It's pci, and is supposed to be compatible with 3.3v or 5v signaling. It is installed in a pci-x slot, also supposed to work like that. I will look for another jumper, thanks for the tip. I just got back from lunch and haven't tried anything since the last post, as always I'll let the group know.
Nathaniel C. Steele Assistant Chief Engineer/Technical Director WTRM-FM / TheCrossFM On 12/22/2011 2:02 PM, Kevin Miller wrote: > On 12/22/2011 09:14 AM, Fred Gleason wrote: >> On Dec 22, 2011, at 13:00 32, Nathan Steele wrote: >> >>> looks like they are not being seen: >>> >>> [root@rdbs ~]# lspci >>> [... slew of lspci cruft omitted ...] >> Agreed. This is looking like a hardware problem. :( >> >> Just for grins, it might be worth trying it with just a single card >> installed. And then with the other one, by itself, too (I have seen an ASI >> card fail in a way where it keeps other things on the system from working as >> well). In each case set the jumper for '1'. >> >> You might also try talking to the ASI folks about this, as it sounds like a >> BIOS-level problem. You might also want to consult their advisories at: >> >> http://www.audioscience.com/internet/support/advisories.htm > Just a long shot, but I was told once that some ASI cards have a jumper > on them setting the voltage that comes off the ISA slot. I don't know > what vintage/format this card is but that might be worth a look... > > ...Kevin _______________________________________________ Rivendell-dev mailing list Rivendell-dev@lists.rivendellaudio.org http://lists.rivendellaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/rivendell-dev