| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 |   | 
 | 2 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 3 | 1) This file is a supplement to arcnet.txt.  Please read that for general | 
 | 4 |    driver configuration help. | 
 | 5 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 6 | 2) This file is no longer Linux-specific.  It should probably be moved out of | 
 | 7 |    the kernel sources.  Ideas? | 
 | 8 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 9 |  | 
 | 10 | Because so many people (myself included) seem to have obtained ARCnet cards | 
 | 11 | without manuals, this file contains a quick introduction to ARCnet hardware, | 
 | 12 | some cabling tips, and a listing of all jumper settings I can find. Please | 
 | 13 | e-mail apenwarr@worldvisions.ca with any settings for your particular card, | 
 | 14 | or any other information you have! | 
 | 15 |  | 
 | 16 |  | 
 | 17 | INTRODUCTION TO ARCNET | 
 | 18 | ---------------------- | 
 | 19 |  | 
 | 20 | ARCnet is a network type which works in a way similar to popular Ethernet | 
 | 21 | networks but which is also different in some very important ways. | 
 | 22 |  | 
 | 23 | First of all, you can get ARCnet cards in at least two speeds: 2.5 Mbps | 
 | 24 | (slower than Ethernet) and 100 Mbps (faster than normal Ethernet).  In fact, | 
 | 25 | there are others as well, but these are less common.  The different hardware | 
 | 26 | types, as far as I'm aware, are not compatible and so you cannot wire a | 
 | 27 | 100 Mbps card to a 2.5 Mbps card, and so on.  From what I hear, my driver does | 
 | 28 | work with 100 Mbps cards, but I haven't been able to verify this myself, | 
 | 29 | since I only have the 2.5 Mbps variety.  It is probably not going to saturate | 
 | 30 | your 100 Mbps card.  Stop complaining. :) | 
 | 31 |  | 
 | 32 | You also cannot connect an ARCnet card to any kind of Ethernet card and | 
 | 33 | expect it to work.   | 
 | 34 |  | 
 | 35 | There are two "types" of ARCnet - STAR topology and BUS topology.  This | 
 | 36 | refers to how the cards are meant to be wired together.  According to most | 
 | 37 | available documentation, you can only connect STAR cards to STAR cards and | 
 | 38 | BUS cards to BUS cards.  That makes sense, right?  Well, it's not quite | 
 | 39 | true; see below under "Cabling." | 
 | 40 |  | 
 | 41 | Once you get past these little stumbling blocks, ARCnet is actually quite a | 
 | 42 | well-designed standard.  It uses something called "modified token passing" | 
 | 43 | which makes it completely incompatible with so-called "Token Ring" cards, | 
 | 44 | but which makes transfers much more reliable than Ethernet does.  In fact, | 
 | 45 | ARCnet will guarantee that a packet arrives safely at the destination, and | 
 | 46 | even if it can't possibly be delivered properly (ie. because of a cable | 
 | 47 | break, or because the destination computer does not exist) it will at least | 
 | 48 | tell the sender about it. | 
 | 49 |  | 
 | 50 | Because of the carefully defined action of the "token", it will always make | 
 | 51 | a pass around the "ring" within a maximum length of time.  This makes it | 
 | 52 | useful for realtime networks. | 
 | 53 |  | 
 | 54 | In addition, all known ARCnet cards have an (almost) identical programming | 
 | 55 | interface.  This means that with one ARCnet driver you can support any | 
 | 56 | card, whereas with Ethernet each manufacturer uses what is sometimes a | 
 | 57 | completely different programming interface, leading to a lot of different, | 
 | 58 | sometimes very similar, Ethernet drivers.  Of course, always using the same | 
 | 59 | programming interface also means that when high-performance hardware | 
 | 60 | facilities like PCI bus mastering DMA appear, it's hard to take advantage of | 
 | 61 | them.  Let's not go into that. | 
 | 62 |  | 
 | 63 | One thing that makes ARCnet cards difficult to program for, however, is the | 
 | 64 | limit on their packet sizes; standard ARCnet can only send packets that are | 
 | 65 | up to 508 bytes in length.  This is smaller than the Internet "bare minimum" | 
 | 66 | of 576 bytes, let alone the Ethernet MTU of 1500.  To compensate, an extra | 
 | 67 | level of encapsulation is defined by RFC1201, which I call "packet | 
 | 68 | splitting," that allows "virtual packets" to grow as large as 64K each, | 
 | 69 | although they are generally kept down to the Ethernet-style 1500 bytes. | 
 | 70 |  | 
 | 71 | For more information on the advantages and disadvantages (mostly the | 
 | 72 | advantages) of ARCnet networks, you might try the "ARCnet Trade Association" | 
 | 73 | WWW page: | 
 | 74 | 	http://www.arcnet.com | 
 | 75 |  | 
 | 76 |  | 
 | 77 | CABLING ARCNET NETWORKS | 
 | 78 | ----------------------- | 
 | 79 |  | 
 | 80 | This section was rewritten by  | 
 | 81 |         Vojtech Pavlik     <vojtech@suse.cz> | 
 | 82 | using information from several people, including: | 
 | 83 |         Avery Pennraun     <apenwarr@worldvisions.ca> | 
 | 84 |  	Stephen A. Wood    <saw@hallc1.cebaf.gov> | 
 | 85 |  	John Paul Morrison <jmorriso@bogomips.ee.ubc.ca> | 
 | 86 |  	Joachim Koenig     <jojo@repas.de> | 
 | 87 | and Avery touched it up a bit, at Vojtech's request. | 
 | 88 |  | 
 | 89 | ARCnet (the classic 2.5 Mbps version) can be connected by two different | 
 | 90 | types of cabling: coax and twisted pair.  The other ARCnet-type networks | 
 | 91 | (100 Mbps TCNS and 320 kbps - 32 Mbps ARCnet Plus) use different types of | 
 | 92 | cabling (Type1, Fiber, C1, C4, C5). | 
 | 93 |  | 
 | 94 | For a coax network, you "should" use 93 Ohm RG-62 cable.  But other cables | 
 | 95 | also work fine, because ARCnet is a very stable network. I personally use 75 | 
 | 96 | Ohm TV antenna cable. | 
 | 97 |  | 
 | 98 | Cards for coax cabling are shipped in two different variants: for BUS and | 
 | 99 | STAR network topologies.  They are mostly the same.  The only difference | 
 | 100 | lies in the hybrid chip installed.  BUS cards use high impedance output, | 
 | 101 | while STAR use low impedance.  Low impedance card (STAR) is electrically | 
 | 102 | equal to a high impedance one with a terminator installed. | 
 | 103 |  | 
 | 104 | Usually, the ARCnet networks are built up from STAR cards and hubs.  There | 
 | 105 | are two types of hubs - active and passive.  Passive hubs are small boxes | 
 | 106 | with four BNC connectors containing four 47 Ohm resistors: | 
 | 107 |  | 
 | 108 |    |         | wires | 
 | 109 |    R         + junction | 
 | 110 | -R-+-R-      R 47 Ohm resistors | 
 | 111 |    R | 
 | 112 |    | | 
 | 113 |  | 
 | 114 | The shielding is connected together.  Active hubs are much more complicated; | 
 | 115 | they are powered and contain electronics to amplify the signal and send it | 
 | 116 | to other segments of the net.  They usually have eight connectors.  Active | 
 | 117 | hubs come in two variants - dumb and smart.  The dumb variant just | 
 | 118 | amplifies, but the smart one decodes to digital and encodes back all packets | 
 | 119 | coming through.  This is much better if you have several hubs in the net, | 
 | 120 | since many dumb active hubs may worsen the signal quality. | 
 | 121 |  | 
 | 122 | And now to the cabling.  What you can connect together: | 
 | 123 |  | 
 | 124 | 1. A card to a card.  This is the simplest way of creating a 2-computer | 
 | 125 |    network. | 
 | 126 |  | 
 | 127 | 2. A card to a passive hub.  Remember that all unused connectors on the hub | 
 | 128 |    must be properly terminated with 93 Ohm (or something else if you don't | 
 | 129 |    have the right ones) terminators. | 
 | 130 |    	(Avery's note: oops, I didn't know that.  Mine (TV cable) works | 
 | 131 | 	anyway, though.) | 
 | 132 |  | 
 | 133 | 3. A card to an active hub.  Here is no need to terminate the unused | 
 | 134 |    connectors except some kind of aesthetic feeling.  But, there may not be | 
 | 135 |    more than eleven active hubs between any two computers.  That of course | 
 | 136 |    doesn't limit the number of active hubs on the network. | 
 | 137 |     | 
 | 138 | 4. An active hub to another. | 
 | 139 |  | 
 | 140 | 5. An active hub to passive hub. | 
 | 141 |  | 
| Matt LaPlante | 84eb8d0 | 2006-10-03 22:53:09 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 142 | Remember that you cannot connect two passive hubs together.  The power loss | 
| Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 143 | implied by such a connection is too high for the net to operate reliably. | 
 | 144 |  | 
 | 145 | An example of a typical ARCnet network: | 
 | 146 |  | 
 | 147 |            R                     S - STAR type card               | 
 | 148 |     S------H--------A-------S    R - Terminator | 
 | 149 |            |        |            H - Hub                          | 
 | 150 |            |        |            A - Active hub                   | 
 | 151 |            |   S----H----S                                        | 
 | 152 |            S        |                                             | 
 | 153 |                     |                                             | 
 | 154 |                     S                                             | 
 | 155 |                                                                            | 
 | 156 | The BUS topology is very similar to the one used by Ethernet.  The only | 
 | 157 | difference is in cable and terminators: they should be 93 Ohm.  Ethernet | 
 | 158 | uses 50 Ohm impedance. You use T connectors to put the computers on a single | 
 | 159 | line of cable, the bus. You have to put terminators at both ends of the | 
 | 160 | cable. A typical BUS ARCnet network looks like: | 
 | 161 |  | 
 | 162 |     RT----T------T------T------T------TR | 
 | 163 |      B    B      B      B      B      B | 
 | 164 |  | 
 | 165 |   B - BUS type card | 
 | 166 |   R - Terminator | 
 | 167 |   T - T connector | 
 | 168 |  | 
 | 169 | But that is not all! The two types can be connected together.  According to | 
 | 170 | the official documentation the only way of connecting them is using an active | 
 | 171 | hub: | 
 | 172 |  | 
 | 173 |          A------T------T------TR | 
 | 174 |          |      B      B      B | 
 | 175 |      S---H---S | 
 | 176 |          | | 
 | 177 |          S | 
 | 178 |  | 
 | 179 | The official docs also state that you can use STAR cards at the ends of | 
 | 180 | BUS network in place of a BUS card and a terminator: | 
 | 181 |  | 
 | 182 |      S------T------T------S | 
 | 183 |             B      B | 
 | 184 |  | 
 | 185 | But, according to my own experiments, you can simply hang a BUS type card | 
 | 186 | anywhere in middle of a cable in a STAR topology network.  And more - you | 
 | 187 | can use the bus card in place of any star card if you use a terminator. Then | 
 | 188 | you can build very complicated networks fulfilling all your needs!  An | 
 | 189 | example: | 
 | 190 |  | 
 | 191 |                                   S | 
 | 192 |                                   | | 
 | 193 |            RT------T-------T------H------S | 
 | 194 |             B      B       B      | | 
 | 195 |                                   |       R | 
 | 196 |     S------A------T-------T-------A-------H------TR                     | 
 | 197 |            |      B       B       |       |      B                          | 
 | 198 |            |   S                 BT       |                                  | 
 | 199 |            |   |                  |  S----A-----S | 
 | 200 |     S------H---A----S             |       |  | 
 | 201 |            |   |      S------T----H---S   | | 
 | 202 |            S   S             B    R       S   | 
 | 203 |                                                                 | 
 | 204 | A basically different cabling scheme is used with Twisted Pair cabling. Each | 
 | 205 | of the TP cards has two RJ (phone-cord style) connectors.  The cards are | 
 | 206 | then daisy-chained together using a cable connecting every two neighboring | 
 | 207 | cards.  The ends are terminated with RJ 93 Ohm terminators which plug into | 
 | 208 | the empty connectors of cards on the ends of the chain.  An example: | 
 | 209 |  | 
 | 210 |           ___________   ___________ | 
 | 211 |       _R_|_         _|_|_         _|_R_   | 
 | 212 |      |     |       |     |       |     |       | 
 | 213 |      |Card |       |Card |       |Card |      | 
 | 214 |      |_____|       |_____|       |_____|           | 
 | 215 |  | 
 | 216 |  | 
 | 217 | There are also hubs for the TP topology.  There is nothing difficult | 
 | 218 | involved in using them; you just connect a TP chain to a hub on any end or | 
 | 219 | even at both.  This way you can create almost any network configuration.  | 
 | 220 | The maximum of 11 hubs between any two computers on the net applies here as | 
 | 221 | well.  An example: | 
 | 222 |  | 
 | 223 |     RP-------P--------P--------H-----P------P-----PR | 
 | 224 |                                | | 
 | 225 |       RP-----H--------P--------H-----P------PR | 
 | 226 |              |                 | | 
 | 227 |              PR                PR | 
 | 228 |  | 
 | 229 |     R - RJ Terminator | 
 | 230 |     P - TP Card | 
 | 231 |     H - TP Hub | 
 | 232 |  | 
 | 233 | Like any network, ARCnet has a limited cable length.  These are the maximum | 
 | 234 | cable lengths between two active ends (an active end being an active hub or | 
 | 235 | a STAR card). | 
 | 236 |  | 
 | 237 | 		RG-62       93 Ohm up to 650 m | 
 | 238 | 		RG-59/U     75 Ohm up to 457 m | 
 | 239 | 		RG-11/U     75 Ohm up to 533 m | 
 | 240 | 		IBM Type 1 150 Ohm up to 200 m | 
 | 241 | 		IBM Type 3 100 Ohm up to 100 m | 
 | 242 |  | 
 | 243 | The maximum length of all cables connected to a passive hub is limited to 65 | 
 | 244 | meters for RG-62 cabling; less for others.  You can see that using passive | 
 | 245 | hubs in a large network is a bad idea. The maximum length of a single "BUS | 
 | 246 | Trunk" is about 300 meters for RG-62. The maximum distance between the two | 
 | 247 | most distant points of the net is limited to 3000 meters. The maximum length | 
 | 248 | of a TP cable between two cards/hubs is 650 meters. | 
 | 249 |  | 
 | 250 |  | 
 | 251 | SETTING THE JUMPERS | 
 | 252 | ------------------- | 
 | 253 |  | 
 | 254 | All ARCnet cards should have a total of four or five different settings: | 
 | 255 |  | 
 | 256 |   - the I/O address:  this is the "port" your ARCnet card is on.  Probed | 
 | 257 |     values in the Linux ARCnet driver are only from 0x200 through 0x3F0. (If | 
 | 258 |     your card has additional ones, which is possible, please tell me.) This | 
 | 259 |     should not be the same as any other device on your system.  According to | 
 | 260 |     a doc I got from Novell, MS Windows prefers values of 0x300 or more, | 
 | 261 |     eating net connections on my system (at least) otherwise.  My guess is | 
 | 262 |     this may be because, if your card is at 0x2E0, probing for a serial port | 
 | 263 |     at 0x2E8 will reset the card and probably mess things up royally. | 
 | 264 | 	- Avery's favourite: 0x300. | 
 | 265 |  | 
 | 266 |   - the IRQ: on  8-bit cards, it might be 2 (9), 3, 4, 5, or 7. | 
 | 267 |              on 16-bit cards, it might be 2 (9), 3, 4, 5, 7, or 10-15. | 
 | 268 |               | 
 | 269 |     Make sure this is different from any other card on your system.  Note | 
 | 270 |     that IRQ2 is the same as IRQ9, as far as Linux is concerned.  You can | 
 | 271 |     "cat /proc/interrupts" for a somewhat complete list of which ones are in | 
 | 272 |     use at any given time.  Here is a list of common usages from Vojtech | 
 | 273 |     Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz>: | 
 | 274 |     	("Not on bus" means there is no way for a card to generate this | 
 | 275 | 	interrupt) | 
 | 276 | 	IRQ  0 - Timer 0 (Not on bus) | 
 | 277 | 	IRQ  1 - Keyboard (Not on bus) | 
 | 278 | 	IRQ  2 - IRQ Controller 2 (Not on bus, nor does interrupt the CPU) | 
 | 279 | 	IRQ  3 - COM2 | 
 | 280 | 	IRQ  4 - COM1 | 
 | 281 | 	IRQ  5 - FREE (LPT2 if you have it; sometimes COM3; maybe PLIP) | 
 | 282 | 	IRQ  6 - Floppy disk controller | 
 | 283 | 	IRQ  7 - FREE (LPT1 if you don't use the polling driver; PLIP)  | 
 | 284 | 	IRQ  8 - Realtime Clock Interrupt (Not on bus) | 
 | 285 | 	IRQ  9 - FREE (VGA vertical sync interrupt if enabled) | 
 | 286 | 	IRQ 10 - FREE | 
 | 287 | 	IRQ 11 - FREE | 
 | 288 | 	IRQ 12 - FREE | 
 | 289 | 	IRQ 13 - Numeric Coprocessor (Not on bus) | 
 | 290 | 	IRQ 14 - Fixed Disk Controller | 
 | 291 | 	IRQ 15 - FREE (Fixed Disk Controller 2 if you have it)  | 
 | 292 | 	 | 
 | 293 | 	Note: IRQ 9 is used on some video cards for the "vertical retrace" | 
 | 294 | 	interrupt.  This interrupt would have been handy for things like | 
 | 295 | 	video games, as it occurs exactly once per screen refresh, but | 
 | 296 | 	unfortunately IBM cancelled this feature starting with the original | 
 | 297 | 	VGA and thus many VGA/SVGA cards do not support it.  For this | 
 | 298 | 	reason, no modern software uses this interrupt and it can almost | 
 | 299 | 	always be safely disabled, if your video card supports it at all. | 
 | 300 | 	 | 
 | 301 | 	If your card for some reason CANNOT disable this IRQ (usually there | 
 | 302 | 	is a jumper), one solution would be to clip the printed circuit | 
 | 303 | 	contact on the board: it's the fourth contact from the left on the | 
 | 304 | 	back side.  I take no responsibility if you try this. | 
 | 305 |  | 
 | 306 | 	- Avery's favourite: IRQ2 (actually IRQ9).  Watch that VGA, though. | 
 | 307 |  | 
 | 308 |   - the memory address:  Unlike most cards, ARCnets use "shared memory" for | 
 | 309 |     copying buffers around.  Make SURE it doesn't conflict with any other | 
 | 310 |     used memory in your system! | 
 | 311 | 	A0000		- VGA graphics memory (ok if you don't have VGA) | 
 | 312 |         B0000		- Monochrome text mode | 
 | 313 |         C0000		\  One of these is your VGA BIOS - usually C0000. | 
 | 314 |         E0000		/ | 
 | 315 |         F0000		- System BIOS | 
 | 316 |  | 
 | 317 |     Anything less than 0xA0000 is, well, a BAD idea since it isn't above | 
 | 318 |     640k. | 
 | 319 | 	- Avery's favourite: 0xD0000 | 
 | 320 |  | 
 | 321 |   - the station address:  Every ARCnet card has its own "unique" network | 
 | 322 |     address from 0 to 255.  Unlike Ethernet, you can set this address | 
 | 323 |     yourself with a jumper or switch (or on some cards, with special | 
 | 324 |     software).  Since it's only 8 bits, you can only have 254 ARCnet cards | 
 | 325 |     on a network.  DON'T use 0 or 255, since these are reserved (although | 
 | 326 |     neat stuff will probably happen if you DO use them).  By the way, if you | 
 | 327 |     haven't already guessed, don't set this the same as any other ARCnet on | 
 | 328 |     your network! | 
 | 329 | 	- Avery's favourite:  3 and 4.  Not that it matters. | 
 | 330 |  | 
 | 331 |   - There may be ETS1 and ETS2 settings.  These may or may not make a | 
 | 332 |     difference on your card (many manuals call them "reserved"), but are | 
 | 333 |     used to change the delays used when powering up a computer on the | 
 | 334 |     network.  This is only necessary when wiring VERY long range ARCnet | 
 | 335 |     networks, on the order of 4km or so; in any case, the only real | 
 | 336 |     requirement here is that all cards on the network with ETS1 and ETS2 | 
 | 337 |     jumpers have them in the same position.  Chris Hindy <chrish@io.org> | 
 | 338 |     sent in a chart with actual values for this: | 
 | 339 | 	ET1	ET2	Response Time	Reconfiguration Time | 
 | 340 | 	---	---	-------------	-------------------- | 
 | 341 | 	open	open	74.7us		840us | 
 | 342 | 	open	closed	283.4us		1680us | 
 | 343 | 	closed	open	561.8us		1680us | 
 | 344 | 	closed	closed	1118.6us	1680us | 
 | 345 |      | 
 | 346 |     Make sure you set ETS1 and ETS2 to the SAME VALUE for all cards on your | 
 | 347 |     network. | 
 | 348 |      | 
 | 349 | Also, on many cards (not mine, though) there are red and green LED's.  | 
 | 350 | Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz> tells me this is what they mean: | 
 | 351 | 	GREEN           RED             Status | 
 | 352 | 	-----		---		------ | 
 | 353 | 	OFF             OFF             Power off | 
 | 354 | 	OFF             Short flashes   Cabling problems (broken cable or not | 
 | 355 | 					  terminated) | 
 | 356 | 	OFF (short)     ON              Card init | 
 | 357 | 	ON              ON              Normal state - everything OK, nothing | 
 | 358 | 					  happens | 
 | 359 | 	ON              Long flashes    Data transfer | 
 | 360 | 	ON              OFF             Never happens (maybe when wrong ID) | 
 | 361 |  | 
 | 362 |  | 
 | 363 | The following is all the specific information people have sent me about | 
 | 364 | their own particular ARCnet cards.  It is officially a mess, and contains | 
 | 365 | huge amounts of duplicated information.  I have no time to fix it.  If you | 
 | 366 | want to, PLEASE DO!  Just send me a 'diff -u' of all your changes. | 
 | 367 |  | 
 | 368 | The model # is listed right above specifics for that card, so you should be | 
 | 369 | able to use your text viewer's "search" function to find the entry you want.  | 
 | 370 | If you don't KNOW what kind of card you have, try looking through the | 
 | 371 | various diagrams to see if you can tell. | 
 | 372 |  | 
 | 373 | If your model isn't listed and/or has different settings, PLEASE PLEASE | 
 | 374 | tell me.  I had to figure mine out without the manual, and it WASN'T FUN! | 
 | 375 |  | 
 | 376 | Even if your ARCnet model isn't listed, but has the same jumpers as another | 
 | 377 | model that is, please e-mail me to say so. | 
 | 378 |  | 
 | 379 | Cards Listed in this file (in this order, mostly): | 
 | 380 |  | 
 | 381 | 	Manufacturer	Model #			Bits | 
 | 382 | 	------------	-------			---- | 
 | 383 | 	SMC		PC100			8 | 
 | 384 | 	SMC		PC110			8 | 
 | 385 | 	SMC		PC120			8 | 
 | 386 | 	SMC		PC130			8 | 
 | 387 | 	SMC		PC270E			8 | 
 | 388 | 	SMC		PC500			16 | 
 | 389 | 	SMC		PC500Longboard		16 | 
 | 390 | 	SMC		PC550Longboard		16 | 
 | 391 | 	SMC		PC600			16 | 
 | 392 | 	SMC		PC710			8 | 
 | 393 | 	SMC?		LCS-8830(-T)		8/16 | 
 | 394 | 	Puredata	PDI507			8 | 
 | 395 | 	CNet Tech	CN120-Series		8 | 
 | 396 | 	CNet Tech	CN160-Series		16 | 
 | 397 | 	Lantech?	UM9065L chipset		8 | 
 | 398 | 	Acer		5210-003		8 | 
 | 399 | 	Datapoint?	LAN-ARC-8		8 | 
 | 400 | 	Topware		TA-ARC/10		8 | 
 | 401 | 	Thomas-Conrad	500-6242-0097 REV A	8 | 
 | 402 | 	Waterloo?	(C)1985 Waterloo Micro. 8 | 
 | 403 | 	No Name		--			8/16 | 
 | 404 | 	No Name		Taiwan R.O.C?		8 | 
 | 405 | 	No Name		Model 9058		8 | 
 | 406 | 	Tiara		Tiara Lancard?		8 | 
 | 407 | 	 | 
 | 408 |  | 
 | 409 | ** SMC = Standard Microsystems Corp. | 
 | 410 | ** CNet Tech = CNet Technology, Inc. | 
 | 411 |  | 
 | 412 |  | 
 | 413 | Unclassified Stuff | 
 | 414 | ------------------ | 
 | 415 |   - Please send any other information you can find. | 
 | 416 |    | 
 | 417 |   - And some other stuff (more info is welcome!): | 
 | 418 |      From: root@ultraworld.xs4all.nl (Timo Hilbrink) | 
 | 419 |      To: apenwarr@foxnet.net (Avery Pennarun) | 
 | 420 |      Date: Wed, 26 Oct 1994 02:10:32 +0000 (GMT) | 
 | 421 |      Reply-To: timoh@xs4all.nl | 
 | 422 |  | 
 | 423 |      [...parts deleted...] | 
 | 424 |  | 
 | 425 |      About the jumpers: On my PC130 there is one more jumper, located near the | 
 | 426 |      cable-connector and it's for changing to star or bus topology;  | 
 | 427 |      closed: star - open: bus | 
 | 428 |      On the PC500 are some more jumper-pins, one block labeled with RX,PDN,TXI | 
 | 429 |      and another with ALE,LA17,LA18,LA19 these are undocumented.. | 
 | 430 |  | 
 | 431 |      [...more parts deleted...] | 
 | 432 |  | 
 | 433 |      --- CUT --- | 
 | 434 |  | 
 | 435 |  | 
 | 436 | ** Standard Microsystems Corp (SMC) ** | 
 | 437 | PC100, PC110, PC120, PC130 (8-bit cards) | 
 | 438 | PC500, PC600 (16-bit cards) | 
 | 439 | --------------------------------- | 
 | 440 |   - mainly from Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@worldvisions.ca>.  Values depicted | 
 | 441 |     are from Avery's setup. | 
 | 442 |   - special thanks to Timo Hilbrink <timoh@xs4all.nl> for noting that PC120, | 
 | 443 |     130, 500, and 600 all have the same switches as Avery's PC100.  | 
 | 444 |     PC500/600 have several extra, undocumented pins though. (?) | 
 | 445 |   - PC110 settings were verified by Stephen A. Wood <saw@cebaf.gov> | 
 | 446 |   - Also, the JP- and S-numbers probably don't match your card exactly.  Try | 
 | 447 |     to find jumpers/switches with the same number of settings - it's | 
 | 448 |     probably more reliable. | 
 | 449 |    | 
 | 450 |  | 
 | 451 |      JP5		       [|]    :    :    :    : | 
 | 452 | (IRQ Setting)		      IRQ2  IRQ3 IRQ4 IRQ5 IRQ7 | 
 | 453 | 		Put exactly one jumper on exactly one set of pins. | 
 | 454 |  | 
 | 455 |  | 
 | 456 |                           1  2   3  4  5  6   7  8  9 10 | 
 | 457 |      S1                /----------------------------------\ | 
 | 458 | (I/O and Memory        |  1  1 * 0  0  0  0 * 1  1  0  1  | | 
 | 459 |  addresses)            \----------------------------------/ | 
 | 460 |                           |--|   |--------|   |--------| | 
 | 461 |                           (a)       (b)           (m) | 
 | 462 |                            | 
 | 463 |                 WARNING.  It's very important when setting these which way | 
 | 464 |                 you're holding the card, and which way you think is '1'! | 
 | 465 |                  | 
 | 466 |                 If you suspect that your settings are not being made | 
 | 467 | 		correctly, try reversing the direction or inverting the | 
 | 468 | 		switch positions. | 
 | 469 |  | 
 | 470 | 		a: The first digit of the I/O address. | 
 | 471 | 			Setting		Value | 
 | 472 | 			-------		----- | 
 | 473 | 			00		0 | 
 | 474 | 			01		1 | 
 | 475 | 			10		2 | 
 | 476 | 			11		3 | 
 | 477 |  | 
 | 478 | 		b: The second digit of the I/O address. | 
 | 479 | 			Setting		Value | 
 | 480 | 			-------		----- | 
 | 481 | 			0000		0 | 
 | 482 | 			0001		1 | 
 | 483 | 			0010		2 | 
 | 484 | 			...		... | 
 | 485 | 			1110		E | 
 | 486 | 			1111		F | 
 | 487 |  | 
 | 488 | 		The I/O address is in the form ab0.  For example, if | 
 | 489 | 		a is 0x2 and b is 0xE, the address will be 0x2E0. | 
 | 490 |  | 
 | 491 | 		DO NOT SET THIS LESS THAN 0x200!!!!! | 
 | 492 |  | 
 | 493 |  | 
 | 494 | 		m: The first digit of the memory address. | 
 | 495 | 			Setting		Value | 
 | 496 | 			-------		----- | 
 | 497 | 			0000		0 | 
 | 498 | 			0001		1 | 
 | 499 | 			0010		2 | 
 | 500 | 			...		... | 
 | 501 | 			1110		E | 
 | 502 | 			1111		F | 
 | 503 |  | 
 | 504 | 		The memory address is in the form m0000.  For example, if | 
 | 505 | 		m is D, the address will be 0xD0000. | 
 | 506 |  | 
 | 507 | 		DO NOT SET THIS TO C0000, F0000, OR LESS THAN A0000! | 
 | 508 |  | 
 | 509 |                           1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8 | 
 | 510 |      S2                /--------------------------\ | 
 | 511 | (Station Address)      |  1  1  0  0  0  0  0  0  | | 
 | 512 |                        \--------------------------/ | 
 | 513 |  | 
 | 514 | 			Setting		Value | 
 | 515 | 			-------		----- | 
 | 516 | 			00000000	00 | 
 | 517 | 			10000000	01 | 
 | 518 | 			01000000	02 | 
 | 519 | 			... | 
 | 520 | 			01111111	FE | 
 | 521 | 			11111111	FF | 
 | 522 |  | 
 | 523 | 		Note that this is binary with the digits reversed! | 
 | 524 |  | 
 | 525 | 		DO NOT SET THIS TO 0 OR 255 (0xFF)! | 
 | 526 |  | 
 | 527 |  | 
 | 528 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 529 |  | 
 | 530 | ** Standard Microsystems Corp (SMC) ** | 
 | 531 | PC130E/PC270E (8-bit cards) | 
 | 532 | --------------------------- | 
 | 533 |   - from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> | 
 | 534 |  | 
 | 535 |  | 
 | 536 | STANDARD MICROSYSTEMS CORPORATION (SMC) ARCNET(R)-PC130E/PC270E | 
 | 537 | =============================================================== | 
 | 538 |  | 
 | 539 | This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> | 
 | 540 | using information from the following Original SMC Manual  | 
 | 541 |  | 
 | 542 |              "Configuration Guide for | 
 | 543 |              ARCNET(R)-PC130E/PC270 | 
 | 544 |             Network Controller Boards | 
 | 545 |                 Pub. # 900.044A | 
 | 546 |                    June, 1989" | 
 | 547 |  | 
 | 548 | ARCNET is a registered trademark of the Datapoint Corporation | 
 | 549 | SMC is a registered trademark of the Standard Microsystems Corporation   | 
 | 550 |  | 
 | 551 | The PC130E is an enhanced version of the PC130 board, is equipped with a  | 
 | 552 | standard BNC female connector for connection to RG-62/U coax cable. | 
 | 553 | Since this board is designed both for point-to-point connection in star | 
 | 554 | networks and for connection to bus networks, it is downwardly compatible  | 
 | 555 | with all the other standard boards designed for coax networks (that is, | 
 | 556 | the PC120, PC110 and PC100 star topology boards and the PC220, PC210 and  | 
 | 557 | PC200 bus topology boards). | 
 | 558 |  | 
 | 559 | The PC270E is an enhanced version of the PC260 board, is equipped with two  | 
 | 560 | modular RJ11-type jacks for connection to twisted pair wiring. | 
 | 561 | It can be used in a star or a daisy-chained network. | 
 | 562 |  | 
 | 563 |  | 
 | 564 |          8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | 
 | 565 |     ________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 566 |    |   |       S1        |                                          | | 
 | 567 |    |   |_________________|                                          | | 
 | 568 |    |    Offs|Base |I/O Addr                                         | | 
 | 569 |    |     RAM Addr |                                              ___| | 
 | 570 |    |         ___  ___                                       CR3 |___| | 
 | 571 |    |        |   \/   |                                      CR4 |___| | 
 | 572 |    |        |  PROM  |                                           ___| | 
 | 573 |    |        |        |                                        N |   | 8 | 
 | 574 |    |        | SOCKET |                                        o |   | 7 | 
 | 575 |    |        |________|                                        d |   | 6 | 
 | 576 |    |                   ___________________                    e |   | 5 | 
 | 577 |    |                  |                   |                   A | S | 4 | 
 | 578 |    |       |oo| EXT2  |                   |                   d | 2 | 3 | 
 | 579 |    |       |oo| EXT1  |       SMC         |                   d |   | 2 | 
 | 580 |    |       |oo| ROM   |      90C63        |                   r |___| 1 | 
 | 581 |    |       |oo| IRQ7  |                   |               |o|  _____| | 
 | 582 |    |       |oo| IRQ5  |                   |               |o| | J1  | | 
 | 583 |    |       |oo| IRQ4  |                   |              STAR |_____| | 
 | 584 |    |       |oo| IRQ3  |                   |                   | J2  | | 
 | 585 |    |       |oo| IRQ2  |___________________|                   |_____| | 
 | 586 |    |___                                               ______________| | 
 | 587 |        |                                             | | 
 | 588 |        |_____________________________________________| | 
 | 589 |  | 
 | 590 | Legend: | 
 | 591 |  | 
 | 592 | SMC 90C63	ARCNET Controller / Transceiver /Logic | 
 | 593 | S1	1-3:	I/O Base Address Select | 
 | 594 | 	4-6:	Memory Base Address Select | 
 | 595 | 	7-8:	RAM Offset Select | 
 | 596 | S2	1-8:	Node ID Select | 
 | 597 | EXT		Extended Timeout Select | 
 | 598 | ROM		ROM Enable Select | 
 | 599 | STAR		Selected - Star Topology	(PC130E only) | 
 | 600 | 		Deselected - Bus Topology	(PC130E only) | 
 | 601 | CR3/CR4		Diagnostic LEDs | 
 | 602 | J1		BNC RG62/U Connector		(PC130E only) | 
 | 603 | J1		6-position Telephone Jack	(PC270E only) | 
 | 604 | J2		6-position Telephone Jack	(PC270E only) | 
 | 605 |  | 
 | 606 | Setting one of the switches to Off/Open means "1", On/Closed means "0". | 
 | 607 |  | 
 | 608 |  | 
 | 609 | Setting the Node ID | 
 | 610 | ------------------- | 
 | 611 |  | 
 | 612 | The eight switches in group S2 are used to set the node ID. | 
 | 613 | These switches work in a way similar to the PC100-series cards; see that | 
 | 614 | entry for more information. | 
 | 615 |  | 
 | 616 |  | 
 | 617 | Setting the I/O Base Address | 
 | 618 | ---------------------------- | 
 | 619 |  | 
 | 620 | The first three switches in switch group S1 are used to select one | 
 | 621 | of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table | 
 | 622 |  | 
 | 623 |  | 
 | 624 |    Switch | Hex I/O | 
 | 625 |    1 2 3  | Address | 
 | 626 |    -------|-------- | 
 | 627 |    0 0 0  |  260 | 
 | 628 |    0 0 1  |  290 | 
 | 629 |    0 1 0  |  2E0  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 630 |    0 1 1  |  2F0 | 
 | 631 |    1 0 0  |  300 | 
 | 632 |    1 0 1  |  350 | 
 | 633 |    1 1 0  |  380 | 
 | 634 |    1 1 1  |  3E0 | 
 | 635 |  | 
 | 636 |  | 
 | 637 | Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address | 
 | 638 | -------------------------------------------- | 
 | 639 |  | 
 | 640 | The memory buffer requires 2K of a 16K block of RAM. The base of this | 
 | 641 | 16K block can be located in any of eight positions. | 
 | 642 | Switches 4-6 of switch group S1 select the Base of the 16K block. | 
 | 643 | Within that 16K address space, the buffer may be assigned any one of four  | 
 | 644 | positions, determined by the offset, switches 7 and 8 of group S1. | 
 | 645 |  | 
 | 646 |    Switch     | Hex RAM | Hex ROM | 
 | 647 |    4 5 6  7 8 | Address | Address *) | 
 | 648 |    -----------|---------|----------- | 
 | 649 |    0 0 0  0 0 |  C0000  |  C2000 | 
 | 650 |    0 0 0  0 1 |  C0800  |  C2000 | 
 | 651 |    0 0 0  1 0 |  C1000  |  C2000 | 
 | 652 |    0 0 0  1 1 |  C1800  |  C2000 | 
 | 653 |               |         | | 
 | 654 |    0 0 1  0 0 |  C4000  |  C6000 | 
 | 655 |    0 0 1  0 1 |  C4800  |  C6000 | 
 | 656 |    0 0 1  1 0 |  C5000  |  C6000 | 
 | 657 |    0 0 1  1 1 |  C5800  |  C6000 | 
 | 658 |               |         | | 
 | 659 |    0 1 0  0 0 |  CC000  |  CE000 | 
 | 660 |    0 1 0  0 1 |  CC800  |  CE000 | 
 | 661 |    0 1 0  1 0 |  CD000  |  CE000 | 
 | 662 |    0 1 0  1 1 |  CD800  |  CE000 | 
 | 663 |               |         | | 
 | 664 |    0 1 1  0 0 |  D0000  |  D2000  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 665 |    0 1 1  0 1 |  D0800  |  D2000 | 
 | 666 |    0 1 1  1 0 |  D1000  |  D2000 | 
 | 667 |    0 1 1  1 1 |  D1800  |  D2000 | 
 | 668 |               |         | | 
 | 669 |    1 0 0  0 0 |  D4000  |  D6000 | 
 | 670 |    1 0 0  0 1 |  D4800  |  D6000 | 
 | 671 |    1 0 0  1 0 |  D5000  |  D6000 | 
 | 672 |    1 0 0  1 1 |  D5800  |  D6000 | 
 | 673 |               |         | | 
 | 674 |    1 0 1  0 0 |  D8000  |  DA000 | 
 | 675 |    1 0 1  0 1 |  D8800  |  DA000 | 
 | 676 |    1 0 1  1 0 |  D9000  |  DA000 | 
 | 677 |    1 0 1  1 1 |  D9800  |  DA000 | 
 | 678 |               |         | | 
 | 679 |    1 1 0  0 0 |  DC000  |  DE000 | 
 | 680 |    1 1 0  0 1 |  DC800  |  DE000 | 
 | 681 |    1 1 0  1 0 |  DD000  |  DE000 | 
 | 682 |    1 1 0  1 1 |  DD800  |  DE000 | 
 | 683 |               |         | | 
 | 684 |    1 1 1  0 0 |  E0000  |  E2000 | 
 | 685 |    1 1 1  0 1 |  E0800  |  E2000 | 
 | 686 |    1 1 1  1 0 |  E1000  |  E2000 | 
 | 687 |    1 1 1  1 1 |  E1800  |  E2000 | 
 | 688 |    | 
 | 689 | *) To enable the 8K Boot PROM install the jumper ROM. | 
 | 690 |    The default is jumper ROM not installed. | 
 | 691 |  | 
 | 692 |  | 
 | 693 | Setting the Timeouts and Interrupt | 
 | 694 | ---------------------------------- | 
 | 695 |  | 
 | 696 | The jumpers labeled EXT1 and EXT2 are used to determine the timeout  | 
 | 697 | parameters. These two jumpers are normally left open. | 
 | 698 |  | 
 | 699 | To select a hardware interrupt level set one (only one!) of the jumpers | 
 | 700 | IRQ2, IRQ3, IRQ4, IRQ5, IRQ7. The Manufacturer's default is IRQ2. | 
 | 701 |   | 
 | 702 |  | 
 | 703 | Configuring the PC130E for Star or Bus Topology | 
 | 704 | ----------------------------------------------- | 
 | 705 |  | 
 | 706 | The single jumper labeled STAR is used to configure the PC130E board for  | 
 | 707 | star or bus topology. | 
 | 708 | When the jumper is installed, the board may be used in a star network, when  | 
 | 709 | it is removed, the board can be used in a bus topology. | 
 | 710 |  | 
 | 711 |  | 
 | 712 | Diagnostic LEDs | 
 | 713 | --------------- | 
 | 714 |  | 
 | 715 | Two diagnostic LEDs are visible on the rear bracket of the board. | 
 | 716 | The green LED monitors the network activity: the red one shows the | 
 | 717 | board activity: | 
 | 718 |  | 
 | 719 |  Green  | Status               Red      | Status | 
 | 720 |  -------|-------------------   ---------|------------------- | 
 | 721 |   on    | normal activity      flash/on | data transfer | 
 | 722 |   blink | reconfiguration      off      | no data transfer; | 
 | 723 |   off   | defective board or            | incorrect memory or | 
 | 724 |         | node ID is zero               | I/O address | 
 | 725 |  | 
 | 726 |  | 
 | 727 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 728 |  | 
 | 729 | ** Standard Microsystems Corp (SMC) ** | 
 | 730 | PC500/PC550 Longboard (16-bit cards) | 
 | 731 | ------------------------------------- | 
 | 732 |   - from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> | 
 | 733 |  | 
 | 734 |  | 
 | 735 | STANDARD MICROSYSTEMS CORPORATION (SMC) ARCNET-PC500/PC550 Long Board | 
 | 736 | ===================================================================== | 
 | 737 |  | 
 | 738 | Note: There is another Version of the PC500 called Short Version, which  | 
 | 739 |       is different in hard- and software! The most important differences | 
 | 740 |       are: | 
 | 741 |       - The long board has no Shared memory. | 
 | 742 |       - On the long board the selection of the interrupt is done by binary | 
 | 743 |         coded switch, on the short board directly by jumper. | 
 | 744 |          | 
 | 745 | [Avery's note: pay special attention to that: the long board HAS NO SHARED | 
 | 746 | MEMORY.  This means the current Linux-ARCnet driver can't use these cards.  | 
 | 747 | I have obtained a PC500Longboard and will be doing some experiments on it in | 
 | 748 | the future, but don't hold your breath.  Thanks again to Juergen Seifert for | 
 | 749 | his advice about this!] | 
 | 750 |  | 
 | 751 | This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> | 
 | 752 | using information from the following Original SMC Manual  | 
 | 753 |  | 
 | 754 |              "Configuration Guide for | 
 | 755 |              SMC ARCNET-PC500/PC550 | 
 | 756 |          Series Network Controller Boards | 
 | 757 |              Pub. # 900.033 Rev. A | 
 | 758 |                 November, 1989" | 
 | 759 |  | 
 | 760 | ARCNET is a registered trademark of the Datapoint Corporation | 
 | 761 | SMC is a registered trademark of the Standard Microsystems Corporation   | 
 | 762 |  | 
 | 763 | The PC500 is equipped with a standard BNC female connector for connection | 
 | 764 | to RG-62/U coax cable. | 
 | 765 | The board is designed both for point-to-point connection in star networks | 
 | 766 | and for connection to bus networks. | 
 | 767 |  | 
 | 768 | The PC550 is equipped with two modular RJ11-type jacks for connection | 
 | 769 | to twisted pair wiring. | 
 | 770 | It can be used in a star or a daisy-chained (BUS) network. | 
 | 771 |  | 
 | 772 |        1  | 
 | 773 |        0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1     6 5 4 3 2 1 | 
 | 774 |     ____________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 775 |    < |         SW1         | |     SW2     |                            | | 
 | 776 |    > |_____________________| |_____________|                            | | 
 | 777 |    <   IRQ    |I/O Addr                                                 | | 
 | 778 |    >                                                                 ___| | 
 | 779 |    <                                                            CR4 |___| | 
 | 780 |    >                                                            CR3 |___| | 
 | 781 |    <                                                                 ___| | 
 | 782 |    >                                                              N |   | 8 | 
 | 783 |    <                                                              o |   | 7 | 
 | 784 |    >                                                              d | S | 6 | 
 | 785 |    <                                                              e | W | 5 | 
 | 786 |    >                                                              A | 3 | 4 | 
 | 787 |    <                                                              d |   | 3 | 
 | 788 |    >                                                              d |   | 2 | 
 | 789 |    <                                                              r |___| 1 | 
 | 790 |    >                                                        |o|    _____| | 
 | 791 |    <                                                        |o|   | J1  | | 
 | 792 |    >  3 1                                                   JP6   |_____| | 
 | 793 |    < |o|o| JP2                                                    | J2  | | 
 | 794 |    > |o|o|                                                        |_____| | 
 | 795 |    <  4 2__                                               ______________| | 
 | 796 |    >    |  |                                             | | 
 | 797 |    <____|  |_____________________________________________| | 
 | 798 |  | 
 | 799 | Legend: | 
 | 800 |  | 
 | 801 | SW1	1-6:	I/O Base Address Select | 
 | 802 | 	7-10:	Interrupt Select | 
 | 803 | SW2	1-6:	Reserved for Future Use | 
 | 804 | SW3	1-8:	Node ID Select | 
 | 805 | JP2	1-4:	Extended Timeout Select | 
 | 806 | JP6		Selected - Star Topology	(PC500 only) | 
 | 807 | 		Deselected - Bus Topology	(PC500 only) | 
 | 808 | CR3	Green	Monitors Network Activity | 
 | 809 | CR4	Red	Monitors Board Activity | 
 | 810 | J1		BNC RG62/U Connector		(PC500 only) | 
 | 811 | J1		6-position Telephone Jack	(PC550 only) | 
 | 812 | J2		6-position Telephone Jack	(PC550 only) | 
 | 813 |  | 
 | 814 | Setting one of the switches to Off/Open means "1", On/Closed means "0". | 
 | 815 |  | 
 | 816 |  | 
 | 817 | Setting the Node ID | 
 | 818 | ------------------- | 
 | 819 |  | 
 | 820 | The eight switches in group SW3 are used to set the node ID. Each node | 
 | 821 | attached to the network must have an unique node ID which must be  | 
 | 822 | different from 0. | 
 | 823 | Switch 1 serves as the least significant bit (LSB). | 
 | 824 |  | 
 | 825 | The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"   | 
 | 826 | These values are: | 
 | 827 |  | 
 | 828 |     Switch | Value | 
 | 829 |     -------|------- | 
 | 830 |       1    |   1 | 
 | 831 |       2    |   2 | 
 | 832 |       3    |   4 | 
 | 833 |       4    |   8 | 
 | 834 |       5    |  16 | 
 | 835 |       6    |  32 | 
 | 836 |       7    |  64 | 
 | 837 |       8    | 128 | 
 | 838 |  | 
 | 839 | Some Examples: | 
 | 840 |  | 
 | 841 |     Switch         | Hex     | Decimal  | 
 | 842 |    8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Node ID | Node ID | 
 | 843 |    ----------------|---------|--------- | 
 | 844 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 |    not allowed | 
 | 845 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 |    1    |    1  | 
 | 846 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 |    2    |    2 | 
 | 847 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 |    3    |    3 | 
 | 848 |        . . .       |         | | 
 | 849 |    0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 |   55    |   85 | 
 | 850 |        . . .       |         | | 
 | 851 |    1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 |   AA    |  170 | 
 | 852 |        . . .       |         |   | 
 | 853 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 |   FD    |  253 | 
 | 854 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 |   FE    |  254 | 
 | 855 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 |   FF    |  255  | 
 | 856 |  | 
 | 857 |  | 
 | 858 | Setting the I/O Base Address | 
 | 859 | ---------------------------- | 
 | 860 |  | 
 | 861 | The first six switches in switch group SW1 are used to select one | 
 | 862 | of 32 possible I/O Base addresses using the following table | 
 | 863 |  | 
 | 864 |    Switch       | Hex I/O | 
 | 865 |    6 5  4 3 2 1 | Address | 
 | 866 |    -------------|-------- | 
 | 867 |    0 1  0 0 0 0 |  200 | 
 | 868 |    0 1  0 0 0 1 |  210 | 
 | 869 |    0 1  0 0 1 0 |  220 | 
 | 870 |    0 1  0 0 1 1 |  230 | 
 | 871 |    0 1  0 1 0 0 |  240 | 
 | 872 |    0 1  0 1 0 1 |  250 | 
 | 873 |    0 1  0 1 1 0 |  260 | 
 | 874 |    0 1  0 1 1 1 |  270 | 
 | 875 |    0 1  1 0 0 0 |  280 | 
 | 876 |    0 1  1 0 0 1 |  290 | 
 | 877 |    0 1  1 0 1 0 |  2A0 | 
 | 878 |    0 1  1 0 1 1 |  2B0 | 
 | 879 |    0 1  1 1 0 0 |  2C0 | 
 | 880 |    0 1  1 1 0 1 |  2D0 | 
 | 881 |    0 1  1 1 1 0 |  2E0 (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 882 |    0 1  1 1 1 1 |  2F0 | 
 | 883 |    1 1  0 0 0 0 |  300 | 
 | 884 |    1 1  0 0 0 1 |  310 | 
 | 885 |    1 1  0 0 1 0 |  320 | 
 | 886 |    1 1  0 0 1 1 |  330 | 
 | 887 |    1 1  0 1 0 0 |  340 | 
 | 888 |    1 1  0 1 0 1 |  350 | 
 | 889 |    1 1  0 1 1 0 |  360 | 
 | 890 |    1 1  0 1 1 1 |  370 | 
 | 891 |    1 1  1 0 0 0 |  380 | 
 | 892 |    1 1  1 0 0 1 |  390 | 
 | 893 |    1 1  1 0 1 0 |  3A0 | 
 | 894 |    1 1  1 0 1 1 |  3B0 | 
 | 895 |    1 1  1 1 0 0 |  3C0 | 
 | 896 |    1 1  1 1 0 1 |  3D0 | 
 | 897 |    1 1  1 1 1 0 |  3E0 | 
 | 898 |    1 1  1 1 1 1 |  3F0 | 
 | 899 |  | 
 | 900 |  | 
 | 901 | Setting the Interrupt | 
 | 902 | --------------------- | 
 | 903 |  | 
 | 904 | Switches seven through ten of switch group SW1 are used to select the  | 
 | 905 | interrupt level. The interrupt level is binary coded, so selections  | 
 | 906 | from 0 to 15 would be possible, but only the following eight values will | 
 | 907 | be supported: 3, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12. | 
 | 908 |  | 
 | 909 |    Switch   | IRQ | 
 | 910 |    10 9 8 7 |  | 
 | 911 |    ---------|--------  | 
 | 912 |     0 0 1 1 |  3 | 
 | 913 |     0 1 0 0 |  4 | 
 | 914 |     0 1 0 1 |  5 | 
 | 915 |     0 1 1 1 |  7 | 
 | 916 |     1 0 0 1 |  9 (=2) (default) | 
 | 917 |     1 0 1 0 | 10 | 
 | 918 |     1 0 1 1 | 11 | 
 | 919 |     1 1 0 0 | 12 | 
 | 920 |  | 
 | 921 |  | 
 | 922 | Setting the Timeouts  | 
 | 923 | -------------------- | 
 | 924 |  | 
 | 925 | The two jumpers JP2 (1-4) are used to determine the timeout parameters.  | 
 | 926 | These two jumpers are normally left open. | 
 | 927 | Refer to the COM9026 Data Sheet for alternate configurations. | 
 | 928 |  | 
 | 929 |  | 
 | 930 | Configuring the PC500 for Star or Bus Topology | 
 | 931 | ---------------------------------------------- | 
 | 932 |  | 
 | 933 | The single jumper labeled JP6 is used to configure the PC500 board for  | 
 | 934 | star or bus topology. | 
 | 935 | When the jumper is installed, the board may be used in a star network, when  | 
 | 936 | it is removed, the board can be used in a bus topology. | 
 | 937 |  | 
 | 938 |  | 
 | 939 | Diagnostic LEDs | 
 | 940 | --------------- | 
 | 941 |  | 
 | 942 | Two diagnostic LEDs are visible on the rear bracket of the board. | 
 | 943 | The green LED monitors the network activity: the red one shows the | 
 | 944 | board activity: | 
 | 945 |  | 
 | 946 |  Green  | Status               Red      | Status | 
 | 947 |  -------|-------------------   ---------|------------------- | 
 | 948 |   on    | normal activity      flash/on | data transfer | 
 | 949 |   blink | reconfiguration      off      | no data transfer; | 
 | 950 |   off   | defective board or            | incorrect memory or | 
 | 951 |         | node ID is zero               | I/O address | 
 | 952 |  | 
 | 953 |  | 
 | 954 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 955 |  | 
 | 956 | ** SMC ** | 
 | 957 | PC710 (8-bit card) | 
 | 958 | ------------------ | 
 | 959 |   - from J.S. van Oosten <jvoosten@compiler.tdcnet.nl> | 
 | 960 |    | 
 | 961 | Note: this data is gathered by experimenting and looking at info of other | 
 | 962 | cards. However, I'm sure I got 99% of the settings right. | 
 | 963 |  | 
 | 964 | The SMC710 card resembles the PC270 card, but is much more basic (i.e. no | 
 | 965 | LEDs, RJ11 jacks, etc.) and 8 bit. Here's a little drawing: | 
 | 966 |  | 
 | 967 |     _______________________________________    | 
 | 968 |    | +---------+  +---------+              |____ | 
 | 969 |    | |   S2    |  |   S1    |              | | 
 | 970 |    | +---------+  +---------+              | | 
 | 971 |    |                                       | | 
 | 972 |    |  +===+    __                          | | 
 | 973 |    |  | R |   |  | X-tal                 ###___ | 
 | 974 |    |  | O |   |__|                      ####__'| | 
 | 975 |    |  | M |    ||                        ### | 
 | 976 |    |  +===+                                | | 
 | 977 |    |                                       | | 
 | 978 |    |   .. JP1   +----------+               | | 
 | 979 |    |   ..       | big chip |               |    | 
 | 980 |    |   ..       |  90C63   |               | | 
 | 981 |    |   ..       |          |               | | 
 | 982 |    |   ..       +----------+               | | 
 | 983 |     -------                     ----------- | 
 | 984 |            ||||||||||||||||||||| | 
 | 985 |  | 
 | 986 | The row of jumpers at JP1 actually consists of 8 jumpers, (sometimes | 
 | 987 | labelled) the same as on the PC270, from top to bottom: EXT2, EXT1, ROM, | 
 | 988 | IRQ7, IRQ5, IRQ4, IRQ3, IRQ2 (gee, wonder what they would do? :-) ) | 
 | 989 |  | 
 | 990 | S1 and S2 perform the same function as on the PC270, only their numbers | 
 | 991 | are swapped (S1 is the nodeaddress, S2 sets IO- and RAM-address). | 
 | 992 |  | 
 | 993 | I know it works when connected to a PC110 type ARCnet board. | 
 | 994 |  | 
 | 995 | 	 | 
 | 996 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 997 |  | 
 | 998 | ** Possibly SMC ** | 
 | 999 | LCS-8830(-T) (8 and 16-bit cards) | 
 | 1000 | --------------------------------- | 
 | 1001 |   - from Mathias Katzer <mkatzer@HRZ.Uni-Bielefeld.DE> | 
 | 1002 |   - Marek Michalkiewicz <marekm@i17linuxb.ists.pwr.wroc.pl> says the | 
 | 1003 |     LCS-8830 is slightly different from LCS-8830-T.  These are 8 bit, BUS | 
 | 1004 |     only (the JP0 jumper is hardwired), and BNC only. | 
 | 1005 | 	 | 
 | 1006 | This is a LCS-8830-T made by SMC, I think ('SMC' only appears on one PLCC, | 
 | 1007 | nowhere else, not even on the few Xeroxed sheets from the manual). | 
 | 1008 |  | 
 | 1009 | SMC ARCnet Board Type LCS-8830-T | 
 | 1010 |  | 
 | 1011 |    ------------------------------------ | 
 | 1012 |   |                                    | | 
 | 1013 |   |              JP3 88  8 JP2         | | 
 | 1014 |   |       #####      | \               | | 
 | 1015 |   |       #####    ET1 ET2          ###| | 
 | 1016 |   |                              8  ###| | 
 | 1017 |   |  U3   SW 1                  JP0 ###|  Phone Jacks | 
 | 1018 |   |  --                             ###| | 
 | 1019 |   | |  |                               | | 
 | 1020 |   | |  |   SW2                         | | 
 | 1021 |   | |  |                               | | 
 | 1022 |   | |  |  #####                        | | 
 | 1023 |   |  --   #####                       ####  BNC Connector  | 
 | 1024 |   |                                   #### | 
 | 1025 |   |   888888 JP1                       | | 
 | 1026 |   |   234567                           | | 
 | 1027 |    --                           ------- | 
 | 1028 |      ||||||||||||||||||||||||||| | 
 | 1029 |       -------------------------- | 
 | 1030 |  | 
 | 1031 |  | 
 | 1032 | SW1: DIP-Switches for Station Address | 
 | 1033 | SW2: DIP-Switches for Memory Base and I/O Base addresses | 
 | 1034 |  | 
 | 1035 | JP0: If closed, internal termination on (default open) | 
 | 1036 | JP1: IRQ Jumpers | 
 | 1037 | JP2: Boot-ROM enabled if closed | 
 | 1038 | JP3: Jumpers for response timeout | 
 | 1039 |   | 
 | 1040 | U3: Boot-ROM Socket           | 
 | 1041 |  | 
 | 1042 |  | 
 | 1043 | ET1 ET2     Response Time     Idle Time    Reconfiguration Time | 
 | 1044 |  | 
 | 1045 |                78                86               840 | 
 | 1046 |  X            285               316              1680 | 
 | 1047 |      X        563               624              1680 | 
 | 1048 |  X   X       1130              1237              1680 | 
 | 1049 |  | 
 | 1050 | (X means closed jumper) | 
 | 1051 |  | 
 | 1052 | (DIP-Switch downwards means "0") | 
 | 1053 |  | 
 | 1054 | The station address is binary-coded with SW1. | 
 | 1055 |  | 
 | 1056 | The I/O base address is coded with DIP-Switches 6,7 and 8 of SW2: | 
 | 1057 |  | 
 | 1058 | Switches        Base | 
 | 1059 | 678             Address | 
 | 1060 | 000		260-26f | 
 | 1061 | 100		290-29f | 
 | 1062 | 010		2e0-2ef | 
 | 1063 | 110		2f0-2ff | 
 | 1064 | 001		300-30f | 
 | 1065 | 101		350-35f | 
 | 1066 | 011		380-38f | 
 | 1067 | 111 		3e0-3ef | 
 | 1068 |  | 
 | 1069 |  | 
 | 1070 | DIP Switches 1-5 of SW2 encode the RAM and ROM Address Range: | 
 | 1071 |  | 
 | 1072 | Switches        RAM           ROM | 
 | 1073 | 12345           Address Range  Address Range | 
 | 1074 | 00000		C:0000-C:07ff	C:2000-C:3fff | 
 | 1075 | 10000		C:0800-C:0fff | 
 | 1076 | 01000		C:1000-C:17ff | 
 | 1077 | 11000		C:1800-C:1fff | 
 | 1078 | 00100		C:4000-C:47ff	C:6000-C:7fff | 
 | 1079 | 10100		C:4800-C:4fff | 
 | 1080 | 01100		C:5000-C:57ff  | 
 | 1081 | 11100		C:5800-C:5fff | 
 | 1082 | 00010		C:C000-C:C7ff	C:E000-C:ffff | 
 | 1083 | 10010		C:C800-C:Cfff | 
 | 1084 | 01010		C:D000-C:D7ff | 
 | 1085 | 11010		C:D800-C:Dfff | 
 | 1086 | 00110		D:0000-D:07ff	D:2000-D:3fff | 
 | 1087 | 10110		D:0800-D:0fff | 
 | 1088 | 01110		D:1000-D:17ff | 
 | 1089 | 11110		D:1800-D:1fff | 
 | 1090 | 00001		D:4000-D:47ff	D:6000-D:7fff | 
 | 1091 | 10001		D:4800-D:4fff | 
 | 1092 | 01001		D:5000-D:57ff | 
 | 1093 | 11001		D:5800-D:5fff | 
 | 1094 | 00101		D:8000-D:87ff	D:A000-D:bfff | 
 | 1095 | 10101		D:8800-D:8fff | 
 | 1096 | 01101		D:9000-D:97ff | 
 | 1097 | 11101		D:9800-D:9fff  | 
 | 1098 | 00011		D:C000-D:c7ff	D:E000-D:ffff | 
 | 1099 | 10011		D:C800-D:cfff | 
 | 1100 | 01011		D:D000-D:d7ff | 
 | 1101 | 11011		D:D800-D:dfff | 
 | 1102 | 00111		E:0000-E:07ff	E:2000-E:3fff | 
 | 1103 | 10111		E:0800-E:0fff | 
 | 1104 | 01111		E:1000-E:17ff | 
 | 1105 | 11111		E:1800-E:1fff | 
 | 1106 |  | 
 | 1107 |  | 
 | 1108 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 1109 |  | 
 | 1110 | ** PureData Corp ** | 
 | 1111 | PDI507 (8-bit card) | 
 | 1112 | -------------------- | 
 | 1113 |   - from Mark Rejhon <mdrejhon@magi.com> (slight modifications by Avery) | 
 | 1114 |   - Avery's note: I think PDI508 cards (but definitely NOT PDI508Plus cards) | 
 | 1115 |     are mostly the same as this.  PDI508Plus cards appear to be mainly | 
 | 1116 |     software-configured. | 
 | 1117 |  | 
 | 1118 | Jumpers: | 
 | 1119 | 	There is a jumper array at the bottom of the card, near the edge | 
 | 1120 |         connector.  This array is labelled J1.  They control the IRQs and | 
 | 1121 |         something else.  Put only one jumper on the IRQ pins. | 
 | 1122 |  | 
 | 1123 | 	ETS1, ETS2 are for timing on very long distance networks.  See the | 
 | 1124 | 	more general information near the top of this file. | 
 | 1125 |  | 
 | 1126 | 	There is a J2 jumper on two pins.  A jumper should be put on them, | 
 | 1127 |         since it was already there when I got the card.  I don't know what | 
 | 1128 |         this jumper is for though. | 
 | 1129 |  | 
 | 1130 | 	There is a two-jumper array for J3.  I don't know what it is for, | 
 | 1131 |         but there were already two jumpers on it when I got the card.  It's | 
 | 1132 |         a six pin grid in a two-by-three fashion.  The jumpers were | 
 | 1133 |         configured as follows: | 
 | 1134 |  | 
 | 1135 | 	   .-------. | 
 | 1136 | 	 o | o   o | | 
 | 1137 | 	   :-------:    ------> Accessible end of card with connectors | 
 | 1138 | 	 o | o   o |             in this direction -------> | 
 | 1139 | 	   `-------' | 
 | 1140 |  | 
 | 1141 | Carl de Billy <CARL@carainfo.com> explains J3 and J4: | 
 | 1142 |  | 
 | 1143 | 	J3 Diagram: | 
 | 1144 |  | 
 | 1145 |            .-------. | 
 | 1146 |          o | o   o | | 
 | 1147 |            :-------:    TWIST Technology | 
 | 1148 |          o | o   o | | 
 | 1149 |            `-------' | 
 | 1150 |            .-------. | 
 | 1151 |            | o   o | o | 
 | 1152 |            :-------:    COAX Technology | 
 | 1153 |            | o   o | o | 
 | 1154 |            `-------' | 
 | 1155 |  | 
 | 1156 |   - If using coax cable in a bus topology the J4 jumper must be removed; | 
 | 1157 |     place it on one pin. | 
 | 1158 |  | 
 | 1159 |   - If using bus topology with twisted pair wiring move the J3  | 
 | 1160 |     jumpers so they connect the middle pin and the pins closest to the RJ11 | 
 | 1161 |     Connectors.  Also the J4 jumper must be removed; place it on one pin of | 
 | 1162 |     J4 jumper for storage. | 
 | 1163 |  | 
 | 1164 |   - If using  star topology with twisted pair wiring move the J3  | 
 | 1165 |     jumpers so they connect the middle pin and the pins closest to the RJ11 | 
 | 1166 |     connectors. | 
 | 1167 |  | 
 | 1168 |  | 
 | 1169 | DIP Switches: | 
 | 1170 |  | 
 | 1171 | 	The DIP switches accessible on the accessible end of the card while | 
 | 1172 |         it is installed, is used to set the ARCnet address.  There are 8 | 
 | 1173 |         switches.  Use an address from 1 to 254. | 
 | 1174 |  | 
 | 1175 | 	Switch No. | 
 | 1176 | 	12345678	ARCnet address | 
 | 1177 | 	----------------------------------------- | 
 | 1178 | 	00000000	FF  	(Don't use this!) | 
 | 1179 | 	00000001	FE | 
 | 1180 | 	00000010	FD | 
 | 1181 | 	.... | 
 | 1182 | 	11111101	2	 | 
 | 1183 | 	11111110	1 | 
 | 1184 | 	11111111	0	(Don't use this!) | 
 | 1185 |  | 
 | 1186 | 	There is another array of eight DIP switches at the top of the | 
 | 1187 |         card.  There are five labelled MS0-MS4 which seem to control the | 
 | 1188 |         memory address, and another three labelled IO0-IO2 which seem to | 
 | 1189 |         control the base I/O address of the card. | 
 | 1190 |  | 
 | 1191 | 	This was difficult to test by trial and error, and the I/O addresses | 
 | 1192 |         are in a weird order.  This was tested by setting the DIP switches, | 
 | 1193 |         rebooting the computer, and attempting to load ARCETHER at various | 
 | 1194 |         addresses (mostly between 0x200 and 0x400).  The address that caused | 
 | 1195 |         the red transmit LED to blink, is the one that I thought works. | 
 | 1196 |  | 
 | 1197 | 	Also, the address 0x3D0 seem to have a special meaning, since the | 
 | 1198 |         ARCETHER packet driver loaded fine, but without the red LED | 
 | 1199 |         blinking.  I don't know what 0x3D0 is for though.  I recommend using | 
 | 1200 |         an address of 0x300 since Windows may not like addresses below | 
 | 1201 |         0x300. | 
 | 1202 |  | 
 | 1203 | 	IO Switch No. | 
 | 1204 | 	210             I/O address | 
 | 1205 | 	------------------------------- | 
 | 1206 | 	111             0x260 | 
 | 1207 | 	110             0x290 | 
 | 1208 | 	101             0x2E0 | 
 | 1209 | 	100             0x2F0 | 
 | 1210 | 	011             0x300 | 
 | 1211 | 	010             0x350 | 
 | 1212 | 	001             0x380 | 
 | 1213 | 	000             0x3E0 | 
 | 1214 |  | 
 | 1215 | 	The memory switches set a reserved address space of 0x1000 bytes | 
 | 1216 |         (0x100 segment units, or 4k).  For example if I set an address of | 
 | 1217 |         0xD000, it will use up addresses 0xD000 to 0xD100. | 
 | 1218 |  | 
 | 1219 | 	The memory switches were tested by booting using QEMM386 stealth, | 
 | 1220 |         and using LOADHI to see what address automatically became excluded | 
 | 1221 |         from the upper memory regions, and then attempting to load ARCETHER | 
 | 1222 |         using these addresses. | 
 | 1223 |  | 
 | 1224 | 	I recommend using an ARCnet memory address of 0xD000, and putting | 
 | 1225 |         the EMS page frame at 0xC000 while using QEMM stealth mode.  That | 
 | 1226 |         way, you get contiguous high memory from 0xD100 almost all the way | 
 | 1227 |         the end of the megabyte. | 
 | 1228 |  | 
 | 1229 | 	Memory Switch 0 (MS0) didn't seem to work properly when set to OFF | 
 | 1230 |         on my card.  It could be malfunctioning on my card.  Experiment with | 
 | 1231 |         it ON first, and if it doesn't work, set it to OFF.  (It may be a | 
 | 1232 |         modifier for the 0x200 bit?) | 
 | 1233 |  | 
 | 1234 | 	MS Switch No. | 
 | 1235 | 	43210           Memory address | 
 | 1236 | 	-------------------------------- | 
 | 1237 | 	00001           0xE100  (guessed - was not detected by QEMM) | 
 | 1238 | 	00011           0xE000  (guessed - was not detected by QEMM) | 
 | 1239 | 	00101           0xDD00 | 
 | 1240 | 	00111           0xDC00 | 
 | 1241 | 	01001           0xD900 | 
 | 1242 | 	01011           0xD800 | 
 | 1243 | 	01101           0xD500 | 
 | 1244 | 	01111           0xD400 | 
 | 1245 | 	10001           0xD100 | 
 | 1246 | 	10011           0xD000 | 
 | 1247 | 	10101           0xCD00 | 
 | 1248 | 	10111           0xCC00 | 
 | 1249 | 	11001           0xC900 (guessed - crashes tested system) | 
 | 1250 | 	11011           0xC800 (guessed - crashes tested system) | 
 | 1251 | 	11101           0xC500 (guessed - crashes tested system) | 
 | 1252 | 	11111           0xC400 (guessed - crashes tested system) | 
 | 1253 | 	 | 
 | 1254 | 	 | 
 | 1255 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 1256 |  | 
 | 1257 | ** CNet Technology Inc. ** | 
 | 1258 | 120 Series (8-bit cards) | 
 | 1259 | ------------------------ | 
 | 1260 |   - from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> | 
 | 1261 |  | 
 | 1262 |  | 
 | 1263 | CNET TECHNOLOGY INC. (CNet) ARCNET 120A SERIES | 
 | 1264 | ============================================== | 
 | 1265 |  | 
 | 1266 | This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> | 
 | 1267 | using information from the following Original CNet Manual  | 
 | 1268 |  | 
 | 1269 |               "ARCNET | 
 | 1270 |             USER'S MANUAL  | 
 | 1271 |                 for | 
 | 1272 |                CN120A | 
 | 1273 |                CN120AB | 
 | 1274 |                CN120TP | 
 | 1275 |                CN120ST | 
 | 1276 |                CN120SBT | 
 | 1277 |              P/N:12-01-0007 | 
 | 1278 |              Revision 3.00" | 
 | 1279 |  | 
 | 1280 | ARCNET is a registered trademark of the Datapoint Corporation | 
 | 1281 |  | 
 | 1282 | P/N 120A   ARCNET 8 bit XT/AT Star | 
 | 1283 | P/N 120AB  ARCNET 8 bit XT/AT Bus | 
 | 1284 | P/N 120TP  ARCNET 8 bit XT/AT Twisted Pair | 
 | 1285 | P/N 120ST  ARCNET 8 bit XT/AT Star, Twisted Pair | 
 | 1286 | P/N 120SBT ARCNET 8 bit XT/AT Star, Bus, Twisted Pair | 
 | 1287 |  | 
 | 1288 |     __________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 1289 |    |                                                                  | | 
 | 1290 |    |                                                               ___| | 
 | 1291 |    |                                                          LED |___| | 
 | 1292 |    |                                                               ___| | 
 | 1293 |    |                                                            N |   | ID7 | 
 | 1294 |    |                                                            o |   | ID6 | 
 | 1295 |    |                                                            d | S | ID5 | 
 | 1296 |    |                                                            e | W | ID4 | 
 | 1297 |    |                     ___________________                    A | 2 | ID3 | 
 | 1298 |    |                    |                   |                   d |   | ID2 | 
 | 1299 |    |                    |                   |  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8  d |   | ID1 | 
 | 1300 |    |                    |                   | _________________ r |___| ID0 | 
 | 1301 |    |                    |      90C65        ||       SW1       |  ____| | 
 | 1302 |    |  JP 8 7            |                   ||_________________| |    | | 
 | 1303 |    |    |o|o|  JP1      |                   |                    | J2 | | 
 | 1304 |    |    |o|o|  |oo|     |                   |         JP 1 1 1   |    | | 
 | 1305 |    |   ______________   |                   |            0 1 2   |____| | 
 | 1306 |    |  |  PROM        |  |___________________|           |o|o|o|  _____| | 
 | 1307 |    |  >  SOCKET      |  JP 6 5 4 3 2                    |o|o|o| | J1  | | 
 | 1308 |    |  |______________|    |o|o|o|o|o|                   |o|o|o| |_____| | 
 | 1309 |    |_____                 |o|o|o|o|o|                   ______________| | 
 | 1310 |          |                                             | | 
 | 1311 |          |_____________________________________________| | 
 | 1312 |  | 
 | 1313 | Legend: | 
 | 1314 |  | 
 | 1315 | 90C65       ARCNET Probe | 
 | 1316 | S1  1-5:    Base Memory Address Select | 
 | 1317 |     6-8:    Base I/O Address Select | 
 | 1318 | S2  1-8:    Node ID Select (ID0-ID7) | 
 | 1319 | JP1     ROM Enable Select | 
 | 1320 | JP2     IRQ2 | 
 | 1321 | JP3     IRQ3 | 
 | 1322 | JP4     IRQ4 | 
 | 1323 | JP5     IRQ5 | 
 | 1324 | JP6     IRQ7 | 
 | 1325 | JP7/JP8     ET1, ET2 Timeout Parameters | 
 | 1326 | JP10/JP11   Coax / Twisted Pair Select  (CN120ST/SBT only) | 
 | 1327 | JP12        Terminator Select       (CN120AB/ST/SBT only) | 
 | 1328 | J1      BNC RG62/U Connector        (all except CN120TP) | 
 | 1329 | J2      Two 6-position Telephone Jack   (CN120TP/ST/SBT only) | 
 | 1330 |  | 
 | 1331 | Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0". | 
 | 1332 |  | 
 | 1333 |  | 
 | 1334 | Setting the Node ID | 
 | 1335 | ------------------- | 
 | 1336 |  | 
 | 1337 | The eight switches in SW2 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached | 
 | 1338 | to the network must have an unique node ID which must be different from 0. | 
 | 1339 | Switch 1 (ID0) serves as the least significant bit (LSB). | 
 | 1340 |  | 
 | 1341 | The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"   | 
 | 1342 | These values are: | 
 | 1343 |  | 
 | 1344 |    Switch | Label | Value | 
 | 1345 |    -------|-------|------- | 
 | 1346 |      1    | ID0   |   1 | 
 | 1347 |      2    | ID1   |   2 | 
 | 1348 |      3    | ID2   |   4 | 
 | 1349 |      4    | ID3   |   8 | 
 | 1350 |      5    | ID4   |  16 | 
 | 1351 |      6    | ID5   |  32 | 
 | 1352 |      7    | ID6   |  64 | 
 | 1353 |      8    | ID7   | 128 | 
 | 1354 |  | 
 | 1355 | Some Examples: | 
 | 1356 |  | 
 | 1357 |     Switch         | Hex     | Decimal  | 
 | 1358 |    8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Node ID | Node ID | 
 | 1359 |    ----------------|---------|--------- | 
 | 1360 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 |    not allowed | 
 | 1361 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 |    1    |    1  | 
 | 1362 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 |    2    |    2 | 
 | 1363 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 |    3    |    3 | 
 | 1364 |        . . .       |         | | 
 | 1365 |    0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 |   55    |   85 | 
 | 1366 |        . . .       |         | | 
 | 1367 |    1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 |   AA    |  170 | 
 | 1368 |        . . .       |         |   | 
 | 1369 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 |   FD    |  253 | 
 | 1370 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 |   FE    |  254 | 
 | 1371 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 |   FF    |  255 | 
 | 1372 |  | 
 | 1373 |  | 
 | 1374 | Setting the I/O Base Address | 
 | 1375 | ---------------------------- | 
 | 1376 |  | 
 | 1377 | The last three switches in switch block SW1 are used to select one | 
 | 1378 | of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table | 
 | 1379 |  | 
 | 1380 |  | 
 | 1381 |    Switch      | Hex I/O | 
 | 1382 |     6   7   8  | Address | 
 | 1383 |    ------------|-------- | 
 | 1384 |    ON  ON  ON  |  260 | 
 | 1385 |    OFF ON  ON  |  290 | 
 | 1386 |    ON  OFF ON  |  2E0  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 1387 |    OFF OFF ON  |  2F0 | 
 | 1388 |    ON  ON  OFF |  300 | 
 | 1389 |    OFF ON  OFF |  350 | 
 | 1390 |    ON  OFF OFF |  380 | 
 | 1391 |    OFF OFF OFF |  3E0 | 
 | 1392 |  | 
 | 1393 |  | 
 | 1394 | Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address | 
 | 1395 | -------------------------------------------- | 
 | 1396 |  | 
 | 1397 | The memory buffer (RAM) requires 2K. The base of this buffer can be  | 
 | 1398 | located in any of eight positions. The address of the Boot Prom is | 
 | 1399 | memory base + 8K or memory base + 0x2000. | 
 | 1400 | Switches 1-5 of switch block SW1 select the Memory Base address. | 
 | 1401 |  | 
 | 1402 |    Switch              | Hex RAM | Hex ROM | 
 | 1403 |     1   2   3   4   5  | Address | Address *) | 
 | 1404 |    --------------------|---------|----------- | 
 | 1405 |    ON  ON  ON  ON  ON  |  C0000  |  C2000 | 
 | 1406 |    ON  ON  OFF ON  ON  |  C4000  |  C6000 | 
 | 1407 |    ON  ON  ON  OFF ON  |  CC000  |  CE000 | 
 | 1408 |    ON  ON  OFF OFF ON  |  D0000  |  D2000  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 1409 |    ON  ON  ON  ON  OFF |  D4000  |  D6000 | 
 | 1410 |    ON  ON  OFF ON  OFF |  D8000  |  DA000 | 
 | 1411 |    ON  ON  ON  OFF OFF |  DC000  |  DE000 | 
 | 1412 |    ON  ON  OFF OFF OFF |  E0000  |  E2000 | 
 | 1413 |    | 
 | 1414 | *) To enable the Boot ROM install the jumper JP1 | 
 | 1415 |  | 
 | 1416 | Note: Since the switches 1 and 2 are always set to ON it may be possible | 
 | 1417 |       that they can be used to add an offset of 2K, 4K or 6K to the base | 
 | 1418 |       address, but this feature is not documented in the manual and I | 
 | 1419 |       haven't tested it yet. | 
 | 1420 |  | 
 | 1421 |  | 
 | 1422 | Setting the Interrupt Line | 
 | 1423 | -------------------------- | 
 | 1424 |  | 
 | 1425 | To select a hardware interrupt level install one (only one!) of the jumpers | 
 | 1426 | JP2, JP3, JP4, JP5, JP6. JP2 is the default. | 
 | 1427 |  | 
 | 1428 |    Jumper | IRQ      | 
 | 1429 |    -------|----- | 
 | 1430 |      2    |  2 | 
 | 1431 |      3    |  3 | 
 | 1432 |      4    |  4 | 
 | 1433 |      5    |  5 | 
 | 1434 |      6    |  7 | 
 | 1435 |  | 
 | 1436 |  | 
 | 1437 | Setting the Internal Terminator on CN120AB/TP/SBT | 
 | 1438 | -------------------------------------------------- | 
 | 1439 |  | 
 | 1440 | The jumper JP12 is used to enable the internal terminator.  | 
 | 1441 |  | 
 | 1442 |                          ----- | 
 | 1443 |        0                |  0  |      | 
 | 1444 |      -----   ON         |     |  ON | 
 | 1445 |     |  0  |             |  0  | | 
 | 1446 |     |     |  OFF         -----   OFF | 
 | 1447 |     |  0  |                0 | 
 | 1448 |      ----- | 
 | 1449 |    Terminator          Terminator  | 
 | 1450 |     disabled            enabled | 
 | 1451 |    | 
 | 1452 |  | 
 | 1453 | Selecting the Connector Type on CN120ST/SBT | 
 | 1454 | ------------------------------------------- | 
 | 1455 |  | 
 | 1456 |      JP10    JP11        JP10    JP11 | 
 | 1457 |                          -----   ----- | 
 | 1458 |        0       0        |  0  | |  0  |        | 
 | 1459 |      -----   -----      |     | |     | | 
 | 1460 |     |  0  | |  0  |     |  0  | |  0  | | 
 | 1461 |     |     | |     |      -----   ----- | 
 | 1462 |     |  0  | |  0  |        0       0  | 
 | 1463 |      -----   ----- | 
 | 1464 |      Coaxial Cable       Twisted Pair Cable  | 
 | 1465 |        (Default) | 
 | 1466 |  | 
 | 1467 |  | 
 | 1468 | Setting the Timeout Parameters | 
 | 1469 | ------------------------------ | 
 | 1470 |  | 
 | 1471 | The jumpers labeled EXT1 and EXT2 are used to determine the timeout  | 
 | 1472 | parameters. These two jumpers are normally left open. | 
 | 1473 |  | 
 | 1474 |  | 
 | 1475 |  | 
 | 1476 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 1477 |  | 
 | 1478 | ** CNet Technology Inc. ** | 
 | 1479 | 160 Series (16-bit cards) | 
 | 1480 | ------------------------- | 
 | 1481 |   - from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> | 
 | 1482 |  | 
 | 1483 | CNET TECHNOLOGY INC. (CNet) ARCNET 160A SERIES | 
 | 1484 | ============================================== | 
 | 1485 |  | 
 | 1486 | This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> | 
 | 1487 | using information from the following Original CNet Manual  | 
 | 1488 |  | 
 | 1489 |               "ARCNET | 
 | 1490 |             USER'S MANUAL  | 
 | 1491 |                 for | 
 | 1492 |                CN160A | 
 | 1493 |                CN160AB | 
 | 1494 |                CN160TP | 
 | 1495 |              P/N:12-01-0006 | 
 | 1496 |              Revision 3.00" | 
 | 1497 |  | 
 | 1498 | ARCNET is a registered trademark of the Datapoint Corporation | 
 | 1499 |  | 
 | 1500 | P/N 160A   ARCNET 16 bit XT/AT Star | 
 | 1501 | P/N 160AB  ARCNET 16 bit XT/AT Bus | 
 | 1502 | P/N 160TP  ARCNET 16 bit XT/AT Twisted Pair | 
 | 1503 |  | 
 | 1504 |    ___________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 1505 |   <                             _________________________          ___| | 
 | 1506 |   >               |oo| JP2     |                         |    LED |___| | 
 | 1507 |   <               |oo| JP1     |        9026             |    LED |___| | 
 | 1508 |   >                            |_________________________|         ___| | 
 | 1509 |   <                                                             N |   | ID7 | 
 | 1510 |   >                                                      1      o |   | ID6 | 
 | 1511 |   <                                    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0      d | S | ID5 | 
 | 1512 |   >         _______________           _____________________     e | W | ID4 | 
 | 1513 |   <        |     PROM      |         |         SW1         |    A | 2 | ID3 | 
 | 1514 |   >        >    SOCKET     |         |_____________________|    d |   | ID2 | 
 | 1515 |   <        |_______________|          | IO-Base   | MEM   |     d |   | ID1 | 
 | 1516 |   >                                                             r |___| ID0 | 
 | 1517 |   <                                                               ____| | 
 | 1518 |   >                                                              |    | | 
 | 1519 |   <                                                              | J1 | | 
 | 1520 |   >                                                              |    | | 
 | 1521 |   <                                                              |____| | 
 | 1522 |   >                            1 1 1 1                                | | 
 | 1523 |   <  3 4 5 6 7      JP     8 9 0 1 2 3                                | | 
 | 1524 |   > |o|o|o|o|o|           |o|o|o|o|o|o|                               | | 
 | 1525 |   < |o|o|o|o|o| __        |o|o|o|o|o|o|                    ___________| | 
 | 1526 |   >            |  |                                       | | 
 | 1527 |   <____________|  |_______________________________________| | 
 | 1528 |  | 
 | 1529 | Legend: | 
 | 1530 |  | 
 | 1531 | 9026            ARCNET Probe | 
 | 1532 | SW1 1-6:    Base I/O Address Select | 
 | 1533 |     7-10:   Base Memory Address Select | 
 | 1534 | SW2 1-8:    Node ID Select (ID0-ID7) | 
 | 1535 | JP1/JP2     ET1, ET2 Timeout Parameters | 
 | 1536 | JP3-JP13    Interrupt Select | 
 | 1537 | J1      BNC RG62/U Connector        (CN160A/AB only) | 
 | 1538 | J1      Two 6-position Telephone Jack   (CN160TP only) | 
 | 1539 | LED | 
 | 1540 |  | 
 | 1541 | Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0". | 
 | 1542 |  | 
 | 1543 |  | 
 | 1544 | Setting the Node ID | 
 | 1545 | ------------------- | 
 | 1546 |  | 
 | 1547 | The eight switches in SW2 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached | 
 | 1548 | to the network must have an unique node ID which must be different from 0. | 
 | 1549 | Switch 1 (ID0) serves as the least significant bit (LSB). | 
 | 1550 |  | 
 | 1551 | The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"   | 
 | 1552 | These values are: | 
 | 1553 |  | 
 | 1554 |    Switch | Label | Value | 
 | 1555 |    -------|-------|------- | 
 | 1556 |      1    | ID0   |   1 | 
 | 1557 |      2    | ID1   |   2 | 
 | 1558 |      3    | ID2   |   4 | 
 | 1559 |      4    | ID3   |   8 | 
 | 1560 |      5    | ID4   |  16 | 
 | 1561 |      6    | ID5   |  32 | 
 | 1562 |      7    | ID6   |  64 | 
 | 1563 |      8    | ID7   | 128 | 
 | 1564 |  | 
 | 1565 | Some Examples: | 
 | 1566 |  | 
 | 1567 |     Switch         | Hex     | Decimal  | 
 | 1568 |    8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Node ID | Node ID | 
 | 1569 |    ----------------|---------|--------- | 
 | 1570 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 |    not allowed | 
 | 1571 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 |    1    |    1  | 
 | 1572 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 |    2    |    2 | 
 | 1573 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 |    3    |    3 | 
 | 1574 |        . . .       |         | | 
 | 1575 |    0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 |   55    |   85 | 
 | 1576 |        . . .       |         | | 
 | 1577 |    1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 |   AA    |  170 | 
 | 1578 |        . . .       |         |   | 
 | 1579 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 |   FD    |  253 | 
 | 1580 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 |   FE    |  254 | 
 | 1581 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 |   FF    |  255 | 
 | 1582 |  | 
 | 1583 |  | 
 | 1584 | Setting the I/O Base Address | 
 | 1585 | ---------------------------- | 
 | 1586 |  | 
 | 1587 | The first six switches in switch block SW1 are used to select the I/O Base | 
 | 1588 | address using the following table: | 
 | 1589 |  | 
 | 1590 |              Switch        | Hex I/O | 
 | 1591 |     1   2   3   4   5   6  | Address | 
 | 1592 |    ------------------------|-------- | 
 | 1593 |    OFF ON  ON  OFF OFF ON  |  260 | 
 | 1594 |    OFF ON  OFF ON  ON  OFF |  290 | 
 | 1595 |    OFF ON  OFF OFF OFF ON  |  2E0  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 1596 |    OFF ON  OFF OFF OFF OFF |  2F0 | 
 | 1597 |    OFF OFF ON  ON  ON  ON  |  300 | 
 | 1598 |    OFF OFF ON  OFF ON  OFF |  350 | 
 | 1599 |    OFF OFF OFF ON  ON  ON  |  380 | 
 | 1600 |    OFF OFF OFF OFF OFF ON  |  3E0 | 
 | 1601 |  | 
 | 1602 | Note: Other IO-Base addresses seem to be selectable, but only the above | 
 | 1603 |       combinations are documented. | 
 | 1604 |  | 
 | 1605 |  | 
 | 1606 | Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address | 
 | 1607 | -------------------------------------------- | 
 | 1608 |  | 
 | 1609 | The switches 7-10 of switch block SW1 are used to select the Memory | 
 | 1610 | Base address of the RAM (2K) and the PROM. | 
 | 1611 |  | 
 | 1612 |    Switch          | Hex RAM | Hex ROM | 
 | 1613 |     7   8   9  10  | Address | Address | 
 | 1614 |    ----------------|---------|----------- | 
 | 1615 |    OFF OFF ON  ON  |  C0000  |  C8000 | 
 | 1616 |    OFF OFF ON  OFF |  D0000  |  D8000 (Default) | 
 | 1617 |    OFF OFF OFF ON  |  E0000  |  E8000 | 
 | 1618 |  | 
 | 1619 | Note: Other MEM-Base addresses seem to be selectable, but only the above | 
 | 1620 |       combinations are documented. | 
 | 1621 |  | 
 | 1622 |  | 
 | 1623 | Setting the Interrupt Line | 
 | 1624 | -------------------------- | 
 | 1625 |  | 
 | 1626 | To select a hardware interrupt level install one (only one!) of the jumpers | 
 | 1627 | JP3 through JP13 using the following table: | 
 | 1628 |  | 
 | 1629 |    Jumper | IRQ      | 
 | 1630 |    -------|----------------- | 
 | 1631 |      3    |  14 | 
 | 1632 |      4    |  15 | 
 | 1633 |      5    |  12 | 
 | 1634 |      6    |  11 | 
 | 1635 |      7    |  10 | 
 | 1636 |      8    |   3 | 
 | 1637 |      9    |   4 | 
 | 1638 |     10    |   5 | 
 | 1639 |     11    |   6 | 
 | 1640 |     12    |   7 | 
 | 1641 |     13    |   2 (=9) Default! | 
 | 1642 |  | 
 | 1643 | Note:  - Do not use JP11=IRQ6, it may conflict with your Floppy Disk | 
 | 1644 |          Controller | 
 | 1645 |        - Use JP3=IRQ14 only, if you don't have an IDE-, MFM-, or RLL- | 
 | 1646 |          Hard Disk, it may conflict with their controllers | 
 | 1647 |  | 
 | 1648 |  | 
 | 1649 | Setting the Timeout Parameters | 
 | 1650 | ------------------------------ | 
 | 1651 |  | 
 | 1652 | The jumpers labeled JP1 and JP2 are used to determine the timeout | 
 | 1653 | parameters. These two jumpers are normally left open. | 
 | 1654 |  | 
 | 1655 |  | 
 | 1656 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 1657 |  | 
 | 1658 | ** Lantech ** | 
 | 1659 | 8-bit card, unknown model | 
 | 1660 | ------------------------- | 
 | 1661 |   - from Vlad Lungu <vlungu@ugal.ro> - his e-mail address seemed broken at | 
 | 1662 |     the time I tried to reach him.  Sorry Vlad, if you didn't get my reply. | 
 | 1663 |  | 
 | 1664 |    ________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 1665 |    |   1         8                                                 | | 
 | 1666 |    |   ___________                                               __| | 
 | 1667 |    |   |   SW1    |                                         LED |__| | 
 | 1668 |    |   |__________|                                                | | 
 | 1669 |    |                                                            ___| | 
 | 1670 |    |                _____________________                       |S | 8 | 
 | 1671 |    |                |                   |                       |W | | 
 | 1672 |    |                |                   |                       |2 | | 
 | 1673 |    |                |                   |                       |__| 1 | 
 | 1674 |    |                |      UM9065L      |     |o|  JP4         ____|____ | 
 | 1675 |    |                |                   |     |o|              |  CN    | | 
 | 1676 |    |                |                   |                      |________| | 
 | 1677 |    |                |                   |                          | | 
 | 1678 |    |                |___________________|                          | | 
 | 1679 |    |                                                               | | 
 | 1680 |    |                                                               | | 
 | 1681 |    |      _____________                                            | | 
 | 1682 |    |      |            |                                           | | 
 | 1683 |    |      |    PROM    |        |ooooo|  JP6                       | | 
 | 1684 |    |      |____________|        |ooooo|                            | | 
 | 1685 |    |_____________                                             _   _| | 
 | 1686 |                 |____________________________________________| |__| | 
 | 1687 |  | 
 | 1688 |  | 
 | 1689 | UM9065L : ARCnet Controller | 
 | 1690 |  | 
 | 1691 | SW 1    : Shared Memory Address and I/O Base | 
 | 1692 |  | 
 | 1693 |         ON=0 | 
 | 1694 |  | 
 | 1695 |         12345|Memory Address | 
 | 1696 |         -----|-------------- | 
 | 1697 |         00001|  D4000 | 
 | 1698 |         00010|  CC000 | 
 | 1699 |         00110|  D0000 | 
 | 1700 |         01110|  D1000 | 
 | 1701 |         01101|  D9000 | 
 | 1702 |         10010|  CC800 | 
 | 1703 |         10011|  DC800 | 
 | 1704 |         11110|  D1800 | 
 | 1705 |  | 
 | 1706 | It seems that the bits are considered in reverse order.  Also, you must | 
 | 1707 | observe that some of those addresses are unusual and I didn't probe them; I | 
 | 1708 | used a memory dump in DOS to identify them.  For the 00000 configuration and | 
 | 1709 | some others that I didn't write here the card seems to conflict with the | 
 | 1710 | video card (an S3 GENDAC). I leave the full decoding of those addresses to | 
 | 1711 | you. | 
 | 1712 |  | 
 | 1713 |         678| I/O Address | 
 | 1714 |         ---|------------ | 
 | 1715 |         000|    260 | 
 | 1716 |         001|    failed probe | 
 | 1717 |         010|    2E0 | 
 | 1718 |         011|    380 | 
 | 1719 |         100|    290 | 
 | 1720 |         101|    350 | 
 | 1721 |         110|    failed probe | 
 | 1722 |         111|    3E0 | 
 | 1723 |  | 
 | 1724 | SW 2  : Node ID (binary coded) | 
 | 1725 |  | 
 | 1726 | JP 4  : Boot PROM enable   CLOSE - enabled | 
 | 1727 |                            OPEN  - disabled | 
 | 1728 |  | 
 | 1729 | JP 6  : IRQ set (ONLY ONE jumper on 1-5 for IRQ 2-6) | 
 | 1730 |  | 
 | 1731 |  | 
 | 1732 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 1733 |  | 
 | 1734 | ** Acer ** | 
 | 1735 | 8-bit card, Model 5210-003 | 
 | 1736 | -------------------------- | 
 | 1737 |   - from Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz> using portions of the existing | 
 | 1738 |     arcnet-hardware file. | 
 | 1739 |  | 
 | 1740 | This is a 90C26 based card.  Its configuration seems similar to the SMC | 
 | 1741 | PC100, but has some additional jumpers I don't know the meaning of. | 
 | 1742 |  | 
 | 1743 |                __ | 
 | 1744 |               |  | | 
 | 1745 |    ___________|__|_________________________ | 
 | 1746 |   |         |      |                       | | 
 | 1747 |   |         | BNC  |                       | | 
 | 1748 |   |         |______|                    ___| | 
 | 1749 |   |  _____________________             |___   | 
 | 1750 |   | |                     |                | | 
 | 1751 |   | | Hybrid IC           |                | | 
 | 1752 |   | |                     |       o|o J1   | | 
 | 1753 |   | |_____________________|       8|8      | | 
 | 1754 |   |                               8|8 J5   | | 
 | 1755 |   |                               o|o      | | 
 | 1756 |   |                               8|8      | | 
 | 1757 |   |__                             8|8      | | 
 | 1758 |  (|__| LED                        o|o      | | 
 | 1759 |   |                               8|8      | | 
 | 1760 |   |                               8|8 J15  | | 
 | 1761 |   |                                        | | 
 | 1762 |   |                    _____               | | 
 | 1763 |   |                   |     |   _____      | | 
 | 1764 |   |                   |     |  |     |  ___| | 
 | 1765 |   |                   |     |  |     | |     | 
 | 1766 |   |  _____            | ROM |  | UFS | |     | 
 | 1767 |   | |     |           |     |  |     | |    | 
 | 1768 |   | |     |     ___   |     |  |     | |    | 
 | 1769 |   | |     |    |   |  |__.__|  |__.__| |    | 
 | 1770 |   | | NCR |    |XTL|   _____    _____  |    | 
 | 1771 |   | |     |    |___|  |     |  |     | |    | 
 | 1772 |   | |90C26|           |     |  |     | |    | 
 | 1773 |   | |     |           | RAM |  | UFS | |    | 
 | 1774 |   | |     | J17 o|o   |     |  |     | |    | 
 | 1775 |   | |     | J16 o|o   |     |  |     | |    | 
 | 1776 |   | |__.__|           |__.__|  |__.__| |    | 
 | 1777 |   |  ___                               |    | 
 | 1778 |   | |   |8                             |    | 
 | 1779 |   | |SW2|                              |    | 
 | 1780 |   | |   |                              |    | 
 | 1781 |   | |___|1                             |    | 
 | 1782 |   |  ___                               |    | 
 | 1783 |   | |   |10           J18 o|o          |    | 
 | 1784 |   | |   |                 o|o          |    | 
 | 1785 |   | |SW1|                 o|o          |    | 
 | 1786 |   | |   |             J21 o|o          |    | 
 | 1787 |   | |___|1                             |    | 
 | 1788 |   |                                    |    | 
 | 1789 |   |____________________________________|    | 
 | 1790 |  | 
 | 1791 |  | 
 | 1792 | Legend: | 
 | 1793 |  | 
 | 1794 | 90C26       ARCNET Chip | 
 | 1795 | XTL         20 MHz Crystal | 
 | 1796 | SW1 1-6     Base I/O Address Select | 
 | 1797 |     7-10    Memory Address Select | 
 | 1798 | SW2 1-8     Node ID Select (ID0-ID7) | 
 | 1799 | J1-J5       IRQ Select | 
 | 1800 | J6-J21      Unknown (Probably extra timeouts & ROM enable ...) | 
 | 1801 | LED1        Activity LED  | 
 | 1802 | BNC         Coax connector (STAR ARCnet) | 
 | 1803 | RAM         2k of SRAM | 
 | 1804 | ROM         Boot ROM socket | 
 | 1805 | UFS         Unidentified Flying Sockets | 
 | 1806 |  | 
 | 1807 |  | 
 | 1808 | Setting the Node ID | 
 | 1809 | ------------------- | 
 | 1810 |  | 
 | 1811 | The eight switches in SW2 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached | 
 | 1812 | to the network must have an unique node ID which must not be 0. | 
 | 1813 | Switch 1 (ID0) serves as the least significant bit (LSB). | 
 | 1814 |  | 
 | 1815 | Setting one of the switches to OFF means "1", ON means "0". | 
 | 1816 |  | 
 | 1817 | The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1" | 
 | 1818 | These values are: | 
 | 1819 |  | 
 | 1820 |    Switch | Value | 
 | 1821 |    -------|------- | 
 | 1822 |      1    |   1 | 
 | 1823 |      2    |   2 | 
 | 1824 |      3    |   4 | 
 | 1825 |      4    |   8 | 
 | 1826 |      5    |  16 | 
 | 1827 |      6    |  32 | 
 | 1828 |      7    |  64 | 
 | 1829 |      8    | 128 | 
 | 1830 |  | 
 | 1831 | Don't set this to 0 or 255; these values are reserved. | 
 | 1832 |  | 
 | 1833 |  | 
 | 1834 | Setting the I/O Base Address | 
 | 1835 | ---------------------------- | 
 | 1836 |  | 
 | 1837 | The switches 1 to 6 of switch block SW1 are used to select one | 
 | 1838 | of 32 possible I/O Base addresses using the following tables | 
 | 1839 |     | 
 | 1840 |           | Hex | 
 | 1841 |    Switch | Value | 
 | 1842 |    -------|------- | 
 | 1843 |      1    | 200   | 
 | 1844 |      2    | 100   | 
 | 1845 |      3    |  80   | 
 | 1846 |      4    |  40   | 
 | 1847 |      5    |  20   | 
 | 1848 |      6    |  10  | 
 | 1849 |  | 
 | 1850 | The I/O address is sum of all switches set to "1". Remember that | 
 | 1851 | the I/O address space bellow 0x200 is RESERVED for mainboard, so | 
 | 1852 | switch 1 should be ALWAYS SET TO OFF.  | 
 | 1853 |  | 
 | 1854 |  | 
 | 1855 | Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address | 
 | 1856 | -------------------------------------------- | 
 | 1857 |  | 
 | 1858 | The memory buffer (RAM) requires 2K. The base of this buffer can be | 
 | 1859 | located in any of sixteen positions. However, the addresses below | 
 | 1860 | A0000 are likely to cause system hang because there's main RAM. | 
 | 1861 |  | 
 | 1862 | Jumpers 7-10 of switch block SW1 select the Memory Base address. | 
 | 1863 |  | 
 | 1864 |    Switch          | Hex RAM | 
 | 1865 |     7   8   9  10  | Address | 
 | 1866 |    ----------------|--------- | 
 | 1867 |    OFF OFF OFF OFF |  F0000 (conflicts with main BIOS) | 
 | 1868 |    OFF OFF OFF ON  |  E0000  | 
 | 1869 |    OFF OFF ON  OFF |  D0000 | 
 | 1870 |    OFF OFF ON  ON  |  C0000 (conflicts with video BIOS) | 
 | 1871 |    OFF ON  OFF OFF |  B0000 (conflicts with mono video) | 
 | 1872 |    OFF ON  OFF ON  |  A0000 (conflicts with graphics) | 
 | 1873 |  | 
 | 1874 |  | 
 | 1875 | Setting the Interrupt Line | 
 | 1876 | -------------------------- | 
 | 1877 |  | 
 | 1878 | Jumpers 1-5 of the jumper block J1 control the IRQ level. ON means  | 
 | 1879 | shorted, OFF means open. | 
 | 1880 |  | 
 | 1881 |     Jumper              |  IRQ | 
 | 1882 |     1   2   3   4   5   | | 
 | 1883 |    ---------------------------- | 
 | 1884 |     ON  OFF OFF OFF OFF |  7 | 
 | 1885 |     OFF ON  OFF OFF OFF |  5 | 
 | 1886 |     OFF OFF ON  OFF OFF |  4 | 
 | 1887 |     OFF OFF OFF ON  OFF |  3 | 
 | 1888 |     OFF OFF OFF OFF ON  |  2 | 
 | 1889 |  | 
 | 1890 |  | 
 | 1891 | Unknown jumpers & sockets | 
 | 1892 | ------------------------- | 
 | 1893 |  | 
 | 1894 | I know nothing about these. I just guess that J16&J17 are timeout | 
 | 1895 | jumpers and maybe one of J18-J21 selects ROM. Also J6-J10 and | 
 | 1896 | J11-J15 are connecting IRQ2-7 to some pins on the UFSs. I can't | 
 | 1897 | guess the purpose. | 
 | 1898 |  | 
 | 1899 |  | 
 | 1900 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 1901 |  | 
 | 1902 | ** Datapoint? ** | 
 | 1903 | LAN-ARC-8, an 8-bit card | 
 | 1904 | ------------------------ | 
 | 1905 |   - from Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz> | 
 | 1906 |  | 
 | 1907 | This is another SMC 90C65-based ARCnet card. I couldn't identify the | 
 | 1908 | manufacturer, but it might be DataPoint, because the card has the | 
 | 1909 | original arcNet logo in its upper right corner. | 
 | 1910 |  | 
 | 1911 |           _______________________________________________________ | 
 | 1912 |          |                         _________                     | | 
 | 1913 |          |                        |   SW2   | ON      arcNet     | | 
 | 1914 |          |                        |_________| OFF             ___| | 
 | 1915 |          |  _____________         1 ______  8                |   | 8   | 
 | 1916 |          | |             | SW1     | XTAL | ____________     | S |     | 
 | 1917 |          | > RAM (2k)    |         |______||            |    | W |     | 
 | 1918 |          | |_____________|                 |      H     |    | 3 |     | 
 | 1919 |          |                        _________|_____ y     |    |___| 1   | 
 | 1920 |          |  _________            |         |     |b     |        |     | 
 | 1921 |          | |_________|           |         |     |r     |        |     | 
 | 1922 |          |                       |     SMC |     |i     |        |     | 
 | 1923 |          |                       |    90C65|     |d     |        |       | 
 | 1924 |          |  _________            |         |     |      |        | | 
 | 1925 |          | |   SW1   | ON        |         |     |I     |        | | 
 | 1926 |          | |_________| OFF       |_________|_____/C     |   _____| | 
 | 1927 |          |  1       8                      |            |  |     |___ | 
 | 1928 |          |  ______________                 |            |  | BNC |___| | 
 | 1929 |          | |              |                |____________|  |_____| | 
 | 1930 |          | > EPROM SOCKET |              _____________           | | 
 | 1931 |          | |______________|             |_____________|          | | 
 | 1932 |          |                                         ______________| | 
 | 1933 |          |                                        |  | 
 | 1934 |          |________________________________________| | 
 | 1935 |  | 
 | 1936 | Legend: | 
 | 1937 |  | 
 | 1938 | 90C65       ARCNET Chip  | 
 | 1939 | SW1 1-5:    Base Memory Address Select | 
 | 1940 |     6-8:    Base I/O Address Select | 
 | 1941 | SW2 1-8:    Node ID Select | 
 | 1942 | SW3 1-5:    IRQ Select    | 
 | 1943 |     6-7:    Extra Timeout | 
 | 1944 |     8  :    ROM Enable    | 
 | 1945 | BNC         Coax connector | 
 | 1946 | XTAL        20 MHz Crystal | 
 | 1947 |  | 
 | 1948 |  | 
 | 1949 | Setting the Node ID | 
 | 1950 | ------------------- | 
 | 1951 |  | 
 | 1952 | The eight switches in SW3 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached | 
 | 1953 | to the network must have an unique node ID which must not be 0. | 
 | 1954 | Switch 1 serves as the least significant bit (LSB). | 
 | 1955 |  | 
 | 1956 | Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0". | 
 | 1957 |  | 
 | 1958 | The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"   | 
 | 1959 | These values are: | 
 | 1960 |  | 
 | 1961 |    Switch | Value | 
 | 1962 |    -------|------- | 
 | 1963 |      1    |   1 | 
 | 1964 |      2    |   2 | 
 | 1965 |      3    |   4 | 
 | 1966 |      4    |   8 | 
 | 1967 |      5    |  16 | 
 | 1968 |      6    |  32 | 
 | 1969 |      7    |  64 | 
 | 1970 |      8    | 128 | 
 | 1971 |  | 
 | 1972 |  | 
 | 1973 | Setting the I/O Base Address | 
 | 1974 | ---------------------------- | 
 | 1975 |  | 
 | 1976 | The last three switches in switch block SW1 are used to select one | 
 | 1977 | of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table | 
 | 1978 |  | 
 | 1979 |  | 
 | 1980 |    Switch      | Hex I/O | 
 | 1981 |     6   7   8  | Address | 
 | 1982 |    ------------|-------- | 
 | 1983 |    ON  ON  ON  |  260 | 
 | 1984 |    OFF ON  ON  |  290 | 
 | 1985 |    ON  OFF ON  |  2E0  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 1986 |    OFF OFF ON  |  2F0 | 
 | 1987 |    ON  ON  OFF |  300 | 
 | 1988 |    OFF ON  OFF |  350 | 
 | 1989 |    ON  OFF OFF |  380 | 
 | 1990 |    OFF OFF OFF |  3E0 | 
 | 1991 |  | 
 | 1992 |  | 
 | 1993 | Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address | 
 | 1994 | -------------------------------------------- | 
 | 1995 |  | 
 | 1996 | The memory buffer (RAM) requires 2K. The base of this buffer can be  | 
 | 1997 | located in any of eight positions. The address of the Boot Prom is | 
 | 1998 | memory base + 0x2000. | 
 | 1999 | Jumpers 3-5 of switch block SW1 select the Memory Base address. | 
 | 2000 |  | 
 | 2001 |    Switch              | Hex RAM | Hex ROM | 
 | 2002 |     1   2   3   4   5  | Address | Address *) | 
 | 2003 |    --------------------|---------|----------- | 
 | 2004 |    ON  ON  ON  ON  ON  |  C0000  |  C2000 | 
 | 2005 |    ON  ON  OFF ON  ON  |  C4000  |  C6000 | 
 | 2006 |    ON  ON  ON  OFF ON  |  CC000  |  CE000 | 
 | 2007 |    ON  ON  OFF OFF ON  |  D0000  |  D2000  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 2008 |    ON  ON  ON  ON  OFF |  D4000  |  D6000 | 
 | 2009 |    ON  ON  OFF ON  OFF |  D8000  |  DA000 | 
 | 2010 |    ON  ON  ON  OFF OFF |  DC000  |  DE000 | 
 | 2011 |    ON  ON  OFF OFF OFF |  E0000  |  E2000 | 
 | 2012 |    | 
 | 2013 | *) To enable the Boot ROM set the switch 8 of switch block SW3 to position ON. | 
 | 2014 |  | 
 | 2015 | The switches 1 and 2 probably add 0x0800 and 0x1000 to RAM base address. | 
 | 2016 |  | 
 | 2017 |  | 
 | 2018 | Setting the Interrupt Line | 
 | 2019 | -------------------------- | 
 | 2020 |  | 
 | 2021 | Switches 1-5 of the switch block SW3 control the IRQ level. | 
 | 2022 |  | 
 | 2023 |     Jumper              |  IRQ | 
 | 2024 |     1   2   3   4   5   | | 
 | 2025 |    ---------------------------- | 
 | 2026 |     ON  OFF OFF OFF OFF |  3 | 
 | 2027 |     OFF ON  OFF OFF OFF |  4 | 
 | 2028 |     OFF OFF ON  OFF OFF |  5 | 
 | 2029 |     OFF OFF OFF ON  OFF |  7 | 
 | 2030 |     OFF OFF OFF OFF ON  |  2 | 
 | 2031 |  | 
 | 2032 |  | 
 | 2033 | Setting the Timeout Parameters | 
 | 2034 | ------------------------------ | 
 | 2035 |  | 
 | 2036 | The switches 6-7 of the switch block SW3 are used to determine the timeout | 
 | 2037 | parameters.  These two switches are normally left in the OFF position. | 
 | 2038 |  | 
 | 2039 |  | 
 | 2040 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 2041 |  | 
 | 2042 | ** Topware ** | 
 | 2043 | 8-bit card, TA-ARC/10 | 
 | 2044 | ------------------------- | 
 | 2045 |   - from Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz> | 
 | 2046 |  | 
 | 2047 | This is another very similar 90C65 card. Most of the switches and jumpers | 
 | 2048 | are the same as on other clones. | 
 | 2049 |  | 
 | 2050 |  _____________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 2051 | |  ___________   |                         |            ______        | | 
 | 2052 | | |SW2 NODE ID|  |                         |           | XTAL |       | | 
 | 2053 | | |___________|  |  Hybrid IC              |           |______|       | | 
 | 2054 | |  ___________   |                         |                        __|     | 
 | 2055 | | |SW1 MEM+I/O|  |_________________________|                   LED1|__|)    | 
 | 2056 | | |___________|           1 2                                         |      | 
 | 2057 | |                     J3 |o|o| TIMEOUT                          ______|     | 
 | 2058 | |     ______________     |o|o|                                 |      |     | 
 | 2059 | |    |              |  ___________________                     | RJ   |     | 
 | 2060 | |    > EPROM SOCKET | |                   \                    |------|      | 
 | 2061 | |J2  |______________| |                    |                   |      |     | 
 | 2062 | ||o|                  |                    |                   |______| | 
 | 2063 | ||o| ROM ENABLE       |        SMC         |    _________             | | 
 | 2064 | |     _____________   |       90C65        |   |_________|       _____|     | 
 | 2065 | |    |             |  |                    |                    |     |___  | 
 | 2066 | |    > RAM (2k)    |  |                    |                    | BNC |___| | 
 | 2067 | |    |_____________|  |                    |                    |_____|     | 
 | 2068 | |                     |____________________|                          |     | 
 | 2069 | | ________ IRQ 2 3 4 5 7                  ___________                 | | 
 | 2070 | ||________|   |o|o|o|o|o|                |___________|                | | 
 | 2071 | |________   J1|o|o|o|o|o|                               ______________| | 
 | 2072 |          |                                             | | 
 | 2073 |          |_____________________________________________| | 
 | 2074 |  | 
 | 2075 | Legend: | 
 | 2076 |  | 
 | 2077 | 90C65       ARCNET Chip | 
 | 2078 | XTAL        20 MHz Crystal | 
 | 2079 | SW1 1-5     Base Memory Address Select | 
 | 2080 |     6-8     Base I/O Address Select | 
 | 2081 | SW2 1-8     Node ID Select (ID0-ID7) | 
 | 2082 | J1          IRQ Select | 
 | 2083 | J2          ROM Enable | 
 | 2084 | J3          Extra Timeout | 
 | 2085 | LED1        Activity LED  | 
 | 2086 | BNC         Coax connector (BUS ARCnet) | 
 | 2087 | RJ          Twisted Pair Connector (daisy chain) | 
 | 2088 |  | 
 | 2089 |  | 
 | 2090 | Setting the Node ID | 
 | 2091 | ------------------- | 
 | 2092 |  | 
 | 2093 | The eight switches in SW2 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached to | 
 | 2094 | the network must have an unique node ID which must not be 0.  Switch 1 (ID0) | 
 | 2095 | serves as the least significant bit (LSB). | 
 | 2096 |  | 
 | 2097 | Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0". | 
 | 2098 |  | 
 | 2099 | The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1" | 
 | 2100 | These values are: | 
 | 2101 |  | 
 | 2102 |    Switch | Label | Value | 
 | 2103 |    -------|-------|------- | 
 | 2104 |      1    | ID0   |   1 | 
 | 2105 |      2    | ID1   |   2 | 
 | 2106 |      3    | ID2   |   4 | 
 | 2107 |      4    | ID3   |   8 | 
 | 2108 |      5    | ID4   |  16 | 
 | 2109 |      6    | ID5   |  32 | 
 | 2110 |      7    | ID6   |  64 | 
 | 2111 |      8    | ID7   | 128 | 
 | 2112 |  | 
 | 2113 | Setting the I/O Base Address | 
 | 2114 | ---------------------------- | 
 | 2115 |  | 
 | 2116 | The last three switches in switch block SW1 are used to select one | 
 | 2117 | of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table: | 
 | 2118 |  | 
 | 2119 |  | 
 | 2120 |    Switch      | Hex I/O | 
 | 2121 |     6   7   8  | Address | 
 | 2122 |    ------------|-------- | 
 | 2123 |    ON  ON  ON  |  260  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 2124 |    OFF ON  ON  |  290 | 
 | 2125 |    ON  OFF ON  |  2E0                          | 
 | 2126 |    OFF OFF ON  |  2F0 | 
 | 2127 |    ON  ON  OFF |  300 | 
 | 2128 |    OFF ON  OFF |  350 | 
 | 2129 |    ON  OFF OFF |  380 | 
 | 2130 |    OFF OFF OFF |  3E0 | 
 | 2131 |  | 
 | 2132 |  | 
 | 2133 | Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address | 
 | 2134 | -------------------------------------------- | 
 | 2135 |  | 
 | 2136 | The memory buffer (RAM) requires 2K. The base of this buffer can be | 
 | 2137 | located in any of eight positions. The address of the Boot Prom is | 
 | 2138 | memory base + 0x2000. | 
 | 2139 | Jumpers 3-5 of switch block SW1 select the Memory Base address. | 
 | 2140 |  | 
 | 2141 |    Switch              | Hex RAM | Hex ROM | 
 | 2142 |     1   2   3   4   5  | Address | Address *) | 
 | 2143 |    --------------------|---------|----------- | 
 | 2144 |    ON  ON  ON  ON  ON  |  C0000  |  C2000 | 
 | 2145 |    ON  ON  OFF ON  ON  |  C4000  |  C6000  (Manufacturer's default)  | 
 | 2146 |    ON  ON  ON  OFF ON  |  CC000  |  CE000 | 
 | 2147 |    ON  ON  OFF OFF ON  |  D0000  |  D2000   | 
 | 2148 |    ON  ON  ON  ON  OFF |  D4000  |  D6000 | 
 | 2149 |    ON  ON  OFF ON  OFF |  D8000  |  DA000 | 
 | 2150 |    ON  ON  ON  OFF OFF |  DC000  |  DE000 | 
 | 2151 |    ON  ON  OFF OFF OFF |  E0000  |  E2000 | 
 | 2152 |  | 
 | 2153 | *) To enable the Boot ROM short the jumper J2. | 
 | 2154 |  | 
 | 2155 | The jumpers 1 and 2 probably add 0x0800 and 0x1000 to RAM address. | 
 | 2156 |  | 
 | 2157 |  | 
 | 2158 | Setting the Interrupt Line | 
 | 2159 | -------------------------- | 
 | 2160 |  | 
 | 2161 | Jumpers 1-5 of the jumper block J1 control the IRQ level.  ON means | 
 | 2162 | shorted, OFF means open. | 
 | 2163 |  | 
 | 2164 |     Jumper              |  IRQ | 
 | 2165 |     1   2   3   4   5   | | 
 | 2166 |    ---------------------------- | 
 | 2167 |     ON  OFF OFF OFF OFF |  2 | 
 | 2168 |     OFF ON  OFF OFF OFF |  3 | 
 | 2169 |     OFF OFF ON  OFF OFF |  4 | 
 | 2170 |     OFF OFF OFF ON  OFF |  5 | 
 | 2171 |     OFF OFF OFF OFF ON  |  7 | 
 | 2172 |  | 
 | 2173 |  | 
 | 2174 | Setting the Timeout Parameters | 
 | 2175 | ------------------------------ | 
 | 2176 |  | 
 | 2177 | The jumpers J3 are used to set the timeout parameters. These two  | 
 | 2178 | jumpers are normally left open. | 
 | 2179 |  | 
 | 2180 |    | 
 | 2181 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 2182 |  | 
 | 2183 | ** Thomas-Conrad ** | 
 | 2184 | Model #500-6242-0097 REV A (8-bit card) | 
 | 2185 | --------------------------------------- | 
 | 2186 |   - from Lars Karlsson <100617.3473@compuserve.com> | 
 | 2187 |  | 
 | 2188 |      ________________________________________________________ | 
 | 2189 |    |          ________   ________                           |_____ | 
 | 2190 |    |         |........| |........|                            | | 
 | 2191 |    |         |________| |________|                         ___| | 
 | 2192 |    |            SW 3       SW 1                           |   | | 
 | 2193 |    |         Base I/O   Base Addr.                Station |   | | 
 | 2194 |    |                                              address |   | | 
 | 2195 |    |    ______                                    switch  |   | | 
 | 2196 |    |   |      |                                           |   | | 
 | 2197 |    |   |      |                                           |___|     | 
 | 2198 |    |   |      |                                 ______        |___._ | 
 | 2199 |    |   |______|                                |______|         ____| BNC | 
 | 2200 |    |                                            Jumper-        _____| Connector | 
 | 2201 |    |   Main chip                                block  _    __|   '   | 
 | 2202 |    |                                                  | |  |    RJ Connector | 
 | 2203 |    |                                                  |_|  |    with 110 Ohm | 
 | 2204 |    |                                                       |__  Terminator | 
 | 2205 |    |    ___________                                         __| | 
 | 2206 |    |   |...........|                                       |    RJ-jack | 
 | 2207 |    |   |...........|    _____                              |    (unused) | 
 | 2208 |    |   |___________|   |_____|                             |__ | 
 | 2209 |    |  Boot PROM socket IRQ-jumpers                            |_  Diagnostic | 
 | 2210 |    |________                                       __          _| LED (red) | 
 | 2211 |             | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |  |        | | 
 | 2212 |             | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |  |________| | 
 | 2213 |                                                               | | 
 | 2214 |                                                               | | 
 | 2215 |  | 
 | 2216 | And here are the settings for some of the switches and jumpers on the cards. | 
 | 2217 |  | 
 | 2218 |  | 
 | 2219 |           I/O | 
 | 2220 |  | 
 | 2221 |          1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | 
 | 2222 |  | 
 | 2223 | 2E0----- 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 | 
 | 2224 | 2F0----- 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 | 
 | 2225 | 300----- 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 | 
 | 2226 | 350----- 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 | 
 | 2227 |  | 
 | 2228 | "0" in the above example means switch is off "1" means that it is on. | 
 | 2229 |  | 
 | 2230 |  | 
 | 2231 |     ShMem address. | 
 | 2232 |  | 
 | 2233 |       1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | 
 | 2234 |  | 
 | 2235 | CX00--0 0 1 1 | |   | | 
 | 2236 | DX00--0 0 1 0       | | 
 | 2237 | X000--------- 1 1   | | 
 | 2238 | X400--------- 1 0   | | 
 | 2239 | X800--------- 0 1   | | 
 | 2240 | XC00--------- 0 0    | 
 | 2241 | ENHANCED----------- 1 | 
 | 2242 | COMPATIBLE--------- 0 | 
 | 2243 |  | 
 | 2244 |  | 
 | 2245 |        IRQ | 
 | 2246 |  | 
 | 2247 |  | 
 | 2248 |    3 4 5 7 2 | 
 | 2249 |    . . . . . | 
 | 2250 |    . . . . . | 
 | 2251 |  | 
 | 2252 |  | 
 | 2253 | There is a DIP-switch with 8 switches, used to set the shared memory address | 
 | 2254 | to be used. The first 6 switches set the address, the 7th doesn't have any | 
 | 2255 | function, and the 8th switch is used to select "compatible" or "enhanced". | 
 | 2256 | When I got my two cards, one of them had this switch set to "enhanced". That | 
 | 2257 | card didn't work at all, it wasn't even recognized by the driver. The other | 
 | 2258 | card had this switch set to "compatible" and it behaved absolutely normally. I | 
 | 2259 | guess that the switch on one of the cards, must have been changed accidentally | 
 | 2260 | when the card was taken out of its former host. The question remains | 
 | 2261 | unanswered, what is the purpose of the "enhanced" position? | 
 | 2262 |  | 
 | 2263 | [Avery's note: "enhanced" probably either disables shared memory (use IO | 
 | 2264 | ports instead) or disables IO ports (use memory addresses instead).  This | 
 | 2265 | varies by the type of card involved.  I fail to see how either of these | 
 | 2266 | enhance anything.  Send me more detailed information about this mode, or | 
 | 2267 | just use "compatible" mode instead.] | 
 | 2268 |  | 
 | 2269 |  | 
 | 2270 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 2271 |  | 
 | 2272 | ** Waterloo Microsystems Inc. ?? ** | 
 | 2273 | 8-bit card (C) 1985 | 
 | 2274 | ------------------- | 
 | 2275 |   - from Robert Michael Best <rmb117@cs.usask.ca> | 
 | 2276 |  | 
 | 2277 | [Avery's note: these don't work with my driver for some reason.  These cards | 
 | 2278 | SEEM to have settings similar to the PDI508Plus, which is | 
 | 2279 | software-configured and doesn't work with my driver either.  The "Waterloo | 
 | 2280 | chip" is a boot PROM, probably designed specifically for the University of | 
 | 2281 | Waterloo.  If you have any further information about this card, please | 
 | 2282 | e-mail me.] | 
 | 2283 |  | 
 | 2284 | The probe has not been able to detect the card on any of the J2 settings, | 
 | 2285 | and I tried them again with the "Waterloo" chip removed. | 
 | 2286 |   | 
 | 2287 |  _____________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 2288 | | \/  \/              ___  __ __                                      | | 
 | 2289 | | C4  C4     |^|     | M ||  ^  ||^|                                  | | 
 | 2290 | | --  --     |_|     | 5 ||     || | C3                               | | 
 | 2291 | | \/  \/      C10    |___||     ||_|                                  |  | 
 | 2292 | | C4  C4             _  _ |     |                 ??                  |  | 
 | 2293 | | --  --            | \/ ||     |                                     |  | 
 | 2294 | |                   |    ||     |                                     |  | 
 | 2295 | |                   |    ||  C1 |                                     |  | 
 | 2296 | |                   |    ||     |  \/                            _____|     | 
 | 2297 | |                   | C6 ||     |  C9                           |     |___  | 
 | 2298 | |                   |    ||     |  --                           | BNC |___|  | 
 | 2299 | |                   |    ||     |          >C7|                 |_____| | 
 | 2300 | |                   |    ||     |                                     | | 
 | 2301 | | __ __             |____||_____|       1 2 3     6                   | | 
 | 2302 | ||  ^  |     >C4|                      |o|o|o|o|o|o| J2    >C4|       | | 
 | 2303 | ||     |                               |o|o|o|o|o|o|                  | | 
 | 2304 | || C2  |     >C4|                                          >C4|       | | 
 | 2305 | ||     |                                   >C8|                       | | 
 | 2306 | ||     |       2 3 4 5 6 7  IRQ                            >C4|       | | 
 | 2307 | ||_____|      |o|o|o|o|o|o| J3                                        | | 
 | 2308 | |_______      |o|o|o|o|o|o|                            _______________| | 
 | 2309 |         |                                             | | 
 | 2310 |         |_____________________________________________| | 
 | 2311 |  | 
 | 2312 | C1 -- "COM9026 | 
 | 2313 |        SMC 8638" | 
 | 2314 |       In a chip socket. | 
 | 2315 |  | 
 | 2316 | C2 -- "@Copyright | 
 | 2317 |        Waterloo Microsystems Inc. | 
 | 2318 |        1985" | 
 | 2319 |       In a chip Socket with info printed on a label covering a round window | 
 | 2320 |       showing the circuit inside. (The window indicates it is an EPROM chip.) | 
 | 2321 |  | 
 | 2322 | C3 -- "COM9032 | 
 | 2323 |        SMC 8643" | 
 | 2324 |       In a chip socket. | 
 | 2325 |  | 
 | 2326 | C4 -- "74LS" | 
 | 2327 |       9 total no sockets. | 
 | 2328 |  | 
 | 2329 | M5 -- "50006-136 | 
 | 2330 |        20.000000 MHZ | 
 | 2331 |        MTQ-T1-S3 | 
 | 2332 |        0 M-TRON 86-40" | 
 | 2333 |       Metallic case with 4 pins, no socket. | 
 | 2334 |  | 
 | 2335 | C6 -- "MOSTEK@TC8643 | 
 | 2336 |        MK6116N-20 | 
 | 2337 |        MALAYSIA" | 
 | 2338 |       No socket. | 
 | 2339 |  | 
 | 2340 | C7 -- No stamp or label but in a 20 pin chip socket. | 
 | 2341 |  | 
 | 2342 | C8 -- "PAL10L8CN | 
 | 2343 |        8623" | 
 | 2344 |       In a 20 pin socket. | 
 | 2345 |  | 
 | 2346 | C9 -- "PAl16R4A-2CN | 
 | 2347 |        8641" | 
 | 2348 |       In a 20 pin socket. | 
 | 2349 |  | 
 | 2350 | C10 -- "M8640 | 
 | 2351 |           NMC | 
 | 2352 |         9306N" | 
 | 2353 |        In an 8 pin socket. | 
 | 2354 |  | 
 | 2355 | ?? -- Some components on a smaller board and attached with 20 pins all  | 
 | 2356 |       along the side closest to the BNC connector.  The are coated in a dark  | 
 | 2357 |       resin. | 
 | 2358 |  | 
 | 2359 | On the board there are two jumper banks labeled J2 and J3. The  | 
 | 2360 | manufacturer didn't put a J1 on the board. The two boards I have both  | 
 | 2361 | came with a jumper box for each bank. | 
 | 2362 |  | 
 | 2363 | J2 -- Numbered 1 2 3 4 5 6.  | 
 | 2364 |       4 and 5 are not stamped due to solder points. | 
 | 2365 |         | 
 | 2366 | J3 -- IRQ 2 3 4 5 6 7 | 
 | 2367 |  | 
 | 2368 | The board itself has a maple leaf stamped just above the irq jumpers  | 
 | 2369 | and "-2 46-86" beside C2. Between C1 and C6 "ASS 'Y 300163" and "@1986  | 
 | 2370 | CORMAN CUSTOM ELECTRONICS CORP." stamped just below the BNC connector. | 
 | 2371 | Below that "MADE IN CANADA" | 
 | 2372 |  | 
 | 2373 |    | 
 | 2374 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 2375 |  | 
 | 2376 | ** No Name ** | 
 | 2377 | 8-bit cards, 16-bit cards | 
 | 2378 | ------------------------- | 
 | 2379 |   - from Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> | 
 | 2380 |    | 
 | 2381 | NONAME 8-BIT ARCNET | 
 | 2382 | =================== | 
 | 2383 |  | 
 | 2384 | I have named this ARCnet card "NONAME", since there is no name of any | 
 | 2385 | manufacturer on the Installation manual nor on the shipping box. The only | 
 | 2386 | hint to the existence of a manufacturer at all is written in copper, | 
 | 2387 | it is "Made in Taiwan" | 
 | 2388 |  | 
 | 2389 | This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> | 
 | 2390 | using information from the Original | 
 | 2391 |                     "ARCnet Installation Manual" | 
 | 2392 |  | 
 | 2393 |  | 
 | 2394 |     ________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 2395 |    | |STAR| BUS| T/P|                                               | | 
 | 2396 |    | |____|____|____|                                               | | 
 | 2397 |    |                            _____________________               | | 
 | 2398 |    |                           |                     |              | | 
 | 2399 |    |                           |                     |              | | 
 | 2400 |    |                           |                     |              | | 
 | 2401 |    |                           |        SMC          |              | | 
 | 2402 |    |                           |                     |              | | 
 | 2403 |    |                           |       COM90C65      |              | | 
 | 2404 |    |                           |                     |              | | 
 | 2405 |    |                           |                     |              | | 
 | 2406 |    |                           |__________-__________|              | | 
 | 2407 |    |                                                           _____| | 
 | 2408 |    |      _______________                                     |  CN | | 
 | 2409 |    |     | PROM          |                                    |_____| | 
 | 2410 |    |     > SOCKET        |                                          | | 
 | 2411 |    |     |_______________|         1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | | 
 | 2412 |    |                               _______________  _______________ | | 
 | 2413 |    |           |o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o|  |      SW1      ||      SW2      || | 
 | 2414 |    |           |o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o|  |_______________||_______________|| | 
 | 2415 |    |___         2 3 4 5 7 E E R        Node ID       IOB__|__MEM____| | 
 | 2416 |        |        \ IRQ   / T T O                      | | 
 | 2417 |        |__________________1_2_M______________________| | 
 | 2418 |  | 
 | 2419 | Legend: | 
 | 2420 |  | 
 | 2421 | COM90C65:       ARCnet Probe | 
 | 2422 | S1  1-8:    Node ID Select | 
 | 2423 | S2  1-3:    I/O Base Address Select | 
 | 2424 |     4-6:    Memory Base Address Select | 
 | 2425 |     7-8:    RAM Offset Select | 
 | 2426 | ET1, ET2    Extended Timeout Select | 
 | 2427 | ROM     ROM Enable Select | 
 | 2428 | CN              RG62 Coax Connector | 
 | 2429 | STAR| BUS | T/P Three fields for placing a sign (colored circle) | 
 | 2430 |                 indicating the topology of the card | 
 | 2431 |  | 
 | 2432 | Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0". | 
 | 2433 |  | 
 | 2434 |  | 
 | 2435 | Setting the Node ID | 
 | 2436 | ------------------- | 
 | 2437 |  | 
 | 2438 | The eight switches in group SW1 are used to set the node ID. | 
 | 2439 | Each node attached to the network must have an unique node ID which | 
 | 2440 | must be different from 0. | 
 | 2441 | Switch 8 serves as the least significant bit (LSB). | 
 | 2442 |  | 
 | 2443 | The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"   | 
 | 2444 | These values are: | 
 | 2445 |  | 
 | 2446 |     Switch | Value | 
 | 2447 |     -------|------- | 
 | 2448 |       8    |   1 | 
 | 2449 |       7    |   2 | 
 | 2450 |       6    |   4 | 
 | 2451 |       5    |   8 | 
 | 2452 |       4    |  16 | 
 | 2453 |       3    |  32 | 
 | 2454 |       2    |  64 | 
 | 2455 |       1    | 128 | 
 | 2456 |  | 
 | 2457 | Some Examples: | 
 | 2458 |  | 
 | 2459 |     Switch         | Hex     | Decimal  | 
 | 2460 |    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Node ID | Node ID | 
 | 2461 |    ----------------|---------|--------- | 
 | 2462 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 |    not allowed | 
 | 2463 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 |    1    |    1  | 
 | 2464 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 |    2    |    2 | 
 | 2465 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 |    3    |    3 | 
 | 2466 |        . . .       |         | | 
 | 2467 |    0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 |   55    |   85 | 
 | 2468 |        . . .       |         | | 
 | 2469 |    1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 |   AA    |  170 | 
 | 2470 |        . . .       |         |   | 
 | 2471 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 |   FD    |  253 | 
 | 2472 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 |   FE    |  254 | 
 | 2473 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 |   FF    |  255 | 
 | 2474 |  | 
 | 2475 |  | 
 | 2476 | Setting the I/O Base Address | 
 | 2477 | ---------------------------- | 
 | 2478 |  | 
 | 2479 | The first three switches in switch group SW2 are used to select one | 
 | 2480 | of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table | 
 | 2481 |  | 
 | 2482 |    Switch      | Hex I/O | 
 | 2483 |     1   2   3  | Address | 
 | 2484 |    ------------|-------- | 
 | 2485 |    ON  ON  ON  |  260 | 
 | 2486 |    ON  ON  OFF |  290 | 
 | 2487 |    ON  OFF ON  |  2E0  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 2488 |    ON  OFF OFF |  2F0 | 
 | 2489 |    OFF ON  ON  |  300 | 
 | 2490 |    OFF ON  OFF |  350 | 
 | 2491 |    OFF OFF ON  |  380 | 
 | 2492 |    OFF OFF OFF |  3E0 | 
 | 2493 |  | 
 | 2494 |  | 
 | 2495 | Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address | 
 | 2496 | -------------------------------------------- | 
 | 2497 |  | 
 | 2498 | The memory buffer requires 2K of a 16K block of RAM. The base of this | 
 | 2499 | 16K block can be located in any of eight positions. | 
 | 2500 | Switches 4-6 of switch group SW2 select the Base of the 16K block. | 
 | 2501 | Within that 16K address space, the buffer may be assigned any one of four | 
 | 2502 | positions, determined by the offset, switches 7 and 8 of group SW2. | 
 | 2503 |  | 
 | 2504 |    Switch     | Hex RAM | Hex ROM | 
 | 2505 |    4 5 6  7 8 | Address | Address *) | 
 | 2506 |    -----------|---------|----------- | 
 | 2507 |    0 0 0  0 0 |  C0000  |  C2000 | 
 | 2508 |    0 0 0  0 1 |  C0800  |  C2000 | 
 | 2509 |    0 0 0  1 0 |  C1000  |  C2000 | 
 | 2510 |    0 0 0  1 1 |  C1800  |  C2000 | 
 | 2511 |               |         | | 
 | 2512 |    0 0 1  0 0 |  C4000  |  C6000 | 
 | 2513 |    0 0 1  0 1 |  C4800  |  C6000 | 
 | 2514 |    0 0 1  1 0 |  C5000  |  C6000 | 
 | 2515 |    0 0 1  1 1 |  C5800  |  C6000 | 
 | 2516 |               |         | | 
 | 2517 |    0 1 0  0 0 |  CC000  |  CE000 | 
 | 2518 |    0 1 0  0 1 |  CC800  |  CE000 | 
 | 2519 |    0 1 0  1 0 |  CD000  |  CE000 | 
 | 2520 |    0 1 0  1 1 |  CD800  |  CE000 | 
 | 2521 |               |         | | 
 | 2522 |    0 1 1  0 0 |  D0000  |  D2000  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 2523 |    0 1 1  0 1 |  D0800  |  D2000 | 
 | 2524 |    0 1 1  1 0 |  D1000  |  D2000 | 
 | 2525 |    0 1 1  1 1 |  D1800  |  D2000 | 
 | 2526 |               |         | | 
 | 2527 |    1 0 0  0 0 |  D4000  |  D6000 | 
 | 2528 |    1 0 0  0 1 |  D4800  |  D6000 | 
 | 2529 |    1 0 0  1 0 |  D5000  |  D6000 | 
 | 2530 |    1 0 0  1 1 |  D5800  |  D6000 | 
 | 2531 |               |         | | 
 | 2532 |    1 0 1  0 0 |  D8000  |  DA000 | 
 | 2533 |    1 0 1  0 1 |  D8800  |  DA000 | 
 | 2534 |    1 0 1  1 0 |  D9000  |  DA000 | 
 | 2535 |    1 0 1  1 1 |  D9800  |  DA000 | 
 | 2536 |               |         | | 
 | 2537 |    1 1 0  0 0 |  DC000  |  DE000 | 
 | 2538 |    1 1 0  0 1 |  DC800  |  DE000 | 
 | 2539 |    1 1 0  1 0 |  DD000  |  DE000 | 
 | 2540 |    1 1 0  1 1 |  DD800  |  DE000 | 
 | 2541 |               |         | | 
 | 2542 |    1 1 1  0 0 |  E0000  |  E2000 | 
 | 2543 |    1 1 1  0 1 |  E0800  |  E2000 | 
 | 2544 |    1 1 1  1 0 |  E1000  |  E2000 | 
 | 2545 |    1 1 1  1 1 |  E1800  |  E2000 | 
 | 2546 |    | 
 | 2547 | *) To enable the 8K Boot PROM install the jumper ROM. | 
 | 2548 |    The default is jumper ROM not installed. | 
 | 2549 |  | 
 | 2550 |  | 
 | 2551 | Setting Interrupt Request Lines (IRQ) | 
 | 2552 | ------------------------------------- | 
 | 2553 |  | 
 | 2554 | To select a hardware interrupt level set one (only one!) of the jumpers | 
 | 2555 | IRQ2, IRQ3, IRQ4, IRQ5 or IRQ7. The manufacturer's default is IRQ2. | 
 | 2556 |   | 
 | 2557 |  | 
 | 2558 | Setting the Timeouts | 
 | 2559 | -------------------- | 
 | 2560 |  | 
 | 2561 | The two jumpers labeled ET1 and ET2 are used to determine the timeout | 
 | 2562 | parameters (response and reconfiguration time). Every node in a network | 
 | 2563 | must be set to the same timeout values. | 
 | 2564 |  | 
 | 2565 |    ET1 ET2 | Response Time (us) | Reconfiguration Time (ms) | 
 | 2566 |    --------|--------------------|-------------------------- | 
 | 2567 |    Off Off |        78          |          840   (Default) | 
 | 2568 |    Off On  |       285          |         1680 | 
 | 2569 |    On  Off |       563          |         1680 | 
 | 2570 |    On  On  |      1130          |         1680 | 
 | 2571 |  | 
 | 2572 | On means jumper installed, Off means jumper not installed | 
 | 2573 |  | 
 | 2574 |  | 
 | 2575 | NONAME 16-BIT ARCNET | 
 | 2576 | ==================== | 
 | 2577 |  | 
 | 2578 | The manual of my 8-Bit NONAME ARCnet Card contains another description | 
 | 2579 | of a 16-Bit Coax / Twisted Pair Card. This description is incomplete, | 
 | 2580 | because there are missing two pages in the manual booklet. (The table | 
 | 2581 | of contents reports pages ... 2-9, 2-11, 2-12, 3-1, ... but inside | 
 | 2582 | the booklet there is a different way of counting ... 2-9, 2-10, A-1, | 
 | 2583 | (empty page), 3-1, ..., 3-18, A-1 (again), A-2) | 
 | 2584 | Also the picture of the board layout is not as good as the picture of | 
 | 2585 | 8-Bit card, because there isn't any letter like "SW1" written to the | 
 | 2586 | picture. | 
 | 2587 | Should somebody have such a board, please feel free to complete this | 
 | 2588 | description or to send a mail to me! | 
 | 2589 |  | 
 | 2590 | This description has been written by Juergen Seifert <seifert@htwm.de> | 
 | 2591 | using information from the Original | 
 | 2592 |                     "ARCnet Installation Manual" | 
 | 2593 |  | 
 | 2594 |  | 
 | 2595 |    ___________________________________________________________________ | 
 | 2596 |   <                    _________________  _________________           | | 
 | 2597 |   >                   |       SW?       ||      SW?        |          | | 
 | 2598 |   <                   |_________________||_________________|          | | 
 | 2599 |   >                       ____________________                        | | 
 | 2600 |   <                      |                    |                       | | 
 | 2601 |   >                      |                    |                       | | 
 | 2602 |   <                      |                    |                       | | 
 | 2603 |   >                      |                    |                       | | 
 | 2604 |   <                      |                    |                       | | 
 | 2605 |   >                      |                    |                       | | 
 | 2606 |   <                      |                    |                       | | 
 | 2607 |   >                      |____________________|                       | | 
 | 2608 |   <                                                               ____| | 
 | 2609 |   >                       ____________________                   |    | | 
 | 2610 |   <                      |                    |                  | J1 | | 
 | 2611 |   >                      |                    <                  |    | | 
 | 2612 |   <                      |____________________|  ? ? ? ? ? ?     |____| | 
 | 2613 |   >                                             |o|o|o|o|o|o|         | | 
 | 2614 |   <                                             |o|o|o|o|o|o|         | | 
 | 2615 |   >                                                                   | | 
 | 2616 |   <             __                                         ___________| | 
 | 2617 |   >            |  |                                       | | 
 | 2618 |   <____________|  |_______________________________________| | 
 | 2619 |  | 
 | 2620 |  | 
 | 2621 | Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0". | 
 | 2622 |  | 
 | 2623 |  | 
 | 2624 | Setting the Node ID | 
 | 2625 | ------------------- | 
 | 2626 |  | 
 | 2627 | The eight switches in group SW2 are used to set the node ID. | 
 | 2628 | Each node attached to the network must have an unique node ID which | 
 | 2629 | must be different from 0. | 
 | 2630 | Switch 8 serves as the least significant bit (LSB). | 
 | 2631 |  | 
 | 2632 | The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"   | 
 | 2633 | These values are: | 
 | 2634 |  | 
 | 2635 |     Switch | Value | 
 | 2636 |     -------|------- | 
 | 2637 |       8    |   1 | 
 | 2638 |       7    |   2 | 
 | 2639 |       6    |   4 | 
 | 2640 |       5    |   8 | 
 | 2641 |       4    |  16 | 
 | 2642 |       3    |  32 | 
 | 2643 |       2    |  64 | 
 | 2644 |       1    | 128 | 
 | 2645 |  | 
 | 2646 | Some Examples: | 
 | 2647 |  | 
 | 2648 |     Switch         | Hex     | Decimal  | 
 | 2649 |    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | Node ID | Node ID | 
 | 2650 |    ----------------|---------|--------- | 
 | 2651 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 |    not allowed | 
 | 2652 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 |    1    |    1  | 
 | 2653 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 |    2    |    2 | 
 | 2654 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 |    3    |    3 | 
 | 2655 |        . . .       |         | | 
 | 2656 |    0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 |   55    |   85 | 
 | 2657 |        . . .       |         | | 
 | 2658 |    1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 |   AA    |  170 | 
 | 2659 |        . . .       |         |   | 
 | 2660 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 |   FD    |  253 | 
 | 2661 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 |   FE    |  254 | 
 | 2662 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 |   FF    |  255 | 
 | 2663 |  | 
 | 2664 |  | 
 | 2665 | Setting the I/O Base Address | 
 | 2666 | ---------------------------- | 
 | 2667 |  | 
 | 2668 | The first three switches in switch group SW1 are used to select one | 
 | 2669 | of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table | 
 | 2670 |  | 
 | 2671 |    Switch      | Hex I/O | 
 | 2672 |     3   2   1  | Address | 
 | 2673 |    ------------|-------- | 
 | 2674 |    ON  ON  ON  |  260 | 
 | 2675 |    ON  ON  OFF |  290 | 
 | 2676 |    ON  OFF ON  |  2E0  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 2677 |    ON  OFF OFF |  2F0 | 
 | 2678 |    OFF ON  ON  |  300 | 
 | 2679 |    OFF ON  OFF |  350 | 
 | 2680 |    OFF OFF ON  |  380 | 
 | 2681 |    OFF OFF OFF |  3E0 | 
 | 2682 |  | 
 | 2683 |  | 
 | 2684 | Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address | 
 | 2685 | -------------------------------------------- | 
 | 2686 |  | 
 | 2687 | The memory buffer requires 2K of a 16K block of RAM. The base of this | 
 | 2688 | 16K block can be located in any of eight positions. | 
 | 2689 | Switches 6-8 of switch group SW1 select the Base of the 16K block. | 
 | 2690 | Within that 16K address space, the buffer may be assigned any one of four | 
 | 2691 | positions, determined by the offset, switches 4 and 5 of group SW1. | 
 | 2692 |  | 
 | 2693 |    Switch     | Hex RAM | Hex ROM | 
 | 2694 |    8 7 6  5 4 | Address | Address | 
 | 2695 |    -----------|---------|----------- | 
 | 2696 |    0 0 0  0 0 |  C0000  |  C2000 | 
 | 2697 |    0 0 0  0 1 |  C0800  |  C2000 | 
 | 2698 |    0 0 0  1 0 |  C1000  |  C2000 | 
 | 2699 |    0 0 0  1 1 |  C1800  |  C2000 | 
 | 2700 |               |         | | 
 | 2701 |    0 0 1  0 0 |  C4000  |  C6000 | 
 | 2702 |    0 0 1  0 1 |  C4800  |  C6000 | 
 | 2703 |    0 0 1  1 0 |  C5000  |  C6000 | 
 | 2704 |    0 0 1  1 1 |  C5800  |  C6000 | 
 | 2705 |               |         | | 
 | 2706 |    0 1 0  0 0 |  CC000  |  CE000 | 
 | 2707 |    0 1 0  0 1 |  CC800  |  CE000 | 
 | 2708 |    0 1 0  1 0 |  CD000  |  CE000 | 
 | 2709 |    0 1 0  1 1 |  CD800  |  CE000 | 
 | 2710 |               |         | | 
 | 2711 |    0 1 1  0 0 |  D0000  |  D2000  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 2712 |    0 1 1  0 1 |  D0800  |  D2000 | 
 | 2713 |    0 1 1  1 0 |  D1000  |  D2000 | 
 | 2714 |    0 1 1  1 1 |  D1800  |  D2000 | 
 | 2715 |               |         | | 
 | 2716 |    1 0 0  0 0 |  D4000  |  D6000 | 
 | 2717 |    1 0 0  0 1 |  D4800  |  D6000 | 
 | 2718 |    1 0 0  1 0 |  D5000  |  D6000 | 
 | 2719 |    1 0 0  1 1 |  D5800  |  D6000 | 
 | 2720 |               |         | | 
 | 2721 |    1 0 1  0 0 |  D8000  |  DA000 | 
 | 2722 |    1 0 1  0 1 |  D8800  |  DA000 | 
 | 2723 |    1 0 1  1 0 |  D9000  |  DA000 | 
 | 2724 |    1 0 1  1 1 |  D9800  |  DA000 | 
 | 2725 |               |         | | 
 | 2726 |    1 1 0  0 0 |  DC000  |  DE000 | 
 | 2727 |    1 1 0  0 1 |  DC800  |  DE000 | 
 | 2728 |    1 1 0  1 0 |  DD000  |  DE000 | 
 | 2729 |    1 1 0  1 1 |  DD800  |  DE000 | 
 | 2730 |               |         | | 
 | 2731 |    1 1 1  0 0 |  E0000  |  E2000 | 
 | 2732 |    1 1 1  0 1 |  E0800  |  E2000 | 
 | 2733 |    1 1 1  1 0 |  E1000  |  E2000 | 
 | 2734 |    1 1 1  1 1 |  E1800  |  E2000 | 
 | 2735 |    | 
 | 2736 |  | 
 | 2737 | Setting Interrupt Request Lines (IRQ) | 
 | 2738 | ------------------------------------- | 
 | 2739 |  | 
 | 2740 | ?????????????????????????????????????? | 
 | 2741 |  | 
 | 2742 |  | 
 | 2743 | Setting the Timeouts | 
 | 2744 | -------------------- | 
 | 2745 |  | 
 | 2746 | ?????????????????????????????????????? | 
 | 2747 |  | 
 | 2748 |  | 
 | 2749 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 2750 |  | 
 | 2751 | ** No Name ** | 
 | 2752 | 8-bit cards ("Made in Taiwan R.O.C.") | 
 | 2753 | ----------- | 
 | 2754 |   - from Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz> | 
 | 2755 |  | 
 | 2756 | I have named this ARCnet card "NONAME", since I got only the card with | 
 | 2757 | no manual at all and the only text identifying the manufacturer is  | 
 | 2758 | "MADE IN TAIWAN R.O.C" printed on the card. | 
 | 2759 |  | 
 | 2760 |           ____________________________________________________________ | 
 | 2761 |          |                 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8                            | | 
 | 2762 |          | |o|o| JP1       o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| ON                        | | 
 | 2763 |          |  +              o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o|                        ___| | 
 | 2764 |          |  _____________  o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| OFF         _____     |   | ID7 | 
 | 2765 |          | |             | SW1                         |     |    |   | ID6 | 
 | 2766 |          | > RAM (2k)    |        ____________________ |  H  |    | S | ID5 | 
 | 2767 |          | |_____________|       |                    ||  y  |    | W | ID4 | 
 | 2768 |          |                       |                    ||  b  |    | 2 | ID3 | 
 | 2769 |          |                       |                    ||  r  |    |   | ID2 | 
 | 2770 |          |                       |                    ||  i  |    |   | ID1 | 
 | 2771 |          |                       |       90C65        ||  d  |    |___| ID0 | 
 | 2772 |          |      SW3              |                    ||     |        |       | 
 | 2773 |          | |o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| ON  |                    ||  I  |        | | 
 | 2774 |          | |o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o|     |                    ||  C  |        | | 
 | 2775 |          | |o|o|o|o|o|o|o|o| OFF |____________________||     |   _____| | 
 | 2776 |          |  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8                            |     |  |     |___ | 
 | 2777 |          |  ______________                             |     |  | BNC |___| | 
 | 2778 |          | |              |                            |_____|  |_____| | 
 | 2779 |          | > EPROM SOCKET |                                           | | 
 | 2780 |          | |______________|                                           | | 
 | 2781 |          |                                              ______________| | 
 | 2782 |          |                                             | | 
 | 2783 |          |_____________________________________________| | 
 | 2784 |  | 
 | 2785 | Legend: | 
 | 2786 |  | 
 | 2787 | 90C65       ARCNET Chip  | 
 | 2788 | SW1 1-5:    Base Memory Address Select | 
 | 2789 |     6-8:    Base I/O Address Select | 
 | 2790 | SW2 1-8:    Node ID Select (ID0-ID7) | 
 | 2791 | SW3 1-5:    IRQ Select    | 
 | 2792 |     6-7:    Extra Timeout | 
 | 2793 |     8  :    ROM Enable    | 
 | 2794 | JP1         Led connector | 
 | 2795 | BNC         Coax connector | 
 | 2796 |  | 
 | 2797 | Although the jumpers SW1 and SW3 are marked SW, not JP, they are jumpers, not  | 
 | 2798 | switches. | 
 | 2799 |  | 
 | 2800 | Setting the jumpers to ON means connecting the upper two pins, off the bottom  | 
 | 2801 | two - or - in case of IRQ setting, connecting none of them at all. | 
 | 2802 |  | 
 | 2803 | Setting the Node ID | 
 | 2804 | ------------------- | 
 | 2805 |  | 
 | 2806 | The eight switches in SW2 are used to set the node ID. Each node attached | 
 | 2807 | to the network must have an unique node ID which must not be 0. | 
 | 2808 | Switch 1 (ID0) serves as the least significant bit (LSB). | 
 | 2809 |  | 
 | 2810 | Setting one of the switches to Off means "1", On means "0". | 
 | 2811 |  | 
 | 2812 | The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"   | 
 | 2813 | These values are: | 
 | 2814 |  | 
 | 2815 |    Switch | Label | Value | 
 | 2816 |    -------|-------|------- | 
 | 2817 |      1    | ID0   |   1 | 
 | 2818 |      2    | ID1   |   2 | 
 | 2819 |      3    | ID2   |   4 | 
 | 2820 |      4    | ID3   |   8 | 
 | 2821 |      5    | ID4   |  16 | 
 | 2822 |      6    | ID5   |  32 | 
 | 2823 |      7    | ID6   |  64 | 
 | 2824 |      8    | ID7   | 128 | 
 | 2825 |  | 
 | 2826 | Some Examples: | 
 | 2827 |  | 
 | 2828 |     Switch         | Hex     | Decimal  | 
 | 2829 |    8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Node ID | Node ID | 
 | 2830 |    ----------------|---------|--------- | 
 | 2831 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 |    not allowed | 
 | 2832 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 |    1    |    1  | 
 | 2833 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 |    2    |    2 | 
 | 2834 |    0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 |    3    |    3 | 
 | 2835 |        . . .       |         | | 
 | 2836 |    0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 |   55    |   85 | 
 | 2837 |        . . .       |         | | 
 | 2838 |    1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 |   AA    |  170 | 
 | 2839 |        . . .       |         |   | 
 | 2840 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 |   FD    |  253 | 
 | 2841 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 |   FE    |  254 | 
 | 2842 |    1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 |   FF    |  255 | 
 | 2843 |  | 
 | 2844 |  | 
 | 2845 | Setting the I/O Base Address | 
 | 2846 | ---------------------------- | 
 | 2847 |  | 
 | 2848 | The last three switches in switch block SW1 are used to select one | 
 | 2849 | of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table | 
 | 2850 |  | 
 | 2851 |  | 
 | 2852 |    Switch      | Hex I/O | 
 | 2853 |     6   7   8  | Address | 
 | 2854 |    ------------|-------- | 
 | 2855 |    ON  ON  ON  |  260 | 
 | 2856 |    OFF ON  ON  |  290 | 
 | 2857 |    ON  OFF ON  |  2E0  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 2858 |    OFF OFF ON  |  2F0 | 
 | 2859 |    ON  ON  OFF |  300 | 
 | 2860 |    OFF ON  OFF |  350 | 
 | 2861 |    ON  OFF OFF |  380 | 
 | 2862 |    OFF OFF OFF |  3E0 | 
 | 2863 |  | 
 | 2864 |  | 
 | 2865 | Setting the Base Memory (RAM) buffer Address | 
 | 2866 | -------------------------------------------- | 
 | 2867 |  | 
 | 2868 | The memory buffer (RAM) requires 2K. The base of this buffer can be  | 
 | 2869 | located in any of eight positions. The address of the Boot Prom is | 
 | 2870 | memory base + 0x2000. | 
 | 2871 | Jumpers 3-5 of jumper block SW1 select the Memory Base address. | 
 | 2872 |  | 
 | 2873 |    Switch              | Hex RAM | Hex ROM | 
 | 2874 |     1   2   3   4   5  | Address | Address *) | 
 | 2875 |    --------------------|---------|----------- | 
 | 2876 |    ON  ON  ON  ON  ON  |  C0000  |  C2000 | 
 | 2877 |    ON  ON  OFF ON  ON  |  C4000  |  C6000 | 
 | 2878 |    ON  ON  ON  OFF ON  |  CC000  |  CE000 | 
 | 2879 |    ON  ON  OFF OFF ON  |  D0000  |  D2000  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 2880 |    ON  ON  ON  ON  OFF |  D4000  |  D6000 | 
 | 2881 |    ON  ON  OFF ON  OFF |  D8000  |  DA000 | 
 | 2882 |    ON  ON  ON  OFF OFF |  DC000  |  DE000 | 
 | 2883 |    ON  ON  OFF OFF OFF |  E0000  |  E2000 | 
 | 2884 |    | 
 | 2885 | *) To enable the Boot ROM set the jumper 8 of jumper block SW3 to position ON. | 
 | 2886 |  | 
 | 2887 | The jumpers 1 and 2 probably add 0x0800, 0x1000 and 0x1800 to RAM adders. | 
 | 2888 |  | 
 | 2889 | Setting the Interrupt Line | 
 | 2890 | -------------------------- | 
 | 2891 |  | 
 | 2892 | Jumpers 1-5 of the jumper block SW3 control the IRQ level. | 
 | 2893 |  | 
 | 2894 |     Jumper              |  IRQ | 
 | 2895 |     1   2   3   4   5   | | 
 | 2896 |    ---------------------------- | 
 | 2897 |     ON  OFF OFF OFF OFF |  2 | 
 | 2898 |     OFF ON  OFF OFF OFF |  3 | 
 | 2899 |     OFF OFF ON  OFF OFF |  4 | 
 | 2900 |     OFF OFF OFF ON  OFF |  5 | 
 | 2901 |     OFF OFF OFF OFF ON  |  7 | 
 | 2902 |  | 
 | 2903 |  | 
 | 2904 | Setting the Timeout Parameters | 
 | 2905 | ------------------------------ | 
 | 2906 |  | 
 | 2907 | The jumpers 6-7 of the jumper block SW3 are used to determine the timeout  | 
 | 2908 | parameters. These two jumpers are normally left in the OFF position. | 
 | 2909 |  | 
 | 2910 |  | 
 | 2911 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 2912 |  | 
 | 2913 | ** No Name ** | 
 | 2914 | (Generic Model 9058) | 
 | 2915 | -------------------- | 
 | 2916 |   - from Andrew J. Kroll <ag784@freenet.buffalo.edu> | 
 | 2917 |   - Sorry this sat in my to-do box for so long, Andrew! (yikes - over a | 
 | 2918 |     year!) | 
 | 2919 |                                                                       _____ | 
 | 2920 |                                                                      |    < | 
 | 2921 |                                                                      | .---' | 
 | 2922 |     ________________________________________________________________ | | | 
 | 2923 |    |                           |     SW2     |                      |  | | 
 | 2924 |    |   ___________             |_____________|                      |  | | 
 | 2925 |    |  |           |              1 2 3 4 5 6                     ___|  | | 
 | 2926 |    |  >  6116 RAM |         _________                         8 |   |  | | 
 | 2927 |    |  |___________|        |20MHzXtal|                        7 |   |  | | 
 | 2928 |    |                       |_________|       __________       6 | S |  | | 
 | 2929 |    |    74LS373                             |          |-     5 | W |  | | 
 | 2930 |    |   _________                            |      E   |-     4 |   |  | | 
 | 2931 |    |   >_______|              ______________|..... P   |-     3 | 3 |  | | 
 | 2932 |    |                         |              |    : O   |-     2 |   |  | | 
 | 2933 |    |                         |              |    : X   |-     1 |___|  | | 
 | 2934 |    |   ________________      |              |    : Y   |-           |  | | 
 | 2935 |    |  |      SW1       |     |      SL90C65 |    :     |-           |  | | 
 | 2936 |    |  |________________|     |              |    : B   |-           |  | | 
 | 2937 |    |    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8      |              |    : O   |-           |  | | 
 | 2938 |    |                         |_________o____|..../ A   |-    _______|  | | 
 | 2939 |    |    ____________________                |      R   |-   |       |------,    | 
 | 2940 |    |   |                    |               |      D   |-   |  BNC  |   #  | | 
 | 2941 |    |   > 2764 PROM SOCKET   |               |__________|-   |_______|------' | 
 | 2942 |    |   |____________________|              _________                |  | | 
 | 2943 |    |                                       >________| <- 74LS245    |  | | 
 | 2944 |    |                                                                |  | | 
 | 2945 |    |___                                               ______________|  | | 
 | 2946 |        |H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H|               | | | 
 | 2947 |        |U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U_U|               | | | 
 | 2948 |                                                                       \| | 
 | 2949 | Legend: | 
 | 2950 |  | 
 | 2951 | SL90C65 	ARCNET Controller / Transceiver /Logic | 
 | 2952 | SW1	1-5:	IRQ Select | 
 | 2953 | 	  6:	ET1 | 
 | 2954 | 	  7:	ET2 | 
 | 2955 | 	  8:	ROM ENABLE  | 
 | 2956 | SW2	1-3:    Memory Buffer/PROM Address | 
 | 2957 | 	3-6:	I/O Address Map | 
 | 2958 | SW3	1-8:	Node ID Select | 
 | 2959 | BNC		BNC RG62/U Connection  | 
 | 2960 | 		*I* have had success using RG59B/U with *NO* terminators! | 
 | 2961 | 		What gives?! | 
 | 2962 |  | 
 | 2963 | SW1: Timeouts, Interrupt and ROM | 
 | 2964 | --------------------------------- | 
 | 2965 |  | 
 | 2966 | To select a hardware interrupt level set one (only one!) of the dip switches | 
 | 2967 | up (on) SW1...(switches 1-5) | 
 | 2968 | IRQ3, IRQ4, IRQ5, IRQ7, IRQ2. The Manufacturer's default is IRQ2. | 
 | 2969 |  | 
 | 2970 | The switches on SW1 labeled EXT1 (switch 6) and EXT2 (switch 7) | 
 | 2971 | are used to determine the timeout parameters. These two dip switches | 
 | 2972 | are normally left off (down). | 
 | 2973 |  | 
 | 2974 |    To enable the 8K Boot PROM position SW1 switch 8 on (UP) labeled ROM. | 
 | 2975 |    The default is jumper ROM not installed. | 
 | 2976 |  | 
 | 2977 |  | 
 | 2978 | Setting the I/O Base Address | 
 | 2979 | ---------------------------- | 
 | 2980 |  | 
 | 2981 | The last three switches in switch group SW2 are used to select one | 
 | 2982 | of eight possible I/O Base addresses using the following table | 
 | 2983 |  | 
 | 2984 |  | 
 | 2985 |    Switch | Hex I/O | 
 | 2986 |    4 5 6  | Address | 
 | 2987 |    -------|-------- | 
 | 2988 |    0 0 0  |  260 | 
 | 2989 |    0 0 1  |  290 | 
 | 2990 |    0 1 0  |  2E0  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 2991 |    0 1 1  |  2F0 | 
 | 2992 |    1 0 0  |  300 | 
 | 2993 |    1 0 1  |  350 | 
 | 2994 |    1 1 0  |  380 | 
 | 2995 |    1 1 1  |  3E0 | 
 | 2996 |  | 
 | 2997 |  | 
 | 2998 | Setting the Base Memory Address (RAM & ROM) | 
 | 2999 | ------------------------------------------- | 
 | 3000 |  | 
 | 3001 | The memory buffer requires 2K of a 16K block of RAM. The base of this | 
 | 3002 | 16K block can be located in any of eight positions. | 
 | 3003 | Switches 1-3 of switch group SW2 select the Base of the 16K block. | 
 | 3004 | (0 = DOWN, 1 = UP) | 
 | 3005 | I could, however, only verify two settings... | 
 | 3006 |  | 
 | 3007 |    Switch| Hex RAM | Hex ROM | 
 | 3008 |    1 2 3 | Address | Address | 
 | 3009 |    ------|---------|----------- | 
 | 3010 |    0 0 0 |  E0000  |  E2000 | 
 | 3011 |    0 0 1 |  D0000  |  D2000  (Manufacturer's default) | 
 | 3012 |    0 1 0 |  ?????  |  ????? | 
 | 3013 |    0 1 1 |  ?????  |  ?????   | 
 | 3014 |    1 0 0 |  ?????  |  ????? | 
 | 3015 |    1 0 1 |  ?????  |  ????? | 
 | 3016 |    1 1 0 |  ?????  |  ????? | 
 | 3017 |    1 1 1 |  ?????  |  ????? | 
 | 3018 |  | 
 | 3019 |  | 
 | 3020 | Setting the Node ID | 
 | 3021 | ------------------- | 
 | 3022 |  | 
 | 3023 | The eight switches in group SW3 are used to set the node ID. | 
 | 3024 | Each node attached to the network must have an unique node ID which | 
 | 3025 | must be different from 0. | 
 | 3026 | Switch 1 serves as the least significant bit (LSB). | 
 | 3027 | switches in the DOWN position are OFF (0) and in the UP position are ON (1) | 
 | 3028 |  | 
 | 3029 | The node ID is the sum of the values of all switches set to "1"   | 
 | 3030 | These values are: | 
 | 3031 |     Switch | Value | 
 | 3032 |     -------|------- | 
 | 3033 |       1    |   1 | 
 | 3034 |       2    |   2 | 
 | 3035 |       3    |   4 | 
 | 3036 |       4    |   8 | 
 | 3037 |       5    |  16 | 
 | 3038 |       6    |  32 | 
 | 3039 |       7    |  64 | 
 | 3040 |       8    | 128 | 
 | 3041 |  | 
 | 3042 | Some Examples: | 
 | 3043 |  | 
 | 3044 |     Switch#     |   Hex   | Decimal  | 
 | 3045 | 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 | Node ID | Node ID | 
 | 3046 | ----------------|---------|--------- | 
 | 3047 | 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 |    not allowed  <-. | 
 | 3048 | 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 |    1    |    1    |  | 
 | 3049 | 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 |    2    |    2    | | 
 | 3050 | 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 |    3    |    3    | | 
 | 3051 |     . . .       |         |         | | 
 | 3052 | 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 |   55    |   85    | | 
 | 3053 |     . . .       |         |         + Don't use 0 or 255! | 
 | 3054 | 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 |   AA    |  170    | | 
 | 3055 |     . . .       |         |         | | 
 | 3056 | 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 |   FD    |  253    | | 
 | 3057 | 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 |   FE    |  254    | | 
 | 3058 | 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 |   FF    |  255  <-' | 
 | 3059 |    | 
 | 3060 |  | 
 | 3061 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 3062 |  | 
 | 3063 | ** Tiara ** | 
 | 3064 | (model unknown) | 
 | 3065 | ------------------------- | 
 | 3066 |   - from Christoph Lameter <christoph@lameter.com> | 
 | 3067 |    | 
 | 3068 |  | 
 | 3069 | Here is information about my card as far as I could figure it out: | 
 | 3070 | ----------------------------------------------- tiara | 
 | 3071 | Tiara LanCard of Tiara Computer Systems. | 
 | 3072 |  | 
 | 3073 | +----------------------------------------------+ | 
 | 3074 | !           ! Transmitter Unit !               ! | 
 | 3075 | !           +------------------+             ------- | 
 | 3076 | !          MEM                              Coax Connector | 
 | 3077 | !  ROM    7654321 <- I/O                     ------- | 
 | 3078 | !  :  :   +--------+                           ! | 
 | 3079 | !  :  :   ! 90C66LJ!                         +++ | 
 | 3080 | !  :  :   !        !                         !D  Switch to set | 
 | 3081 | !  :  :   !        !                         !I  the Nodenumber | 
 | 3082 | !  :  :   +--------+                         !P | 
 | 3083 | !                                            !++ | 
 | 3084 | !         234567 <- IRQ                      ! | 
 | 3085 | +------------!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!--------+ | 
 | 3086 |              !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! | 
 | 3087 |  | 
 | 3088 | 0 = Jumper Installed | 
 | 3089 | 1 = Open | 
 | 3090 |  | 
 | 3091 | Top Jumper line Bit 7 = ROM Enable 654=Memory location 321=I/O | 
 | 3092 |  | 
 | 3093 | Settings for Memory Location (Top Jumper Line) | 
 | 3094 | 456     Address selected | 
 | 3095 | 000	C0000 | 
 | 3096 | 001     C4000 | 
 | 3097 | 010     CC000 | 
 | 3098 | 011     D0000 | 
 | 3099 | 100     D4000 | 
 | 3100 | 101     D8000 | 
 | 3101 | 110     DC000      | 
 | 3102 | 111     E0000 | 
 | 3103 |  | 
 | 3104 | Settings for I/O Address (Top Jumper Line) | 
 | 3105 | 123     Port | 
 | 3106 | 000	260 | 
 | 3107 | 001	290 | 
 | 3108 | 010	2E0 | 
 | 3109 | 011	2F0 | 
 | 3110 | 100	300 | 
 | 3111 | 101	350 | 
 | 3112 | 110	380 | 
 | 3113 | 111	3E0 | 
 | 3114 |  | 
 | 3115 | Settings for IRQ Selection (Lower Jumper Line) | 
 | 3116 | 234567 | 
 | 3117 | 011111 IRQ 2 | 
 | 3118 | 101111 IRQ 3 | 
 | 3119 | 110111 IRQ 4 | 
 | 3120 | 111011 IRQ 5 | 
 | 3121 | 111110 IRQ 7 | 
 | 3122 |  | 
 | 3123 | ***************************************************************************** | 
 | 3124 |  | 
 | 3125 |  | 
 | 3126 | Other Cards | 
 | 3127 | ----------- | 
 | 3128 |  | 
 | 3129 | I have no information on other models of ARCnet cards at the moment.  Please | 
 | 3130 | send any and all info to: | 
 | 3131 | 	apenwarr@worldvisions.ca | 
 | 3132 |  | 
 | 3133 | Thanks. |