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About Your Computer: Dell OptiPlex GX150 System User's Guide
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About Your Computer: Dell OptiPlex GX150 System User's
Guide
The following figures show the controls, indicators, and features located on the front
panel of the small form-factor, small desktop, and small mini-tower systems.
Front View of the Small Form-Factor System
Small Form-Factor Computer
Front View of the Small Desktop System
Front View of the Small Mini-Tower System
Front-Panel Door
Open the front-panel door to access two Universal Serial Bus (USB)
connectors and the headphone connector. This door is removable; if you remove it or
accidentally knock it off its hinges, it snaps back in place.
View With the Front-Panel Door Open on the Small Desktop
System
 |
| 1 |
USB connectors (2) (do not use these front connectors
for USB keyboards or mice) |
| 2 |
Headphone connector |
| 3 |
Breakaway hinges (2) |
|
View With the Front-Panel Door Open on the Small Mini-Tower System
 |
| 1 |
Front-panel door, with two breakaway hinges |
| 2 |
Headphone connector |
| 3 |
USB connectors (2) (do not use these front connectors
for USB keyboards or mice) |
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The power button controls the system's AC input power.
The Microsoft® Windows® 98, Windows 98 Second Edition (SE),
Windows 2000, and Windows XP operating systems let you configure the function of the power
button through the Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) feature, as shown in
the following table.
NOTICE: To turn off your computer system, perform an orderly
system shutdown using the operating system menu when possible.
Power Button Behavior Under Microsoft Windows 98, Windows 98
SE, Windows 2000, and Windows XP Operating Systems With ACPI
Action |
Results |
System
Turned On
and ACPI Enabled |
System
in Standby Mode |
System
Turned Off |
Press power
button |
System goes
into standby mode or turns off (depending on the operating system setup) |
System turns
on |
Boots and
system turns on |
Hold power
button
for 6 seconds* |
System turns
off |
System turns
off |
Boots and
system turns on |
*Pressing or holding the power button to shut
down the system may result in data loss. Use the power button to shut down the system only
if the operating system is not responding.
The following table shows power button functions for the Windows 98,
Windows 98 SE, Windows 2000, and Windows XP operating systems that have the ACPI feature
disabled.
Power Button Behavior Under Microsoft Windows 98, Windows 98
SE, Windows 2000, and Windows XP (With Dell AutoShutdown Loaded)
Action |
Results |
System
Turned On and ACPI Disabled |
System
in Suspend Mode |
System
Turned Off |
Press power
button |
System turns
off immediately |
System turns
off immediately |
Boots and
system turns on |
Hold power
button for 6 seconds* |
System turns
off |
System turns
off |
Boots and
system turns on |
*Pressing or holding the power button to shut
down the system may result in data loss. Use the power button to shut down the system only
if the operating system is not responding.
The following table shows power button functions for Microsoft
Windows NT® operating systems.
Power Button Behavior Under Microsoft Windows NT (With Dell
AutoShutdown Loaded)
Action |
Results |
System Turned On |
System Turned Off |
Press power
button |
System shuts down |
Boots and system turns on |
Hold power
button for 6 seconds* |
System turns off |
Boots and system turns on |
*Pressing or holding the power button to shut
down the system may result in data loss. Use the power button to shut down the system only
if the operating system is not responding.
If the system does not turn off when you press the power button, the
system may be hung. Press and hold the power button until the system turns off completely
(this process may take several seconds). If the system is hung and the power button fails
to function properly, unplug the AC power cable from the computer, wait for it to
completely stop running, and plug in the AC power cable. If the system does not restart,
press the power button to restart the system.
The power indicator contains a light-emitting diode (LED) that illuminates in two
colors and blinks or remains solid to indicate different states (normal and nonnormal).
The following are normal indicators:
- No light system is in the off state (S4, S5, or mechanical OFF)
- Steady green normal operating state
- Blinking green low-power state (S1 or S3)
 |
NOTE: Your system can resume from the S3 state
(suspend to RAM) in several ways. Pressing the power button always works. Certain USB
devices also wake the system from S3, and the action required varies by device. Check your
device documentation for details. Remote Wake Up also creates an S3 wake event if enabled
in system setup and in your operating system. Personal System/2 (PS/2) wake events also
vary depending on your operating system. For example, PS/2 mice will not wake from S3 in
Windows 98 SE or Windows Millennium (Me), but will wake from S3 in Windows 2000 or Windows
XP if enabled in the operating system (OS). PS/2 keyboards will always wake the system
from S3 in Windows 98 SE or Windows Me and will wake from S3 in Windows 2000 or Windows XP
if enabled in the OS. |
See "Diagnostic LEDs" for a
description of nonnormal indications.
The diskette drive access indicator lights when the drive is reading data from, or
writing data to, a diskette. Wait until this indicator turns off before you remove the
diskette from the drive.
The hard drive access indicator lights when the system is reading data from, or writing
data to, the drive.
The following figure shows the connectors and indicators on the back of your computer
for attaching external devices.
Small Form-Factor System Back-Panel Connectors and Indicators
|
| 1 |
Half-height PCI expansion-card slot
|
| 2 |
AC adapter
|
| 3 |
AC voltage switch
|
|
I/O Panel
|
| 1 |
Parallel connector
|
| 2 |
Keyboard connector
|
| 3 |
Mouse connector
|
| 4 |
Link integrity light
|
| 5 |
Network adapter
|
| 6 |
Activity light
|
| 7 |
Video connector
|
| 8 |
Microphone connector
|
| 9 |
Audio line-in connector
|
| 10 |
Audio line-out connector
|
| 11 |
USB connectors (2)
|
| 12 |
Diagnostic lights
|
| 13 |
Serial 2 connector
|
| 14 |
Serial 1 connector
|
|
Small Desktop System Back-Panel Connectors and Indicators
Small Mini-Tower System Back-Panel Connectors and
Indicators
Connecting Devices
When you connect external devices to your computer's back panel,
follow these guidelines:
- Check the documentation that accompanied the device for specific
installation and configuration instructions.
For example, you must connect most devices to a particular
input/output (I/O) port or connector to operate properly. Also, external devices like a
mouse or printer usually require you to load device drivers into system memory before they
will work.
- Always attach external devices while your computer is turned off.
Then turn on the computer before turning on any external devices, unless the
documentation for the device specifies otherwise. (If the computer does not seem to
recognize the device, try turning on the device before turning on the computer.)
NOTICE: When you disconnect external devices from the back
of the computer, wait 5 seconds after turning off the computer before you disconnect any
devices to avoid possible damage to the system board.
This is used to connect printers. Default designation is LPT1.
 |
NOTE: The integrated parallel port is
automatically disabled if the system detects an installed expansion card containing a
parallel port configured to the same address as specified in "Additional System Setup Options." |
Turn off the computer and any attached peripherals before connecting a mouse to the
computer. If your system uses Microsoft Windows 2000 or Windows NT 4.0, Dell
installed the necessary mouse drivers on your hard drive.
These are used to attach USB-compliant devices such as keyboards, mice, printers, and
computer speakers to your system. If you use a USB keyboard or mouse, attach these devices
to the back panel connectors only.
The network interface controller (NIC), which includes a Remote Wake
Up feature, has the following indicators:
- A yellow activity indicator flashes when the system is transmitting
or receiving network data. (A high volume of network traffic may make this indicator
appear to be in a steady "on" state.)
- A dual-colored link integrity indicator, which is green when there is a good connection
between a 10-megabit per second (Mbps) network and the NIC and orange when there is a good
connection between a 100-Mbps network and the NIC. When the indicator is off, the computer
is not detecting a physical connection to the network.
Network Cable Requirements
The NIC connector attaches an unshielded twisted pair (UTP) Ethernet cable to your
system. Press one end of the UTP cable to an RJ45 jack wall plate or to an RJ45 port on a
UTP concentrator or hub, depending on your network configuration, and press the other end
of the UTP cable into the NIC connector until the cable snaps securely into place.
Dell recommends the use of Category 5 wiring and connectors for our customers' networks.
This jack is used to attach record/playback devices such as cassette players, CD
players, and VCRs. Connect the line-out cable from any of these devices to the line-in
jack.
This jack is used to attach computer speakers. This jack is amplified, so speakers with
integrated amplifiers are not required. Connect the audio cable from the speakers to this
jack.
This jack is used to attach a standard personal computer microphone. Connect the audio
cable from the microphone to the microphone jack.
This connector is used to attach a video graphics array (VGA)-compatible monitor to
your system.
 |
NOTE: Do not use this connector if your computer
contains an add-in accelerated graphics port (AGP) and/or Peripheral Component
Interconnect (PCI) card. This connector can be used for a secondary display if
multi-monitor is supported and enabled in your operating system and you have an add-in PCI
video card. |
Default port designations: COM1 for serial port 1 and COM2 for serial port 2. You can
reassign the serial port's designation if you add an expansion card containing a serial
port using this designation.
If you set the systems serial ports to Auto in system setup and add an
expansion card containing a serial port configured to a specific designation, the computer
automatically maps (assigns) the integrated ports to the appropriate COM setting as
necessary.
Before you add a card with a serial port, check the documentation that accompanied your
software to make sure that the software can be mapped to the new COM port designation.
Attach the keyboard cable to the 6-pin connector on the back panel.
The following figures show the desktop systems with their covers
opened.
Inside the Small Form-Factor Chassis
 |
| 1 |
Hard drive |
| 2 |
3.5-inch floppy drive |
| 3 |
CD drive |
| 4 |
Cover
release buttons (2) |
| 5 |
Internal
speaker |
| 6 |
Chassis
intrusion switch |
| 7 |
System board |
| 8 |
Power supply |
| 9 |
AC power
connector |
| 10 |
I/O ports
and connectors |
| 11 |
Padlock ring |
| 12 |
Heat sink
and blower assembly |
|
Inside the Small
Desktop Chassis
 |
| 1 |
Diskette drive |
| 2 |
Hard drive |
| 3 |
Internal speaker |
| 4 |
Chassis intrusion switch |
| 5 |
Expansion-card cage |
| 6 |
Power supply |
| 7 |
Expansion-card slots |
| 8 |
AC power connector |
| 9 |
Padlock ring |
| 10 |
I/O ports
and connectors |
| 11 |
Microprocessor and heat sink |
| 12 |
System board |
| 13 |
Optical drive |
|
Inside the Small Mini-Tower
Chassis
 |
| 1 |
Optical drive |
| 2 |
Diskette drive |
| 3 |
Hard drive |
| 4 |
Internal speaker |
| 5 |
Chassis intrusion switch |
| 6 |
System board |
| 7 |
Expansion-card slots |
| 8 |
I/O ports
and connectors |
| 9 |
AC power connector |
| 10 |
Power supply |
| 11 |
Padlock ring |
| 12 |
Microprocessor and heat sink
shroud |
|
System Cables
Cabling in the Small Form-Factor Desktop System
 |
| 1 |
CD drive
data cable |
| 2 |
Floppy drive
data cable |
| 3 |
Control-panel cable |
| 4 |
CD drive
power cable |
| 5 |
IDE drive
power cable (hard drive) |
| 6 |
IDE data
cable (hard drive) |
| 7 |
Input/output
cable |
| 8 |
Input/output
audio cable |
| 9 |
CD audio
cable |
|
Cabling in the Small Desktop System Without a Sound Card
Installed
 |
| 1 |
Optical drive audio cable |
| 2 |
Optical drive cable |
| 3 |
Diskette drive cable |
| 4 |
Control panel cable |
| 5 |
Front input/output cable |
| 6 |
Front input/output audio cable |
| 7 |
EIDE interface cable (hard
drive) |
|
Cabling in the Small Desktop System With a Sound Card
Installed
 |
| 1 |
Optical drive audio cable |
| 2 |
Optical drive cable |
| 3 |
Diskette drive cable |
| 4 |
Control panel cable |
| 5 |
Front input/output cable |
| 6 |
Front input/output audio cable |
| 7 |
EIDE interface cable (hard
drive) |
|
Cabling in the Small Mini-Tower System
 |
| 1 |
Optical drive power cable |
| 2 |
Optical drive audio cable |
| 3 |
Optical drive data cable |
| 4 |
Diskette drive power cable |
| 5 |
Diskette drive data cable |
| 6 |
Hard-drive power cable |
| 7 |
Hard-drive data cable |
| 8 |
Front I/O cable |
| 9 |
Front I/O audio cable |
|
The following table provides a color code key for the cables inside
your system.
| Hard drive |
Blue |
| Diskette drive |
Black |
| Optical drive |
Orange |
| USB |
Gray |
| ATA, IDE, or EIDE drive |
Green |
| Control panel |
Yellow |
| CD audio |
Blue |
| System audio |
Black |
Front of Computer

Back of Computer |
| 1 |
PC speaker |
| 2 |
DC power connector |
| 3 |
Diskette drive connector |
| 4 |
Battery |
| 5 |
EIDE2 connector |
| 6 |
Auxiliary power indicator |
| 7 |
Memory module (DIMM) connectors (2) |
| 8 |
Front-panel cable connector |
| 9 |
EIDE1 connector |
| 10 |
PCI 2 riser connector (not populated on
the small form-factor chassis, used as the riser in the small desktop chassis, and can be
populated with PCI expansion card in the small mini-tower chassis) |
| 11 |
PCI 1 connector (not able to be populated
on the small desktop chassis) |
| 12 |
AGP/GPA (AIMM)
connector |
| 13 |
Video connector (upper) and audio
connectors (lower) |
| 14 |
CD audio and telephony connectors |
| 15 |
NIC connector (upper) and USB connectors
(2) (lower) |
| 16 |
Keyboard (lower) and mouse (upper)
connectors |
| 17 |
Diagnostic LEDs |
| 18 |
Voltage regulator module (may not be
removable on some systems) |
| 19 |
Parallel port (upper) and serial port (2)
(lower) connectors |
| 20 |
Microprocessor fan connector |
| 21 |
Microprocessor and heat sink assembly |
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The following table lists the labels for connectors and sockets on
the system board and gives a brief description of their functions.
System Board Connectors and Sockets
| Connector or Socket |
Description |
| AGP |
Accelerated Graphics Port (AGP) Pro
connector |
| AUDIO |
Line-in, line-out, and microphone jacks |
| AUX_PWR |
Auxiliary power indicator |
| BATTERY |
Battery socket |
| CD-IN |
CD-ROM drive audio cable connector |
| DIAG_LED |
Diagnostic LEDs |
| DIMM_x |
Dual in-line memory module (DIMM) socket |
| DSKT |
Diskette drive interface connector |
| FAN |
Microprocessor fan connector |
| FRONTAUDIO |
Front panel audio connector for onboard
audio |
| FRONTPANEL |
Front panel cable connector |
| IDEn |
EIDE interface connector |
| KYBD_MOUSE |
Keyboard and mouse connectors |
| MICROPROCESSOR |
Microprocessor connector |
| MODEM |
Telephony connector |
| MONITOR |
Video connector |
| NIC_USB |
Integrated NIC connector and USB
connectors |
| PAR_SER1_SER2 |
Parallel and serial port connectors |
| PCI1 and 2 |
PCI expansion card connectors |
| POWER |
Main power input connector |
| PSWD |
Password jumper |
| VRISER |
Riser board connector |
| SPEAKER |
Internal speaker |
| VRM |
Voltage regulator module connector (may
not be removable on some systems) |
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