1 STEP# 4 DK_PJIN# 2 IDE_IOW#
TP-1
1,2,8 AD0
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T290
T27 TP-1 T133 T194 T255 2,3 IDE_D15
T96
1,2,8 C/BE#3 1 WDATA# 1,2,8 AD9 2 IDE_CS1#
TP-1
1,2,8 AD2
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T291
T32 TP-1 T134 T196 T256
2 IDE_DACK0#
T97 IDE_CS0#
3 DSKCHG# 3 TRK0# 1,2,8 AD19 2
1,2,8 AD3 TP-1
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T295
T33 TP-1 T135 T204 T258 IDE_A2
2
T98 C/BE#2
3 CD_PASS# 1 HDSEL 1,2,8 AD23 1,2,8
TP-1
5 FDD/PRT#
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T331
T35 TP-1 T136 T205 T259
AMP_5V
T99 TRDY#
IDE_IOCS16# 2 IDE_A0 1,2,8 AD21 1,2,8
TP-1
8 ZV_PCLK
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 T362
TP-1 T139 T206 T260
1 CSI
T100 AD17
8 UV2 1,2,8 AD22 1,2,8
TP-1
1,2,8 AD1
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
T37 TP-1 T140 T207 T263
T101
3 FDD_EXIST# 1 $PCICLK1 1,2,8 AD20 3 AUDIO_CD_L
1,2,8 C/BE#1
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
T43 TP-1 T142 T208 T264
T102
3 WRTPRT# 8 UV4 1,2,8 AD27 6 DOCKPWOK
1 CRT_G
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
T44 TP-1 T143 T209 T265
T105

Figure B-3 MPB Main Board (Motherboard) Logic Diagrams (Sheet 10 of 10)
8 Y2 8 UV6 1,2,8 AD31 2 IRQ15
1,8 SERR#
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
T45 TP-1 T155 T210 T266
T106
1 FDIR 8 UV0 1,2,8 AD29 INTB#
1,2 DEVSEL#
TP-1 TP-1 TP-1 TP-1
TP-1

MPB Schematic Diagrams B-15


RGBGND RGBGND
CN2
1 71
2 72
CRT_VS 3 CRT_R
2 CRT_VS 73 CRT_R
CRT_HS 4 74 2
CRT_G
2 CRT_HS 5 75 CRT_G
2
6 76
DDC_DATA 7 77 CRT_B CRT_B
DDC_CLK 8 78 2
2 2
+5V 9 10 79 +5V
C10 11 80 C29
12 81 SCD1U
ENAVEE ENAVEE SCD1U 82
13 LCDVEE
14 83
C52 DISPLAY ZV_PCLK C53
15 84 ZV_PCLK
2 4 4
SCD1U 85
DISPLAY 16 86 ZV_HREF ZV_HREF
2 17 SCD1U
18 87 2 FRAME#
ZV_VREF AD0 Y0
ZV_VREF AD1 19 88 Y1
AD2 20 89 Y2 2
AD3 90 Y3
21 91
AD4 22 Y4
AD5 23 92 Y5
AD6 24 93 Y6
Y[0..7] AD7 25 27 94 Y7
26 95 97
Y[0..7]
AD8 96
UV[0..7]
AD9 28
UV[0..7]
AD10
AD11 29 98 100 C/BE#0
C/BE#[0..3] 30 99 UV0
AD[0..31] 2 101 UV1
AD[0..31] AD12 31 102 UV2
AD13 32 103
C/BE#[0..3] 2 AD14 33 104
AD15 34 UV3
2 35 105 UV4
106 UV5
2 SERR# 36 107 UV6
SERR# 37
2 108 PAR
STOP# 38 109 PERR# 2
TRDY# C/BE#1 39 110 UV7
PAR DEVSEL#

FRAME# 40 111 IRDY#


2 AD16 41 112 PERR#
TRDY# AD17
STOP# 42 113 DEVSEL#
AD18 43 2
114
2 FRAME# 44 115 IRDY#
2 AD19 45 116 C/BE#2 2
AD20 46
AD21 117
AD22 47 118 2
48 119
49 120
AD23 50 121 CLOSE VGA C
51 122 3.3V/5V#
DEVSEL# $VGACLK AD24
PCIRST#
AD25 52 123 STNDBY# STNDBY#
53 124
1 C/BE#3AD26
AD27 54 125
R22 R11 55 126
1 AD28 2
56 127 3.3V/5V#
47R3 47R3 AD29 57 128 PCIRST# $VGA_14M
2
AD30 58 129 $VGACLK 5 $VGACLK
AD31 59 130 2
2 60 131
C40 C25 2
SC39P SC39P +3.3V 61 132 @32K2 +3.3V
62 133 @32K2
63 134
C44 64 135 $VGA_14M C43
136HRS-CONN140 SCD1U
65 137 2
66
1 67 138
TRDY# R10 139 2
1 68
R9 69 140
47R3 2 SCD1U 70
2
C1747R3
SC39P
C15
SC39P

IRDY#

1
R23

47R3
C41
VGA BOARD CONNECTOR
SC39P

Figure B-4 MPB VGA Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 1 of 5)

B-16 MPB Schematic Diagrams


+5V
3 VAA[0..8] VGAPWR

C2 C12 C28 C18


3 VMBD[0..15]
VRAMVCC CVCC0 SC10U16V SCD1U SCD1U SCD1U

DVCC CVCC1
3 VMAD[0..15]
V V VV V V VV V +5V
V V V VV V V VV V VV V V VV V VV V V VV V V VV V VV V V A A AA A A AA A
M M M MM M M MM M MM M M MM M MM M M MM M M MM M MM M M A A AA A A AA A
A A A AA A A AA A AA A A AA B BB B B BB B B BB B BB B B 0 1 23 4 5 67 8 AVCC
D D D DD D D DD D DD D D DD D DD D D DD D D DD D DD D D
RP9 R21 0 1 2 34 5 6 78 9 11 1 1 11 0 12 3 4 56 7 8 91 1 11 1 1
1 8 VAA0 1 2 01 2 3 45 0 1 23 4 5 RP8
2 7 VAA5 PCASAL# 1 8
CASAL# 3
3 6 4K7R3 1 1 11 1 1 11 1 1 11 1 11 1 11 1 11 1 1 11 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 11 1 1 11 1 1 2 2 PCASAH# 2 7
6 6 66 6 6 66 7 7 77 7 77 7 22 2 33 3 3 33 3 3 34 4 4 4 4 4 44 4 55 5 5 5 4 54 0 6 8 8 0 0 CASAH# 3
4 5 SB U4 PWEA# 3 6 WEA# 3
2 3 45 6 7 89 0 1 23 4 56 7 78 9 01 2 3 45 6 7 80 1 3 4 5 6 78 9 01 2 3 9 9 2 82 8 6 0 1 5 6 PRASA# 4 5
RASA# 3
SRN4K7
M MM M M MM M M MM M MM M M M M MM M M MM M M MM M M MM A AA A A AA A A A B B MM MD I I C C
A AA A A AA A A AA A AA A A B B BB B B BB B B BB B B BB A AA A A AA A A V V V VV VV V V V V SRN33
D DD D D DD D D DD D DD D D D D DD D D DD D D DD D D DD 0 12 3 4 56 7 8 C C C CC CC C C C C RP7
R24 0 12 3 4 56 7 8 91 1 11 1 1 0 1 23 4 5 67 8 9 11 1 1 11 C C C CC CC C C C C PRASB# 8 1
0 1 23 4 5 01 2 3 45 AB C 0 1 RASB# 3
AD22 1 2 11 156 PWEB# 7 2
IDSEL RASA# WEB# 3
33R3 123 PCASBH# 6 3
22 RASB# 159 PCASBL# 5 4 CASBH# 3
1 FRAME# FRAME# CASAH# CASBL# 3
23 160
1 IRDY# IRDY# CASAL# UD[0..3]
24 125 SRN33
1 TRDY# TRDY# CASBH# VRAMOE# 3
1 DEVSEL# 25 DEVSEL# CASBL# 126 RP5
27 157 1 8 UD3
1 STOP# STOP# WEA#
31 124 R12 2 7 UD2
1 C/BE#[0..3] 1 PAR PAR WEB#
155 1 2 U3 3 6 UD1
C/BE#0 43 OEAB# 1 20 4 5 UD0
C/BE0#
C/BE#1 32 71 33R3 2 19
C/BE1# P0
C/BE#2 21 72 3 18 SRN22
C/BE2# P1
C/BE#3 10 73 4 17
C/BE3# P2 74 5 16 RP6
P3
207 75 6 15 1 8 LD3
1 PCIRST# RESET# P4
76 7 14 2 7 LD2
P5
179 ROMA0 P6 78 8 13 3 6 LD1
180 79 9 12 4 5 LD0
ROMA1 P7
182 81 10 11
ROMA2 P8
183 82 SRN22
ROMA3 65550-B P9
185 ROMA4 P10 83 QPRN-R27C15 LD[0..3]
187 84 U2
ROMA5 P11
189 85 1 20 RP3
ROMA6 P12
191 86 2 19 1 8 SUD3
192 ROMA7 P13 87 3 18 2 7 SUD2
ROMA8 P14
190 88 4 17 3 6 SUD1
ROMA9 P15
186 5 16 4 5 SUD0
ROMA10
SB 188 ROMA11 MCD0 106 6 15
G1 193 107 Y0 7 14 SRN22
ROMA12 MCD1
1 2 194 109 Y1 8 13 RP4
ROMA13 MCD2
196 110 Y2 9 12 1 8 SUD7
ROMA14 MCD3
GAP-CLOSE 195 ROMA15 MCD4 111 Y3 10 11 2 7 SUD6
197 112 Y4 3 6 SUD4
ROMA16 MCD5
RGBGND 198 113 Y5 QPRN-R27C15 4 5 SUD5
ROMA17 MCD6
200 114 Y6
ROMOE# MCD7 115 Y7
MCD8 SRN22 SUD[0..7]
199 116 UV0
A20 MCD9
117 UV1
MCD10
1 $VGACLK 201 CLK MCD11 118 UV2 Y[0..7] 1
28 119
A23 MCD12
29 120 UV3
1 PERR# PERR# MCD13
30 121 UV4
1 SERR# SERR# MCD14 122 UV5
MCD15
203
1 $VGA_14M REFCLK
204 101
(RESERVED) RASC#
154 103 UV7
1 @32K2 178 32KHZ CASCH# 104 UV6
1 STNDBY# STNDBY# CASCL#
102
WEC#
53 100
1 DDC_DATA ACTI OEC# UV[0..7] 1
R17 1 DDC_CLK 54 ENABKL ZV_PCLK ZV_PCLK 1
1 2 R18 70 55
4 SHFCLK SHFCLK RSET
1 2 R19 69
4 MOD M
10R3 1 2 R20 68 60 R
4 LP 1 2 67 LP R 58 G CRT_R 1
4 LFS 10R3 FLM G CRT_G 1
10R3 62 57 B
ENAVDD B CRT_B 1
10R3 61 65 HSYNC
ENAVEE HSYNC CRT_HS 1
C35 64 VSYNC
SC33P C37 VSYNC CRT_VS 1
C34 SC33P M MM CC 1 1 1
A AA A A AA A A AA A AA A A AA A AA A A AA A A AA A A A H A B B BB G GG D D I I GG
SC47P C36 C33 D DD D D DD D D DD D DD D D DD D DD D D DD D D DD D D D C C CC C C CC CR G G G GG N N N G G GG NN R5 R6 R7
SC33P SC47P 0 00 0 0 00 0 0 01 1 11 1 1 11 1 12 2 2 22 2 2 22 2 3 3 A A AA A A AA AE N N N NN D DD N N NN DD 75R3 75R3 75R3
0 12 3 4 56 7 8 90 1 23 4 5 67 8 90 1 2 34 5 6 78 9 0 1 0 1 23 4 5 67 8F D D D DD A BC D D DD 01
CT65550 2 2 2
5 5 44 4 4 44 4 4 33 3 33 3 2 11 1 11 1 1 9 9 9 99 9 99 9 9 5 1 2 35 1 1 18 6 71 2 2
1 0 98 7 6 54 1 0 87 6 54 3 0 98 7 65 4 3 87 6 5 43 2 1 0 1 2 34 5 67 8 9 6 2 6 92 6 3 09 3 78 0 0
1 9 5 4 2 8
5 ENAVDD
A A A AA A A AA A AA A A AA A A AA A A AA A A AA A AA A 1
D D D DD D D DD D DD D D DD D D DD D D DD D D DD D DD D R8 RGBGND
0 1 2 34 5 6 78 9 11 1 1 11 1 1 11 2 2 22 2 2 22 2 23 3 560R3
1 ENAVEE
01 2 3 45 6 7 89 0 1 23 4 5 67 8 90 1 RGBGND RGBGND
Z Z 2
1 AD[0..31]
RP2 V V
R0 5 4 U1 _ _
4 R[0..7] R1 6 3 11 10 V H
R2 7 2 12 9 RGBGND

Figure B-4 MPB VGA Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 2 of 5)


R R
R3 8 1 13 8 E E
14 7 F F
SRN22 15 6
ZV_HREF 1
RP1 16 5
ZV_VREF 1
R4 5 4 17 4
R5 6 3 18 3
R6 7 2 19 2
R7 8 1 20 1

SRN22 QPRN-R27C15
VGA CONTROLLER

MPB Schematic Diagrams B-17


VRAMVCC
VRAMVCC

C42
C30
SCD1U U12
SCD1U U11
1 44
VMAD0 VCC VSS VMAD15 1 44 VMAD15
2 43 VCC
VMAD1 DQ0 DQ15 VMAD14 VMAD0 2 VSS 43 VMAD14
3 42 DQ0
VMAD2 DQ1 DQ14 VMAD13 VMAD1 3 DQ15 42 VMAD13
VMAD3 4 41 DQ1
5 DQ2 DQ13 40 VMAD12 VMAD2 4 DQ14 41 VMAD12
DQ3 DQ12 DQ2 DQ13
6 39 VMAD3 5 40
VMAD4 VCC VSS VMAD11 DQ3 DQ12
7 38 6 39 VMAD11
VMAD5 DQ4 DQ11 VMAD10 VCC VSS 38
8 37 VMAD4 7 DQ4 VMAD10
VMAD6 DQ5 DQ10 VMAD9 VMAD5 8 DQ11 37
9 36 DQ5 VMAD9
VMAD7 DQ6 DQ9 VMAD8 VMAD6 9 DQ10 36 VMAD8
10 35 DQ6
DQ7 DQ8 VMAD7 10 DQ9 35
11 34 DQ7
N.C N.C 11 DQ8 34
12 N.C N.C 33 N.C N.C
13 32 12 33
N.C N.C N.C N.C
14 31 CASAL# 13 32 CASAL#
N.C LCAS CASAL# 2 N.C N.C 31
WEA# 15 30 CASAH# 14 N.C CASAH#
2 WEA# RASA# WE UCAS OE# CASAH# 2 WEB# LCAS 30
16 29 15 WE OE#
2 RASA# RAS OE VAA8 VRAMOE# 2 RASB# UCAS 29 VAA8
17 28 16 RAS
VAA0 N.C A8 VAA7 17 OE 28 VAA7
18 27 N.C
VAA1 A0 A7 VAA6 VAA0 18 A8 27 VAA6
19 A1 A6 26 A0 A7
VAA2 20 25 VAA5 VAA1 19 26 VAA5
A2 A5 A1 A6
VAA3 21 24 VAA4 VAA2 20 25 VAA4
A3 A4 VAA3 A2 A5 24
22 23 21
VCC VSS A3 A4 23
22
VCC VSS

B-18 MPB Schematic Diagrams


S256K16-60
C16 S256K16-60
SCD1U C13
2 SCD1U
VAA[0..8]

M5M44256 M5M44256

VMAD[0..15]
VRAMVCC
2
VRAMVCC

C39
SCD1U U10
C31
1 44 SCD1U U5
VMBD0 VCC VSS
2 43 VMBD15
VMBD1 DQ0 DQ15
3 42 VMBD14 1 VCC VSS 44
VMBD2 4 DQ1 DQ14 41 VMBD13 VMBD0 2 43 VMBD15
VMBD3 DQ2 DQ13 DQ0 DQ15
5 40 VMBD12 VMBD1 3 42 VMBD14
DQ3 DQ12 DQ1 DQ14
6 39 VMBD2 4 41 VMBD13
VMBD4 VCC VSS VMBD3 5 DQ2 DQ13 40 VMBD12
7 38 VMBD11 DQ3 DQ12
VMBD5 8 DQ4 DQ11 37 VMBD10 6 39
VMBD6 DQ5 DQ10 VCC VSS
9 36 VMBD9 VMBD4 7 38 VMBD11
VMBD7 DQ6 DQ9 DQ4 DQ11
10 35 VMBD8 VMBD5 8 37 VMBD10
DQ7 DQ8 VMBD6 9 DQ5 DQ10 36 VMBD9
11 N.C N.C 34 DQ6 DQ9
12 33 VMBD7 10 35 VMBD8
N.C N.C DQ7 DQ8
13 32 11 34
N.C N.C N.C N.C
14 31 CASBL# 12 N.C N.C 33
WEA# 15 N.C LCAS 30 CASBH# 13 32
RASA# WE UCAS N.C N.C
16 29 OE# 14 31 CASBL#
RAS OE N.C LCAS CASBL# 2
17 28 VAA8 WEB# 15 30 CASBH#
VAA0 N.C A8 2 WEB# RASB# 16 WE UCAS 29 OE# CASBH# 2
18 27 VAA7 2 RASB# RAS OE
VAA1 19 A0 A7 26 VAA6 17 28 VAA8
VAA2 A1 A6 N.C A8
20 25 VAA5 VAA0 18 27 VAA7
VAA3 A2 A5 A0 A7
21 24 VAA4 VAA1 19 26 VAA6
A3 A4 VAA2 20 A1 A6 25 VAA5
22 VCC VSS 23 A2 A5
VAA3 21 24 VAA4
A3 A4
S256K16-60 22 23
VCC VSS

Figure B-4 MPB VGA Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 3 of 5)


C38
SCD1U S256K16-60
C19
SCD1U
M5M44256
VMBD[0..15]

2
M5M44256

2M VRAM
)

R[0..7]

SUD[0..7]

2 CN1

1 1
R2 2 80 R13
2
CLK 79 1 2 LFS
3 2
R15 78
10R3 4 R0
1 2 77 22R3
NF1 5
76 R3
R1 6
STC222B 22R3 75
7
1 2 C3 74
R2 R4
73 8
9
3 SC47P R5 72 R7
10
SB 71
11
R6 70 SUD3
12
69
13
SUD2 68 SUD0
14
67
15
66
2 LP SUD1 16 SUD7
65
17
64
SUD6 SUD4
63 18
19
SUD5 62
20
61 UD3
21 2
60
22
59
2 UD2 23 UD0 2
58
24
57
2 UD1 25 LD3 2
56
55 26
2 LD2 LD1 2
27
54 +5V
28
53 LD0 R14
29 2
52 1 2 MOD
30 2
51 1 R1
31
50 22R3
32 LCDVEE 1 LCDPWR
1 49 100KR3
33
R16 48
34
47 2
0R3 LCD_3/5V#
46 35
LCD_3/5V#
36 5
2 45
37
44
38
43
39
42 C1 C26
41 40 SC10U16V SCD1U

JAE-CONN80C

+3.3V
+3.3V

CP1
R0 10 1 C51
R1 9 2 R4 1U13A SCD1U 1 U13B
R2 8 3 R5 4 4
R3 7 4 R6 1
4
6 5 R7 2 3
DISPLAY 1
SRP1K-2
7SSHC04 7 SSHC04

CP2
SUD0 10 1 LVC ,VHC OR LCX
SUD1 9 2 SUD4
SUD2 8 3 SUD5
SUD3 7 4 SUD6
6 5 SUD7
SRP1K-2

CP3
UD0 10 1
UD1 9 2 LD0
UD2 8 3 LD1
UD3 7 4 LD2
6 5 LD3
SRP1K-2
LCD I/F
CHIP CAPACITOR

Figure B-4 MPB VGA Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 4 of 5)

MPB Schematic Diagrams B-19


+3.3V +3.3V

1 U9D 1 U9A
4 4
11 2
13 1
12 3

7 SSHC02 7 SSHC02

DVCC
Close 105(MGNDC),108(MVCCC) PIN

+3.3V +5V

C48 C49 C50 +3.3V VGAPWR U7


SC1U16V5ZY SC10U16V SCD1U SI9706DY
1 U13F 2 7
VCC 5VIN
4 3 6
VCC 3.3VIN
13 12 5 G 8
1 3.3V/5V# S1 SR
Close 66(DVCC)PIN & 63,89(GND)PIN 4 N
S2 D
7 SSHC04
1
VGAPWR

B-20 MPB Schematic Diagrams


C4
C5 C6 1
SC10U16V SCD1U SC1000P50V3MX R27
100KR3

+5V
VRAMVCC R31
1 2 +3.3V
LCDPWR U6
SI9706DY
0R3
U9B 2 7
1 VCC 5VIN
C14 C11 C20 4 3 6
VCC 3.3VIN
SCD1U SC10U16V SC10U16V +3.3V C27 5
SCD1U 4 5 G 8
R32 S1 SR
6 4 N
1 2 S2 D

DUMMY-R3 7 SSHC02
1

CVCC1
VGAPWR R26
1 2 +3.3V
NOT INS.
+3.3V
C32 33R3 C24 C47 C46 1 U13C
SCD1U SC10U16V SCD1U SCD01U 4 1 U9C
4
5 6 8
2 ENAVDD
RGBGND CVCC0 10
R25 9
1 2 7 SSHC04
7 SSHC02 DVCC U8
C45 33R3 C23 C21 C22 SI9706DY
SCD1U SC10U16V SCD1U SCD01U 2 7
VCC 5VIN
3 6
VCC 3.3VIN
LVC , VHC OR LCX
AVCC 5 G 8
RGBGND S1 SR
L4 4 N
S2 D
1 2 +3.3V +3.3V

U13E U13D 1
HF70ACB C7 C9 C8 1 1
SC10U16V SCD1U SCD01U 4 4

11 10 9 8

Figure B-4 MPB VGA Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 5 of 5)


4 LCD_3/5V#
RGBGND
7 SSHC04 7 SSHC04

LCDPWR
LCD_3/5V# ENAVDD S1 S2
0 0 0 0
0 1 1 0
1 0 0 0
1 1 0 1

VOLTAGE SWITCH
DK_PJIN#
SC100P25V3KN

CN2

C3 C5
)

L4 SC100P25V3KN 1
LINE_OUT_L 1 2 2
3
L5 HF70ACB 4
LINE_OUT_R 1 2 5

HF70ACB
PH-JK11
C4 C6

AUD_GND
SC100P25V3KN
1
SC1000P50V3JN
SC100P25V3KN R3 C7
AD+
JK1 4
2
TR6
2 SC1000P50V3JN
3
2 C2
1 1 3 10KR3
4

C17 SBT-0308W C1
MOJ-D21
SCD1U
SCD1U

SC100P25V3KN

C11
C9 CN1

L1
DK_LINEIN_L 2
1 SC100P25V3KN 1
2
3
DK_LINEIN_R 1 L2 2 HF70ACB 4
5

HF70ACB
C10 C12 PH-JK11

AD+ AUD_GND
SC100P25V3KN
SC100P25V3KN
CN4
LINE_OUT_L 2 1
4 3 +5V
LINE_OUT_R 6 5
8 7
DK_LINEIN_L 10 9
DK_LINEIN_R 12 11 DK_PJIN#
14 13
DK_MIC 16 15 +5V
DK_MIC_PJIN 18 17
20 19

SC100P25V3KN R2
HRS-CONN20D
C16 1

SCD1U 100KR3

AUD_GND HF70ACB 2

Figure B-5 MPB DC In Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 1 of 1)


CN3
C14
C13
DK_MIC L3 SC100P25V3KN 1
1 2 2
3
DK_MIC_PJIN
4
AUD_GND
5
1
C8 C15
R1
PH
10KR3
2
AUD_GND

MPB Schematic Diagrams B-21


SC1000P50V3JN
+5VSB
M+5V
+5V
+5V
MICROPHONE
LED2
CN2 CN1
R3
18 NLOCK_LED
1 2 1 2
2
1
1 1KR3 LED-G
2
NUMBER LOCK
3 +5V
CLOCK_LED 4 LED3
STANDBY_LED 5
R4 CLOCK_LED
NLOCK_LED 6
1 2 1 2
HDD/FDD_LED 7
CHARGE_LED 8
9 1KR3 LED-G
10 CAPS LOCK
POWER_SW2 11 +5V
COVER_SW 12
POWER_LED 13 LED1
14
R1 POWER_LED
15
1 2 1 2
16
1KR3 LED-G
17
POWER LED

MOLEX-CON16
+5V
LED6
R5 STANDBY_LED
1 2 1 2

1KR3 LED-G
STANDBY LED

SW1 1
+5VSB
COVER_SW LED4
3 R6 CHARGE_LED
1 2 1 2
2
SW-SPVE1 1KR3 LED-G
CHARGING LED

+5V
LED5

R2 HDD/FDD_LED
1 2 1 2

POWER_SW2 1KR3 LED-G


SW2
1 HD/FD/CD LED
3

4 2
SKQGAB

Figure B-6 MPB LED Board Logic Diagrams (Sheet 1 of 1)

B-22 MPB Schematic Diagrams


C
POST BIOS
C.1 Introduction
This section contains a listing of the POST BIOS calls for the Extensa 900 Series
Notebook.

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Make sure we entered POST in real mode
; Determine the CPU type
; Convert all segment limits to 4GB
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
002H post Verify Real Mode
004H cpu Get Type J
006H post Hardware Initialize
024H postSetHugeESJ

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Initialize the chipset
; Set the in-POST flag
; Autosize the RAM
; Clear the base RAM
; Test the base RAM
; Autosize the cache
; Shadow the BIOS
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
008H cs Initialize
011H post Reg Initialize J
00EH io Initialize OPTIONAL
00CH cache Initialize
016H post Checksum Test
018H post Timer Init
017H cache Pre Ram Auto size, OPTIONAL
028H cs Ram Auto size
03AH cache Auto size
02AH post Zero Base Ram
02CH post Real Address Test
030H post Base Ram Test
02FH cache Pre Sys Shadow OPTIONAL
038H cs System Shadow Config
020H post Refresh Test, FAR
009H post Set In Post Flag, FAR

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Initialize all the hardware to a known state
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
00AH cpu Initialize
00BH cpu Cache On
00FH fdiskInitializeJ
010H pmInitializeJ, OPTIONAL

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Perform hardware tests, and further initialization
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
014H post I8742 Init, FAR

POST BIOS C-1


01AH post Dma InitJ, FAR
01CH post Reset PIC

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Test the keyboard controller
; Compute the CPU clock speed
; Test the CMOS RAM
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
022H post I8742 Test, FAR
032H post Compute Speed, FAR
034H post Cmos Test, FAR

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Optimize chipset timing
; Optimize other hardware
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
03CH cs Adv Config
03DH post Adv Reg Config, OPTIONAL

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Initialize interrupt vectors
; Make sure ROM copyright notice is intact
; Check for configuration errors
; Initialize the video
; Shadow the video
; Display the copyright notice
; Display the CPU type
; Initialize EISA bus
; Set segment limits back to 4GB (PCI code may have changed them)
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
042H post Vector Init, FAR
046H post Copyright Check, FAR
047H pci Op Rom Init
049H pci Init
048H post Config Check, FAR
04AH pci Video Init
04CH cs Video Shadow Config
024H postSetHugeESJ

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Test and initialize the keyboard
; Check for unexpected interrupts
; Display prompt "Press F2 to enter SETUP"
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
052H post KB Test, FAR
054H feat Setup Keyclick, OPTIONAL, FAR
076H post Keyboard Test, FAR
058H post Hot Interrupt Test, FAR

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Initialize QuietBoot if it's installed
; Note: Both the keyboard and timer interrupts (IRQ0 and IRQ1) are enabled
; here. Also, interrupts are enabled here and run through the end
; of POST. If your POST task requires interrupts to be off, please
; preserve them by doing a PUSHF, CLI at the beginning and a POPF at
; the end. If you change the PIC, please preserve existing bits.
; Display the copyright notice
; Display the CPU type
; Initialize EISA bus

C-2 POST BIOS


; Display prompt "Press F2 to enter SETUP"
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
04BH quiet Boot Start, OPTIONAL, FAR
04EH post Copyright Display, FAR
050H cpu Display, FAR
051H eisa Init, OPTIONAL
05AH post Display F2 Message, FAR

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Disable the CPU cache
; Size and test the system memory
; Size and test the extended memory
; Test extended memory address lines
; User hook # 1
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
05BH cpu Cache Off
05CH post Memory Test, FAR
060H post Extended Memory Test, FAR
062H post Extended Address Test, FAR
064H user Patch1

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Enable and configure the cache
; Display the cache size if a cache was detected and enabled.
; Display size of shadow RAM, size of non-disposable BIOS
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
066H cache Adv Config
068H cache Configure
06AH post Display Cache Size, FAR
06CH post Display Shadows, FAR
06EH post Display Non Disposable, FAR

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Display any POST errors
; Check for configuration errors
; Test Real Time Clock
; Check for keyboard errors
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
070H post Display Error Messages, FAR
072H post Test Config, FAR
074H post RTC Test, FAR

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Set up hardware interrupt vectors
; Test coprocessor if present
; Return to standard real mode
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
07CH post Setup Hardware Vectors, FAR
07EH cpu Coprocessor Test, FAR
096H post Clear Huge ES

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Disable programmable I/O devices
; Detect and install fixed RS232 ports
; Detect and install fixed parallel ports
; Init PC-compatible PNP & PCI devices (COM, LPT, floppy, etc.)
; Re-enable programmable I/O and check for conflicts with fixed I/O
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
post Shutdown Eight Table LABEL post Proc

POST BIOS C-3


094H post Disable A20, FAR
080H io Before Init, OPTIONAL
085H pci Init Pcc, OPTIONAL
082H io RS232 Test Code
084H io Parallel Test Code
086H io After Init

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Initialize Bios Data Area and Extended Bios Data Area
; Initialize hard and floppy disk controllers
; Initialize MP Environment
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------

088H post Bios Init, FAR


08CH post Floppy Test, FAR
090H fdisk Post Test, FAR
08AH post Init Ext BDAJ, FAR
08BH feat Mouse Test, OPTIONAL, FAR
095H hdd CD Test, OPTIONAL, FAR
093H mp Init, OPTIONAL
092H user Patch2

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Scan for BIOS ROM extensions
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
098H pci Rom Area Check

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Set up Power Management
; Enable hardware interrupts
; Set time
; Check for key lock
; Init typematic rate
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
09CH pm Setup, OPTIONAL
09EH post Enable IRQs, FAR
0A0H post Set Time Of Day, FAR
0A2H post Key Lock Test, FAR
0A4H feat Init Keyboard Rate, OPTIONAL, FAR

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Erase F2 prompt
; Check to see if F2 key was pressed
; Optionally print "Press F1 or F2" prompt, and/or enter SETUP
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
0A8H post Erase F2 Msg, FAR
0AAH post Scan For F2, FAR
0ACH post Setup Check, FAR

;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Clear the In Post flag
; Check for errors
; Prepare to boot
; Beep once
; Optionally check password
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
0AEH post Clear Boot Flag, FAR

C-4 POST BIOS


0B0H post Error Check, FAR
0B2H post Done, FAR
0B4H post One Beep, FAR
0B5H quiet Boot End, OPTIONAL, FAR
0B6H feat Check Password, OPTIONAL, FAR
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Shutdown 4 is a boot retry
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
post Shutdown Four TableLABELpost Proc
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
;Clear parity checkers
;Optionally clear the screen
;Optionally display any reminder messages
;Try to boot via INT 19
;----------------------------------------------------------------------------
0BCH post Clear Parity, FAR
0BAH post DMI Config, OPTIONAL, FAR
0BDH feat Boot Menu, OPTIONAL, FAR
0BBH pnp Oprom InitBCVs, OPTIONAL, FAR
0BEH post Clear Screen, FAR
0BFH post Check Reminders, OPTIONAL, FAR
08FH fdisk Pre Fast Init, OPTIONAL
091H fdisk Fast Init, OPTIONAL
09FH fdisk Rest Fast Init, OPTIONAL
097H post Mp Fix Up Table, OPTIONAL
0C0H postInt19

postSegment ENDS

POST BIOS C-5

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