Documentation Number 232PCC23799 Manual 9
B&B Electronics Mfg Co Inc – 707 Dayton Rd - PO Box 1040 - Ottawa IL 61350 - Ph 815-433-5100 - Fax 815-433-5104
B&B Electronics Ltd – Westlink Commercial Park – Oranmore, Galway, Ireland – Ph +353-91-792444 – Fax +353-91-792445
Common Problems
Identifying the 232PCC2
The 232PCC2 when installed shows up as a DSP-100.
Generic Client Drivers Generic Client Drivers
Many Card and Socket Services packages include a generic
client driver (or SuperClient) that configures standard I/O devices. If
one of these generic client drivers is installed, it may configure the
232PCC2 causing the 232PCC2 client driver to fail installation. In
these cases, the user should do one of the following:
Modify the operation of the generic client driver to
disable the configuration of modem/serial port cards.
Consult the Card and Socket Services documentation
for availability and details of this feature.
Place the 232PCC2 client driver before the generic
client driver in the CONFIG.SYS.
Available Resources
One function of the Card and Socket Services software is to
track which system resources (memory addresses, I/O addresses,
IRQs, etc.) are available for assignment to inserted PCMCIA cards.
Sometimes, however, the Card Services software assumes or
incorrectly determines that a particular resource is used when it is
actually available. Most Card and Socket Services generate a
resource table in a file (typically in the form of an .INI file) that the
user can modify to adjust the available system resources. Consult
the Card and Socket Services documentation for availability and
details of this feature.
Multiple Configuration Attempts
Some Card and Socket Services have a setting that aborts the
configuration process after a single configuration failure (such as a
requesting an unavailable resource). The user should change this
setting to allow for multiple configuration attempts. Consult Card and
Socket Services documentation for availability and feature details.
Older Versions of Card and Socket Services
Some versions of Card and Socket Services dated before 1993
do not support general-purpose I/O cards. If, after careful
installation of the Client Driver, the 232PCC2 does not configure or
operate properly, an updated version of Card and Socket Services
may be required.