It's you.
Get a 3.3v supported Motherboard.
-or-
Grab a Hacksaw. Others will post instructions.
;)
On Wed, 4 May 2005, Daniel Salama wrote:
I'm trying to install a TE410P on a Gigabyte motherboard (8S661FX) and I'm
just noticing that the TE410P does not fit in the PCI slot. It seems as if
the
Corect me if I am wrong, but the TE410P is for 5v PCI Slots..
I think you need to be using the TE405P (3.3V PCI)
Dave
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Daniel Salama
Sent: Thursday, 5 May 2005 9:55 AM
To: Asterisk Users Mailing List -
Vice Versa.
http://www.digium.com/index.php?menu=wildcard_te410p
The TE405P is for 5v slots.
To counter, there are, and I won't suggest them, ways to make the TE410P
work in a 3.3v slot. This would basically entail cutting it to fit.. and
has been proven to work, but it is not recommended by
[Oooops]
Corect me if I am wrong, but the TE410P is for 5v PCI Slots..
I think you need to be using the TE405P (3.3V PCI)
[/ooops]
Got that back-to-front
Maybe I should Have had the Scrambled Eggs instead of my Brain...
Dave
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL
Hey, I remember those commercials, too!
On Thu, 5 May 2005, David Phelan wrote:
[Oooops]
Corect me if I am wrong, but the TE410P is for 5v PCI Slots..
I think you need to be using the TE405P (3.3V PCI)
[/ooops]
Got that back-to-front
Maybe I should Have had the Scrambled Eggs instead of my
Well, no, it looks like the 8S661FX (which is actually called
8S661FXM-RZ or FXM_P_ for Socket 478) has 5v PCI slots.
http://www.giga-byte.com/Motherboard/FileList/ProductImage/photo_8s661fx
m_rz_big.jpg
and
http://www.giga-byte.com/Motherboard/FileList/ProductImage/photo_8s661fx
mp-rz_big.jpg
Is
-Original Message-
Is that what your motherboard looks like? Coz those are *definitely*
5v
slots.
And then I come to the slow realisation that the 10 is 3.3, and the 5 is
5. Sigh. Apologies.
--Rob
___
Asterisk-Users mailing list
Thank you all for pointing this out to me. I wasn't aware of the
physical difference between the 3.3V and the 5V PCI slots.
I guess it's time to change the motherboard.
Thanks,
Daniel
On May 4, 2005, at 9:32 PM, Rob Thomas wrote:
Well, no, it looks like the 8S661FX (which is actually called