Gateway 7210 User Manual
Page 10
Front panel
3
PS1 status LED that glows green when the first power supply module in the
redundant power supply is installed and working correctly. It flashes green if
the power supply module fails or one of its power levels goes out of bounds.
If the power supply module is not installed, this LED is off. The LED is only
active on systems using the Redundant N+1 power supply.
PS2 status LED that glows green when the second power supply module in
the redundant power supply is installed and working correctly. It flashes green
if the power supply module fails or one of its power levels goes out of bounds.
If the power supply module is not installed, this LED is off. The LED is only
active on systems using the Redundant N+1 power supply.
System reset button is a recessed button that lets you reset the server if it
has become nonresponsive.
Power button turns the server on and off. In an ACPI-enabled operating
system like Windows 2000, you can set the power button to enter sleep mode
rather than turning the system off.
Reserved LEDs these LEDs are reserved for future use.
Hot-plug drive lock secures the drive in place to prevent unauthorized or
accidental removal.
The outriggers provide support for the castors.
Castors let you roll the server around for ease of service.
5.25-inch drive bays (3) to let you install additional 5.25-inch devices such
as tape drives or an additional CD drive.
CD drive plays data or audio CDs
Diskette drive writes to and reads from 3.5-inch, 1.44 MB diskettes.
Power alarm speaker reset disables the power supply alarm speaker. The
alarm is not cleared and the appropriate LED continues to flash until the failed
power supply module is replaced. The alarm is only active on systems using
the N+1 redundant power supply.
Hot-plug drive activity LED that indicates when the hot-plug drive
immediately below it is reading or writing data.
Hot-plug drives up to six hot-swappable hot-plug drives connected to a
hot-plug backplane.
Front panel door covers the front panel controls to prevent unauthorized or
accidental access.
8505945.book Page 3 Thursday, March 9, 2000 2:13 PM