Raptor AT – Installation Guide

Airflow management

It is important to manage the velocity, quantity and direction of air that flows within the system (and how it flows) to maximize the volume of air that flows over the processor.

Thermal interface management

To optimize the heatsink design for the Celeron/Pentium III processor, it is important to understand the impact of factors related to the interface between the processor and the heatsink base. Specifically, the bond line thickness, interface material area, and interface material thermal conductivity should be managed to realize the most effective thermal solution.

This completes the installation of the CPU. Now is it a good time to double check both the CPU and DIMM installation to make sure that these devices have been properly installed.

Disk-on-Chip installation

The Raptor AT supports Two Disk-on-Chip on-board up to 288 MB each with FFS for diskless applications.

Locate the Disk-on-Chip socket on your Raptor AT system board (Locations U12 and U13 - Figure 1-2). Locate pin 1 (Figure 1-2). To install the Disk-on-Chip gently insert the chip. Make sure the Disk-on- Chip is inserted all the way.

Installing Cables

Power and Control Panel Cables

The Raptor AT gets power either from the power ATX connector J7 or the power AT connector J41.

Installing Peripheral Cables

Now it is a good time to install the internal peripherals such as floppy and hard disk drives. Do not connect the power cable to these peripherals, as it is easier to attach the bulky ribbon cables before the smaller power connectors. If you are installing more than one IDE drive double check your master/slave jumpers on the drives. Review

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Intel Raptor AT Disk-on-Chip installation, Installing Cables Power and Control Panel Cables, Installing Peripheral Cables