Motherboard Description SY-6ICA
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1-7.3 IDE Support
The motherboard has two independent bus-mastering PCI IDE interfaces.
These interfaces support PIO Mode3, PIO Mode 4, ATAPI devices (e.g.,
CD-ROM), and Ultra DMA/33 synchronous-DMA mode transfers. The
BIOS supports logical block addressing (LBA) and extended cylinder head
sector (ECHS) translation modes. The BIOS automatically detects the IDE
device transfer rate and translation mode.
Programmed I/O operations usually require a substantial amount of
processor bandwidth. However, in multitasking operating systems, the
bandwidth freed by bus mastering IDE can be devoted to other tasks while
disk transfers are occurring.
The motherboard also supports laser servo (LS-120) drives. LS-120
technology allows the user to perform read/write operations to LS-120
(120MB) and conventional 1.44MB and 720KB diskettes. An optical
servo system is used to precisely position a dual-gap head to access the
diskett’s 2,490 tracks per inch (tpi) containing up to 120 MB of data
storage. A conventional diskette uses 135 tpi for 1.44 MB of data storage.
LS-120 drivers are ATAPI-compatible and connect to the motherboard’ s
IDE interface. (LS-120 drives are also available with SCSI and parallel
port interfaces.) Some versions of Windows 95 and Windows NT
operating systems recognize the LS-120 drive as a bootable device in both
120 MB and 1.44 MB mode.
Connection of an LS-120 drive and a standard 3.5-inch diskette drive is
allowed. The LS-120 drive can be configured as a boot device if selected
as Drive A in the BIOS setup program.
Note
If you connect at LS-120 drive to an IDE connector and configure it as
the :boot: drive and configure a standard 3.5-inch diskette drive as a “B”
drive, the standard diskette drive is not seen by the operating system.
When the LS-120 drive is configured as the “boot: device, the system will
recognize it as both the A and B drive