possible damage to the system board.
4.Wear a wrist grounding strap, and clip it to an unpainted metal surface, such as the padlock loop on the back of the chassis. If a wrist grounding strap is not available, touch any unpainted metal surface on the back of the computer or on the computer chassis, such as the power supply, to discharge any static charge from your body before touching anything inside the computer. While you work, periodically touch an unpainted metal surface on the computer chassis to dissipate any static electricity that might harm internal components. Also avoid touching components or contacts on a card and avoid touching pins on a chip.
5.Verify that the auxiliary power indicator on the riser board is not on. If it is on, you may need to wait 10 to 30 seconds for it to go out (see Riser Boards).
Internal Views
Figure 1 shows a top view of the low-profile chassis to help you orient yourself when you work inside the computer.
Figure 1. Low-Profile Chassis Orientation View
1System board
2
3Power supply
4Externally accessible drive bays
Figure 2 shows the low-profile chassis with the cover removed.
Figure 2. Inside the Low-Profile Chassis
1 Diskette drive in upper bay
2 Diskette drive interface cable
3
4
5 Chassis intrusion switch
6
7
8 Security cable slot
9 I/O ports and connectors
10 AC power receptacle
11 Padlock ring
12 Power supply