Black Box Switch KV812A User Manual

FEBRUARY 2000  
KV812A  
KV814A  
KV822A  
KV824A  
 
SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
TRADEMARKS USED IN THIS MANUAL  
BLACK BOX and the  
logo are registered trademarks, and ServSwitch,  
ServSwitch USB, and ServSwitch USB Plus are trademarks, of Black Box  
Corporation.  
Apple, Mac, and Macintosh are registered trademarks, and G3 and G4 are  
trademarks, of Apple Computer, Inc.  
Compaq is a registered trademark of Compaq Computer Corporation.  
Gateway is a trademark of Gateway, Inc.  
Hewlett-Packard and HP-UX are registered trademarks of Hewlett-Packard.  
Zip is a registered trademark of Iomega Corporation.  
IBM, PC/AT, PS/2, and RS/6000 are registered trademarks of International  
Business Machines Corporation.  
Kensington is a registered trademark of Kensington Microware Limited.  
Genius and Netmouse are registered trademarks of KYE Systems Corp.  
Logitech and MouseMan are registered trademarks, and Pilot Mouse is a  
trademark, of Logitech, Inc.  
Microsoft and Windows are registered trademarks, and IntelliMouse is a  
trademark, of Microsoft Corporation.  
Novell and NetWare are registered trademarks of Novell, Inc.  
SCO is a registered trademark of Santa Cruz Operation, Inc.  
SGI is a registered trademark of Silicon Graphics, Inc.  
Sun and Sun Microsystems are registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in  
the United States and other countries.  
UNIX is a registered trademark of Unix System Laboratories.  
Velcro is a registered trademark of Velcro USA Inc.  
Any other trademarks mentioned in this manual are acknowledged to be the property of the  
trademark owners.  
2
 
FCC/IC STATEMENTS  
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION AND INDUSTRY CANADA  
RADIO-FREQUENCY INTERFERENCE STATEMENTS  
This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy and if not  
installed and used properly, that is, in strict accordance with the manufacturer’s  
instructions, may cause interference to radio communication. It has been tested  
and found to comply with the limits for a Class A computing device in accordance  
with the specifications in Subpart B of Part 15 of FCC rules, which are designed to  
provide reasonable protection against such interference when the equipment is  
operated in a commercial environment. Operation of this equipment in a  
residential area is likely to cause interference, in which case the user at his own  
expense will be required to take whatever measures may be necessary to correct the  
interference.  
Changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for  
compliance could void the user’s authority to operate the equipment.  
This digital apparatus does not exceed the Class A limits for radio noise emission from digital  
apparatus set out in the Radio Interference Regulation of Industry Canada.  
Le présent appareil numérique n’émet pas de bruits radioélectriques dépassant les limites  
applicables aux appareils numériques de la classe A prescrites dans le Règlement sur le  
brouillage radioélectrique publié par Industrie Canada.  
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SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
DECLARATION OF CONFORMITY  
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a class B  
computing device in accordance with the specifications in the European standard  
EN55022. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against  
harmful interference. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio  
frequency energy and if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions  
may cause harmful interference to radio or television reception. However, there is  
no guarantee that harmful interference will not occur in a particular installation. If  
this equipment does cause interference to radio or television reception, which can  
be determined by turning the equipment on and off, the user is encouraged to  
correct the interference with one or more of the following measures:  
(a) Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.  
(b) Increase the separation between the equipment and the receiver.  
(c) Connect the equipment to an outlet on a circuit different from that to which  
the receiver is connected.  
(d)Consult the supplier or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.  
Shielded cables must be used with this equipment to maintain compliance with  
radio frequency energy emission regulations and ensure a suitably high level of  
immunity to electromagnetic disturbances.  
4
 
NOM STATEMENT  
NORMAS OFICIALES MEXICANAS (NOM)  
ELECTRICAL SAFETY STATEMENT  
INSTRUCCIONES DE SEGURIDAD  
1. Todas las instrucciones de seguridad y operación deberán ser leídas antes de  
que el aparato eléctrico sea operado.  
2. Las instrucciones de seguridad y operación deberán ser guardadas para  
referencia futura.  
3. Todas las advertencias en el aparato eléctrico y en sus instrucciones de  
operación deben ser respetadas.  
4. Todas las instrucciones de operación y uso deben ser seguidas.  
5. El aparato eléctrico no deberá ser usado cerca del agua—por ejemplo, cerca  
de la tina de baño, lavabo, sótano mojado o cerca de una alberca, etc.  
6. El aparato eléctrico debe ser usado únicamente con carritos o pedestales que  
sean recomendados por el fabricante.  
7. El aparato eléctrico debe ser montado a la pared o al techo sólo como sea  
recomendado por el fabricante.  
8. Servicio—El usuario no debe intentar dar servicio al equipo eléctrico más allá  
a lo descrito en las instrucciones de operación. Todo otro servicio deberá ser  
referido a personal de servicio calificado.  
9. El aparato eléctrico debe ser situado de tal manera que su posición no  
interfiera su uso. La colocación del aparato eléctrico sobre una cama, sofá,  
alfombra o superficie similar puede bloquea la ventilación, no se debe colocar  
en libreros o gabinetes que impidan el flujo de aire por los orificios de  
ventilación.  
10. El equipo eléctrico deber ser situado fuera del alcance de fuentes de calor  
como radiadores, registros de calor, estufas u otros aparatos (incluyendo  
amplificadores) que producen calor.  
11. El aparato eléctrico deberá ser connectado a una fuente de poder sólo del  
tipo descrito en el instructivo de operación, o como se indique en el aparato.  
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SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
12. Precaución debe ser tomada de tal manera que la tierra fisica y la polarización  
del equipo no sea eliminada.  
13. Los cables de la fuente de poder deben ser guiados de tal manera que no  
sean pisados ni pellizcados por objetos colocados sobre o contra ellos,  
poniendo particular atención a los contactos y receptáculos donde salen del  
aparato.  
14. El equipo eléctrico debe ser limpiado únicamente de acuerdo a las  
recomendaciones del fabricante.  
15. En caso de existir, una antena externa deberá ser localizada lejos de las lineas  
de energia.  
16. El cable de corriente deberá ser desconectado del cuando el equipo no sea  
usado por un largo periodo de tiempo.  
17. Cuidado debe ser tomado de tal manera que objectos liquidos no sean  
derramados sobre la cubierta u orificios de ventilación.  
18. Servicio por personal calificado deberá ser provisto cuando:  
A: El cable de poder o el contacto ha sido dañado; u  
B: Objectos han caído o líquido ha sido derramado dentro del aparato; o  
C: El aparato ha sido expuesto a la lluvia; o  
D: El aparato parece no operar normalmente o muestra un cambio en su  
desempeño; o  
E: El aparato ha sido tirado o su cubierta ha sido dañada.  
6
 
TABLE OF CONTENTS  
Contents  
Chapter  
Page  
1. Specifications ............................................................................................. 9  
2. Introduction ............................................................................................. 11  
2.1 Features and Benefits ....................................................................... 11  
2.2 The Complete Package ..................................................................... 13  
2.3 The ServSwitch USB Illustrated ....................................................... 14  
2.4 Safety Concerns ................................................................................. 16  
3. Configuration ............................................................................................ 17  
3.1 Setting the Enumeration Guard Time (Positions 5 & 6) ............... 18  
3.2 Setting the Autoscan Pause Time (Position 7) ............................... 19  
3.3 Setting Which Ports to Cycle To and Autoscan (Position 8) ......... 19  
3.4 Setting the Hotkey Sequence (USB Plus with  
PS/2 Keyboard Only, Positions 1 & 2) ....................................... 20  
3.5 Enabling/Disabling Mouse Switching (USB Plus Only, Position 3) .. 20  
4. Installation ................................................................................................ 21  
4.1 What Else You’ll Need ...................................................................... 21  
4.2 Getting Your PCs Ready and Verifying Your Peripherals ............... 22  
4.3 Connecting Your Devices ................................................................. 23  
4.3.1 Monitor ................................................................................... 23  
4.3.2 USB Peripherals ...................................................................... 23  
4.3.3 PS/2 Keyboard and Mouse (Optional, USB Plus Only) ...... 24  
4.3.4 CPUs ........................................................................................ 26  
4.3.5 Remote-Control Module (Optional, USB Plus Only) .......... 26  
4.4 Powering the System ......................................................................... 27  
5. Operation ................................................................................................. 28  
5.1 Interpreting the Status Display at Power-Up ................................... 28  
5.2 Using the Front-Panel Pushbutton .................................................. 29  
5.2.1 Channel Selection .................................................................. 29  
5.2.2 Viewing the Firmware Revision .............................................. 29  
5.2.3 Autoscanning .......................................................................... 29  
5.3 Interpreting the Status Display During Normal Operation ........... 30  
5.4 Sending Commands from the PS/2 Keyboard (Optional,  
USB Plus Only) ............................................................................ 31  
5.5 Using the PS/2 Mouse (Optional, USB Plus Only) ........................ 32  
5.6 Using the Remote-Control Module (Optional, USB Plus Only) ... 33  
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SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
Contents (continued)  
Chapter  
Page  
6. Troubleshooting ...................................................................................... 34  
6.1 Things to Try ..................................................................................... 34  
6.2 Calling Black Box .............................................................................. 36  
6.3 Shipping and Packaging ................................................................... 36  
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CHAPTER 1: Specifications  
1. Specifications  
Operating System  
Required —  
An OS with full USB-switching support, such as  
Windows 98 Release 2 or later or Mac OS 8.6 or later,  
complete with USB drivers for all your devices  
Hardware  
Required —  
Monitor that works when directly connected to each of  
your CPUs (see Section 4.1);  
Keyboard and mouse that—if they are USB type—work  
when directly connected to each of your CPUs  
Compliance —  
Standards —  
Interfaces —  
CE (EN55022 Class B), FCC Part 15 Subpart J Class A,  
IC Class/classe A  
VGA, SVGA, XGA, or XGA-2 video; supports VESA DDC1  
and DDC2 monitors  
Video: VGA;  
Keyboard and mouse: Universal Serial Bus or (USB Plus  
models only) IBM PS/2 compatible;  
Other peripherals: Universal Serial Bus;  
Option port: Proprietary  
Resolution —  
Up to 1600 x 1280 noninterlaced at up to 100 MHz  
Video Bandwidth — 200 MHz  
Maximum  
Distance —  
From Switch to CPUs or USB peripherals: 5 m (16.4 ft.),  
but this distance can be extended if USB hubs are added;  
From ServSwitch USB Plus (KV822A or KV824A) to PS/2  
keyboard or mouse: 30 ft. (10 m)  
User Controls —  
(1) Front-mounted selector pushbutton;  
(1) Bottom-mounted 8-position DIP switch for  
configuration;  
USB Plus models only:  
Keyboard commands (from PS/2 keyboard only);  
Mouse-click functions (from PS/2 mouse only)  
Indicator —  
(1) Front-mounted 7-segment status display  
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SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
Connectors —  
All rear-mounted:  
All models:  
(1) HD15 female for attaching monitor;  
(3) USB Type A female for USB peripherals;  
HD15 female connectors for video from CPU:  
KV812A and KV822A: (2);  
KV814A and KV824A: (4);  
USB Type B female connectors for other I/O to/from  
CPU:  
KV812A and KV822A: (2);  
KV814A and KV824A: (4);  
KV822A and KV824A also have:  
(2) 6-pin mini-DIN female for attaching PS/2 type  
keyboard and mouse;  
(1) DB15 female for attaching Remote-Control Module  
Power —  
MTBF —  
From the included power supply:  
Input: 100 to 240 VAC, 50 to 60 Hz, from utility-power  
outlet, through detachable power cord and IEC 320  
male inlet, to external transformer;  
Output: 5 VDC at at least 2 amps from transformer to  
Switch;  
Consumption: 10 watts maximum  
500,000 hours (based on the historical reliability of  
similarly designed and manufactured products)  
Maximum  
Altitude—  
10,000 ft. (3048 m)  
Temperature  
Tolerance—  
32 to 104˚F (0 to 40˚C)  
Humidity  
Tolerance—  
5 to 60% noncondensing  
Enclosure —  
Size —  
Steel, aluminum, and plastic  
1.8"H (1U) x 10.3"W x 5.9"D (4.5 x 26.1 x 15 cm)  
2.2 lb. (1 kg)  
Weight —  
10  
 
CHAPTER 2: Introduction  
2. Introduction  
The ServSwitch™ USB and ServSwitch™ USB Plus are high-performance  
peripheral-sharing devices that support computers with VGA video outputs and  
Universal Serial Bus (USB) peripheral ports. You can switch between two fully USB-  
®
®
®
enabled IBM PC compatible or Apple Macintosh G3™ or G4™ CPUs using our  
2-port Switch models (our product codes KV812A and KV822A) or four such CPUs  
using our 4-port models (KV814A and KV824A).  
You can plug in a VGA-type monitor and as many as three USB peripherals (or  
more, if you add USB hubs) for these CPUs to share. Refer to Section 4.1 to find  
out what types of monitors and USB peripherals are supported, as well as what  
cables can be used and what distances can be covered.  
The ServSwitch USB Plus models (KV822A and KV824A), in addition to all of  
the capabilities of the regular ServSwitch USB models (KV812A and KV814A), have  
6-pin mini-DIN connectors to which you can hook up an optional PS/2 keyboard  
and mouse. (With these, you can control the Switch with keyboard commands and  
mouse-click functions.) The USB Plus models also have a DB15 “option port” into  
which you can plug a Remote-Control Module (KV6REM, specify length of the  
cable component) for channel switching up to 50 ft. (15.2 m) away.  
2.1 Features and Benefits  
Here are some of the useful features of all of the ServSwitch USB models, as well as  
some of the ways those features benefit you:  
• Control two to four USB-enabled CPUs, and switch their access to three or  
more USB peripherals, with one keyboard, monitor, and mouse.  
• Units are self-powered (that is, have their own power supply), so they’re sure to  
provide enough power on their ports. They also have USB hub functions built-in.  
• Supports VGA and related standards at resolutions up to 1600 x 1280, as well  
as VESA DDC1 and DDC2 video signaling.  
• USB peripherals can be almost any kind of devices: keyboards, mice, joysticks,  
microphones, speakers, etc.  
• You can switch CPU channels with the front-panel pushbutton and view the  
Switch’s status on the front-panel display.  
• Autoscan ports for easy monitoring of CPU activity.  
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SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
• Optional CPU/Server Cables (our product code EHN810) have a VGA strand  
bonded to a USB strand and make connecting your CPUs a snap.  
The ServSwitch USB Plus adds these exciting features:  
• You can attach a PS/2 keyboard and send the Switch keystroke commands.  
®
• You can attach a 3-button PS/2 mouse—including the Microsoft  
IntelliMouse™ and compatible models—and perform mouse switching.  
• Automatically restores PS/2 keyboard and mouse states when channel is  
changed.  
• Set various autoscan and hotkey options.  
• Attach optional Remote-Control Module for convenient remote switching.  
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CHAPTER 2: Introduction  
2.2 The Complete Package  
You should have received these components with your ServSwitch USB:  
• The ServSwitch USB itself.  
• Its power supply.  
• This manual.  
If you didn’t receive everything, or if anything arrived damaged, contact Black Box  
right away.  
The Switch’s Remote-Control Module (our product code KV6REM, specify  
®
length of cable component) includes the module itself and Velcro strips for  
mounting it.  
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SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
2.3 The ServSwitch USB Illustrated  
Status display (7-segment LED)  
Channel-selection button  
(also used to trigger firmware-version  
display and autoscanning; see Section 5.2)  
Figure 2-1. The front panel of all ServSwitch USB models.  
To CPU 1’s  
video card  
To CPU 2’s  
video card  
To monitor  
KV812A  
USER AND  
PERIPHERAL  
CONNECTIONS  
CPU  
CONNECTIONS  
2
1
5V DC, 2A  
To CPU 1’s  
USB port  
To USB peripherals  
To CPU 2’s  
USB port  
Power jack  
Figure 2-2. The rear panel of the 2-port ServSwitch USB (KV812A).  
To CPUs’  
video cards  
To monitor  
KV814A  
USER AND  
PERIPHERAL  
CONNECTIONS  
4
3
2
1
CPU  
CONNECTIONS  
5V DC, 2A  
To CPUs’  
USB ports  
Power jack  
To USB peripherals  
Figure 2-3. The rear panel of the 4-port ServSwitch USB (KV814A).  
14  
 
CHAPTER 2: Introduction  
To CPU 1’s  
video card  
To CPU 2’s  
video card  
To monitor  
KV822A  
USER AND  
PERIPHERAL  
CONNECTIONS  
CPU  
CONNECTIONS  
2
1
5V DC, 2A  
OPTIONS  
To PS/2 type  
keyboard  
and mouse  
To USB peripherals  
To CPUs’  
USB ports  
To Remote-  
Control Module  
Power  
jack  
Figure 2-4. The rear panel of the 2-port ServSwitch USB Plus (KV822A).  
To CPUs’  
video cards  
To monitor  
KV824A  
USER AND  
PERIPHERAL  
CONNECTIONS  
4
3
2
1
5V DC, 2A  
OPTIONS  
To PS/2 type  
keyboard  
and mouse  
To USB peripherals  
To CPUs’  
USB ports  
To Remote-  
Control Module  
Power  
jack  
Figure 2-5. The rear panel of the 4-port ServSwitch USB Plus (KV824A).  
To Options port  
on Switch  
Figure 2-6. The Remote-Control Module (KV6REM, specify length of cable  
component), an optional accessory for the USB Plus models.  
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SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
2.4 Safety Concerns  
As you prepare to install the ServSwitch USB, please keep these things in mind:  
• The Switch is for use in dry, oil-free indoor environments only.  
• Warning: The Switch’s power adapter contains no user-serviceable parts, but it  
does contain parts capable of delivering hazardous electric shocks—do not  
attempt to dismantle it!  
• Plug the power adapter into a socket outlet close to the Switch.  
• Do not use the Switch’s power adapter if its case becomes damaged, cracked,  
or broken, or if you suspect that it is not operating properly.  
• If the Switch’s power adapter stops working, replace it with a manufacturer-  
approved adapter of the same type only.  
16  
 
CHAPTER 3: Configuration  
3. Configuration  
The ServSwitch USB comes from the factory preset to default configuration  
settings which are suitable for most applications. You can set the Switch differently  
by moving the positions of the configuration DIP switch on the bottom of the  
ServSwitch USB, shown in Figure 3-1 below, to different settings.  
ON  
DIP  
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8  
Positions 1 and 2:  
Hotkey combination  
(ServSwitch USB Plus  
only; see Section 3.4)  
Position 8:  
Ports to scan and  
cycle to (see  
Section 3.3)  
Position 3:  
Mouse switching  
(ServSwitch USB Plus  
only; see Section 3.5)  
Position 7:  
Autoscan pause time  
(see Section 3.2)  
Position 4:  
Reserved for future  
use (do not change  
its setting)  
Positions 5 and 6:  
Enumeration guard time  
(see Section 3.1)  
Figure 3-1. The configuration DIP switch.  
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SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
3.1 Setting the Enumeration Guard Time (Positions 5 & 6)  
When devices are connected to or disconnected from a USB bus, the devices on  
that bus then need a certain amount of time for uninterrupted communication in  
order for the currently selected CPU to determine the new makeup of the bus—  
which USB devices are connected, what capabilities those devices have, etc. This  
process is called “enumeration.” The USB devices attached to the ServSwitch USB  
begin to perform enumeration each time that a new CPU channel remains  
selected for more than one second.  
If enumeration is interrupted before it’s complete, some or all of the devices on  
the bus can crash. So, starting one second after a new channel has been selected,  
the ServSwitch USB enforces a “guard time” during which no further switching is  
possible. The front-panel 7-segment display will begin blinking to show you that  
enumeration is underway and the guard time is in effect, and it will keep blinking  
faster and faster until the guard time expires.  
(You can still quickly cycle through the channels for as long as you like, because  
there is an initial one-second window after each channel change during which the  
ServSwitch USB is busy resynchronizing the video and doesn’t even attempt to  
communicate with the computer’s USB port. Also note that enumeration is not  
performed during autoscanning; video from each CPU is displayed, but no USB  
communication occurs until you stop the scan at a particular port.)  
The factory-default enumeration guard time is 2 seconds; the other possible  
settings are 4, 8, and 16 seconds. The bus will probably only need two seconds if  
you only have a USB keyboard and mouse attached to it, but as you add more  
®
peripherals (especially hubs and Zip drives), enumeration will require more time  
to finish. We suggest that you time the process—wait until the CPU’s on-screen  
hourglass or clock stops running and all of your USB devices return to normal  
operation—then set the ServSwitch USB to use the shortest guard time that’s still  
longer than the actual enumeration time.  
To set the enumeration guard time, move positions 5 and 6 of the DIP switch on  
the bottom of the ServSwitch USB to your desired setting:  
Guard Time  
Position 5  
OFF (down)  
ON (up)  
Position 6  
OFF (down)  
OFF (down)  
ON (up)  
Two seconds (default)  
Four seconds  
Eight seconds  
OFF (down)  
ON (up)  
Sixteen seconds  
ON (up)  
18  
 
CHAPTER 3: Configuration  
3.2 Setting the Autoscan Pause Time (Position 7)  
You can set how long the ServSwitch USB will pause to display each attached CPU’s  
video when you autoscan the CPUs (known as the “pause time” or “dwell time”; for  
more information on autoscanning, see Section 5.2.3). To do so, move position 7  
of the DIP switch on the bottom of the ServSwitch USB to OFF (down) for two  
seconds (the factory-default setting) or to ON (up) for five seconds.  
3.3 Setting Which Ports to Cycle To and Autoscan (Position 8)  
When you manually cycle through CPU channels and when the ServSwitch USB  
autoscans (see Section 5.2.3), the Switch will either stop/pause at each active CPU  
port (the factory default) or at each and every CPU port whether it’s active (or  
even occupied) or not. To set which ports the Switch cycles to and scans, move  
position 8 of the DIP switch on the bottom of the ServSwitch USB to OFF (down)  
to have the Switch stop at the active ports only (the factory-default setting) or to  
ON (up) to have the Switch stop at all ports.  
Even if you set your ServSwitch USB Plus for active ports only, it will still switch to  
an empty CPU port if you send it a command from the PS/2 keyboard to switch  
directly to that particular port number.  
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SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
3.4 Setting the Hotkey Sequence (USB Plus with PS/2 Keyboard Only,  
Positions 1 & 2)  
You can access several of the ServSwitch USB Plus’s main functions (such as CPU-  
channel selection and autoscanning) by sending commands from a PS/2 type  
keyboard attached to the Switch’s PS/2 keyboard port (refer to Section 5.4—the  
Switch cannot recognize commands from a USB keyboard). Each command must  
start with a “hotkey sequence” (series of keystrokes) that alerts the Switch to  
interpret the keyboard data that follows it as a command.  
The default hotkey sequence is [Ctrl] and [Alt] pressed simultaneously. If any of  
the applications on computers attached to the Switch require this sequence to  
trigger important application-specific functions, you will have to either send that  
sequence to the application from an attached USB keyboard (because the Switch  
will not recognize hotkey sequences sent from USB keyboards), or you’ll have to  
change the Switch’s hotkey sequence.  
To change the hotkey sequence, move positions 1 and 2 of the DIP switch on the  
bottom of the ServSwitch USB Plus to your desired setting:  
PS/2 Keyboard Hotkeys  
[Ctrl] and [Alt] (default)  
[Ctrl] and [Shift]  
Position 1  
OFF (down)  
OFF (down)  
ON (up)  
Position 2  
OFF (down)  
ON (up)  
[Alt] and [Shift]  
OFF (down)  
ON (up)  
No hotkeys (PS/2 keyboard  
commands disabled)  
ON (up)  
3.5 Enabling/Disabling Mouse Switching (USB Plus Only, Position 3)  
In the ServSwitch USB Plus’s factory-default state, you can use a three-button PS/2  
mouse or IntelliMouse attached to the Switch’s PS/2 mouse port to cycle through  
the Switch’s CPU channels; see Section 5.5. If you don’t want to use this feature—  
particularly if it’s going to conflict with mouse-controlled application functions—  
you can disable it.  
To enable mouse switching, move position 3 of the DIP switch on the bottom of  
the ServSwitch USB Plus to OFF (down, the factory-default setting). To disable  
mouse switching, move position 3 to ON (up).  
20  
 
CHAPTER 4: Installation  
4. Installation  
4.1 What Else You’ll Need  
You’ll need to have these things before you can install your ServSwitch USB:  
• Cables to connect the ServSwitch USB to the video and USB ports of each of  
your PCs. We recommend our bonded VGA/USB cable, product code  
EHN810.  
• A monitor with a standard VGA/SVGA (HD15) connector that will work when  
connected directly to each of your PCs. The ServSwitch USB supports low- and  
high-resolution monitors.  
• A standard PC compatible keyboard. With regular ServSwitch USB models, this  
must be a USB keyboard; with ServSwitch USB Plus models, this can be a  
standard PC/AT or PS/2 style keyboard (it must be such a keyboard if you want  
to switch channels with it). (If you want to use a PC/AT keyboard with a 5-pin  
DIN connector, you’ll need a standard PC/AT to PS/2 keyboard adapter—our  
product code FA212—to connect it to the ServSwitch USB Plus.)  
• A standard PC compatible mouse (if you’re going to use a mouse at all—the  
Switch can operate without a mouse connected). With regular ServSwitch USB  
models, this must be a USB mouse; with ServSwitch USB Plus models, this can  
®
be a PS/2 style two- or three-button Microsoft or Logitech compatible mouse  
or a Microsoft IntelliMouse compatible mouse. If you want to use the PS/2  
mouse to switch channels on the ServSwitch USB Plus, you will need a three-  
button mouse or an IntelliMouse. (The Switch supports other “Internet mice”  
compatible with the IntelliMouse—fitted with a wheel or other scrolling  
control, and sometimes additional buttons—including the Logitech  
®
®
®
MouseMan +, Genius NetMouse , and Genius NetMouse Pro.)  
• Suitable USB software drivers for all of your peripherals.  
21  
 
SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
4.2 Getting Your PCs Ready and Verifying Your Peripherals  
Before you begin installing your system, check the OS version(s) you have installed  
®
®
on your computers. If you’re running Windows 98 or Mac OS, we highly  
recommend that you upgrade to the latest version of the operating system, because  
the USB handling has tended to become more reliable with each new revision. You  
should upgrade Windows 98 to at least Release 2, and, in particular, you must  
upgrade Mac OS to at least version 8.6; Mac CPUs with earlier OS versions tend to  
hang following about 50 switch cycles. Other operating systems, such as  
®
®
®
®
®
®
Windows 2000, HP-UX , Linux , SCO UNIX , and Novell NetWare , now have  
USB support or are expected to add it soon. However, DOS, Windows 3.x,  
Windows 95, and Windows NT either do not support USB or do not support it  
adequately.  
You will probably also need to configure any IBM PC compatible computers you  
plan to attach so that they will accept USB peripherals. Unfortunately, at the time  
of this writing, most PCs can’t automatically detect the presence of a USB keyboard  
or other USB devices without initial detection of, or input from, a regular PS/2  
keyboard. Some such CPUs will require you to attach an actual PS/2 keyboard to  
them, because you have to do an initial operating-system configuration to make the  
CPU USB-aware and to make sure that the appropriate drivers are installed. But  
many CPUs just need to “see” a PS/2 keyboard, and then will autodetect the USB  
keyboard; while you boot up these CPUs, you can simply plug in a PS/2 keyboard  
emulator such as our Keyboard and Mouse GHOST Emulator, product code  
AC245A, instead of attaching a real PS/2 keyboard.  
It is also probably a good idea at this point to directly attach all of the USB  
peripherals you plan on using to each of your CPUs, load the drivers, and make  
sure that the devices work correctly when they are directly plugged into the CPUs.  
This way, if there are problems with your equipment, cabling, or drivers, you can  
find them before you put your whole system together.  
22  
 
CHAPTER 4: Installation  
4.3 Connecting Your Devices  
As you connect your equipment, make sure that your ServSwitch USB and (if  
possible) all the devices you want to attach to it are turned off and unplugged.  
4.3.1 MONITOR  
The shared monitor in your system must work when directly attached to any of  
your computers, which includes being able to display all of the types of video that  
they can output.  
If this monitor’s video cable has an HD15 male connector, you can plug it right  
into the ServSwitch USB’s monitor port; this is the HD15 female connector labeled  
with the picture of a monitor in the teal-colored “USER AND PERIPHERAL  
CONNECTIONS” area on the rear panel of the Switch. If the monitor is truly  
compatible with all of your CPUs but has some other kind of connector, you will  
need a video adapter or converter of some kind; call Black Box for technical support.  
4.3.2 USB PERIPHERALS  
Use standard USB cables such as our product code USB01 to attach your USB  
keyboard, mouse, scanner, printer, speaker, microphone, camera, hub, or other  
peripherals to the ServSwitch USB’s user-side USB ports. (These are the three  
Type A female USB connectors labeled with a triple branching icon in the teal-  
colored “USER AND PERIPHERAL CONNECTIONS” area on the rear panel of  
the Switch.) A few things you need to keep in mind as you attach these peripherals:  
Important: Normally, you would not be able to press the Power key on Mac  
USB keyboards to boot CPUs attached to the keyboards through USB switches  
or hubs, because they don’t support the special Mac power circuit. The  
ServSwitch USB does support this circuit, but only on the rightmost of its three  
USB peripheral ports. So if you want to be able to boot an attached Mac  
computer from your Mac USB keyboard, you must plug the keyboard into that  
rightmost port.  
• Normally, cable must not be run farther than 5 m (16.4 ft.) from the Switch to  
your USB peripherals. However, if you are using USB hubs, the total cable  
distance from the Switch through your hub(s) to the peripherals can be longer  
as long as the peripherals are not more than 5 m (16.4 ft.) from the hub they  
are attached to.  
• Because the Switch provides the USB-standard 500 mA on its USB ports, you  
can attach one layer of nonpowered hubs to the Switch. Just remember not to  
cascade any nonpowered hubs from other nonpowered hubs; your USB bus  
will fail if you do.  
23  
 
SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
• In applications that include both IBM compatible and Mac G3 or G4 type  
CPUs, a single keyboard—either PC/Mac/generic USB type or (with  
ServSwitch USB Plus models) PS/2 type—should suffice for most of the  
activities you’ll want to do on either platform. You just have to be aware of the  
cross-platform mappings of the keys, shown in Table 4-1 on the next page.  
Also, when you use a PC keyboard, the functions of the Mac keyboard’s Power  
key will not be available.  
• You can use the left mouse button on a PC USB type or (with ServSwitch USB  
Plus models) PS/2 type mouse with two or three buttons to perform any Mac  
mouse-click function. However, you cannot use a single-button Mac mouse to  
perform the PC mouse-click functions that require the center or right mouse  
button, so we recommend that you use a PC mouse in a mixed PC/Mac system.  
• We do not recommend attaching more than one USB video camera at a time  
to the system. Videocams make heavy demands on USB bandwidth; it can be  
very difficult for a single bus to properly support two or more of them  
simultaneously.  
4.3.3 PS/2 KEYBOARD AND MOUSE (OPTIONAL, USB PLUS ONLY)  
If your PS/2 keyboard has a 6-pin mini-DIN male connector, you can plug it right  
into the ServSwitch USB Plus’s PS/2 keyboard port; this is the 6-pin mini-DIN  
female connector labeled with the picture of a keyboard in the teal-colored “USER  
AND PERIPHERAL CONNECTIONS” area on the rear panel of the Switch. If the  
keyboard is a PC/AT type with a 5-pin DIN male connector, you’ll need a keyboard  
adapter such as our product code FA211 to make this connection. If your keyboard  
is really PS/2 compatible but has some other type of connector, call Black Box for  
technical support.  
If your PS/2 mouse has a 6-pin mini-DIN male connector, you can plug it right  
into the ServSwitch USB Plus’s PS/2 mouse port; this is the 6-pin mini-DIN female  
connector labeled with the picture of a mouse in the teal-colored “USER AND  
PERIPHERAL CONNECTIONS” area on the rear panel of the Switch. If your  
mouse is really PS/2 compatible but has some other type of connector, call Black  
Box for technical support. The Switch does not support PC/AT type RS-232 serial  
mice.  
The PS/2 keyboard is capable of performing most of the activities you’ll want to  
do on either the PC or Mac platform—you just have to be aware of the cross-  
platform mappings of the keys, which are shown in Table 4-1 on the next page.  
Also, when you use a PC keyboard, the functions of the Mac keyboard’s Power key  
will not be available.  
24  
 
CHAPTER 4: Installation  
Table 4-1. Keyboard Key Mappings  
Generally, USB keyboards have uniform position-based codes for their keys, so any keys that  
occupy more or less the same positions and perform more or less the same functions across  
platforms will map one-to-one. However, certain keys available on certain keyboards do not  
correspond well or are not available on other types of keyboards, so the ServSwitch USB maps  
the more important of these as shown below.  
On the IBM PC 104/  
105-key keyboard,  
the ___ key:  
Emulates the  
Apple keyboard’s  
___ key:  
Left Ctrl  
Left Control  
Left Windows Start (  
Left Alt  
Right Alt or Alt Graph  
Right Windows Start (  
Right Ctrl  
)
Left Command (  
Left Option (alt)  
Right Option (alt)  
Right Command (  
Right Control  
)
)
)
On the Apple  
keyboard, the  
___ key:  
Emulates the  
PC 104/105-key  
keyboard’s ___ key:  
Left Ctrl  
Left Control  
Left Option (alt)  
Left Alt  
Left Command (  
Right Command (  
Right Option (alt)  
Right Control  
)
Left Windows Start (  
Right Windows Start (  
Right Alt or Alt Graph  
Right Ctrl  
)
)
)
Things to keep in mind:  
1. Do not use an older 101/102-key PS/2 keyboard with the ServSwitch USB Plus when you  
have any Macintosh computers attached, because 101/102-key PC keyboards cannot  
emulate the Command ( ) keys on the Apple keyboard.  
2. The Power () key on the Mac keyboard does not map to anything on a PC keyboard,  
nor does anything on a PC keyboard map to it. Similarly, the Windows Application (  
)
key on a PC keyboard does not map to anything on a Mac keyboard, nor does anything  
on a Mac keyboard map to it. The functions of these keys are simply not available when  
you use a keyboard designed for the other platform.  
25  
 
SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
4.3.4 CPUS  
To connect your CPUs to the ServSwitch USB, you’ll need to run cable from the  
Switch to their USB ports and VGA video ports. You can do this in one of two ways:  
• We strongly recommend that you use our special bonded two-to-two cable (our  
product code EHN810, specify length). It has a high-quality VGA video strand  
bonded to a USB strand. Attach the end of this cable with a Type A male plug  
and an HD15 male plug to the Type A female USB port and the HD15 female  
video port on your computer. Attach the other end of this cable to one of the  
matched numbered Type B female CPU USB ports and HD15 female CPU  
video ports in the gray-colored “CPU CONNECTIONS” area on the rear panel  
of the Switch.  
• You can also use separate video-extension cables and USB cables. Run a high-  
quality HD15 male to HD15 male VGA video-extension cable such as our  
product code EVNPS05-MM (specify length) from the CPU’s HD15 female  
video port to one of the numbered HD15 female CPU video ports in the gray-  
colored “CPU CONNECTIONS” area on the rear panel of the Switch. Then  
run a USB cable such as our product code USB01 from the CPU’s Type A  
female USB port to the Type B female CPU USB port on the rear of the Switch  
that has the same number as the CPU video port you just hooked up.  
Be sure to use high-grade cabling for your CPU-to-Switch video connection. Cable  
made to lower standards often doesn’t carry video signals adequately. In particular,  
Macintosh video is very sensitive to the cabling environment; lesser-quality cable  
can cause Mac video to degrade badly.  
If one of your CPUs outputs VGA or another type of video that the ServSwitch  
USB supports, but its video port is not an HD15 connector, please call Black Box  
for technical support.  
4.3.5 REMOTE-CONTROL MODULE (OPTIONAL, USB PLUS ONLY)  
If you’d like to be able to change the CPU channel on your ServSwitch USB Plus  
from farther away than normal, you can plug a Remote-Control Module (RCM for  
short, our product code KV6REM—specify the length of its cable component) into  
the DB15 female connector labeled “OPTIONS” on the rear panel of the Switch.  
Once you make this attachment, you can press the button on the RCM when the  
ServSwitch USB is operating to switch to the next CPU; the number of the  
currently selected CPU channel will be displayed in the RCM’s 7-segment LED  
display.  
26  
 
CHAPTER 4: Installation  
4.4 Powering the System  
Once you’ve installed your ServSwitch USB and attached your equipment to it, you  
need to apply power to the Switch system. Plug the power supply’s output cord into  
the power jack on the back of the ServSwitch USB, then attach the input cord to  
the power-supply transformer’s IEC 320 inlet, then plug the input cord into utility  
(mains) power. The Switch should start operating immediately; it has no ON/OFF  
switch. Now plug in and power on your monitor and any other powered  
peripherals. Lastly, plug in and power on your CPUs.  
Always apply power to the ServSwitch USB first, then power on the monitor and  
each of the computers; if you power up the computers before the Switch, the  
system will probably not work. In particular, some Mac computers that power up  
without a monitor attached either directly or through the Switch will go into a “no  
video” mode and will simply not output any video signal. There is no way to correct  
this situation; a Mac that powers up with no video must be rebooted.  
27  
 
SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
5. Operation  
This chapter explains the general operation of the ServSwitch USB. We  
recommend that you read this chapter carefully before starting to use the Switch.  
5.1 Interpreting the Status Display at Power-Up  
When you plug in the ServSwitch USB to power it up, its front-panel 7-segment  
display will show one of three things:  
• If it’s not actually getting any power, the display will be blank.  
• If it’s getting power and its front-panel pushbutton isn’t pressed, it will select  
CPU channel #1; the display will blink “1” while the USB “enumeration  
process” occurs—see Section 3.1—then will be solidly lit “1”.  
• If it’s getting power and its pushbutton is pressed, the display will show the  
firmware revision (see Section 5.2.2), then blinking and solid “1” as above.  
For the meaning of this display after power-up, see Section 5.3.)  
DISPLAY SHOWS:  
Blank  
MEANING:  
Switch is not receiving enough  
power to operate  
Flashing number “1”  
Switch has powered up normally  
and is performing enumeration  
Alternating letter “F”s and  
numbers  
Switch is displaying its firmware  
revision  
Steadily lit number “1”  
Switch has powered up normally  
and is ready to operate  
Figure 5-1. The front-panel status display at power-up.  
28  
 
CHAPTER 5: Operation  
5.2 Using the Front-Panel Pushbutton  
5.2.1 CHANNEL SELECTION  
During normal ServSwitch USB operation, you can use the Switch’s front-panel  
pushbutton to select which CPU channel (CPU port) you want to access and  
control. Press and release the key once to select the next higher-numbered CPU  
channel; press and release the key repeatedly to manually cycle through the  
channels. Bear in mind that depending on how position 8 of the Switch’s DIP  
switch is set, the Switch will change to either (a) the next active channel or (b) the  
next channel in sequence, regardless of whether the channel is active or not (see  
Section 3.3). One second after you switch to a new channel, enumeration is  
performed (see Section 3.1).  
5.2.2 VIEWING THE FIRMWARE REVISION  
For technical-support purposes, it might be necessary to find out the firmware-  
release version of the control software in your ServSwitch USB. Before calling Black  
Box Tech Support about a problem, turn off the Switch and then turn it back on  
while holding down the front-panel pushbutton (hold down the button for five  
seconds). This will cause the Switch to briefly show the letter “F” alternating with  
the firmware’s version number, one digit at a time, on its front-panel 7-segment  
display, followed by the equals sign (“=”). For example, if the Switch is using  
firmware revision 1.02, it will display the letter “F”, then the digit “1”, then the  
letter “F” again, then the digit “0”, then the letter “F” one more time, then the  
digit “2”, and finally the “=” character. After displaying the firmware revision, the  
Switch will select CPU channel #1 and perform enumeration (see Section 3.1), and  
then the display will begin showing what it normally does (see Section 5.3).  
5.2.3 AUTOSCANNING  
To have the ServSwitch USB start “autoscanning,” press the Switch’s front-panel  
pushbutton and hold it down for five seconds. The Switch will disconnect the USB  
bus and then cycle through your CPU channels continuously. While it does this it  
will show a circling pattern on its front-panel display (see the next section) and will  
briefly show each channel’s video signal (or lack of video signal) on the shared  
monitor. You can stop the scan at a particular port by pressing and releasing the  
front-panel pushbutton when the scan reaches that port. (With the ServSwitch USB  
Plus, you can also stop the scan by sending a command from the PS/2 keyboard  
[see Section 5.4], by clicking the PS/2 mouse to the next higher or lower port [see  
Section 5.5], or, if you have a Remote-Control Module, by pressing its SELECT  
button [see Section 5.6].) When you stop the scan, enumeration is performed (see  
Section 3.1) and then full USB access and control resumes. You can set how long  
the Switch pauses on each CPU channel, and whether the Switch includes empty  
channels, when it autoscans; see Sections 3.2 and 3.3 respectively.  
29  
 
SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
5.3 Interpreting the Status Display During Normal Operation  
The ServSwitch USB’s front-panel 7-segment status display usually shows the  
number of the currently selected computer channel. On the ServSwitch USB Plus  
models, the dot LED alongside it also flashes in response to data from the shared  
PS/2 keyboard or mouse, as shown in the top illustration in Figure 5-2 below.  
When you change CPU channels, this display will flash as shown in the second  
illustration below, more and more quickly, until the USB “enumeration” process is  
complete (see Section 3.1); until the display stops flashing, the channel cannot be  
changed again.  
If you hold in the Switch’s front-panel pushbutton for five seconds, the Switch  
starts autoscanning (see Section 5.2.3). The display will alternately (a) show the  
current channel number and (b) light each of its outer six LED segments, one  
after the other, in a clockwise sequence, as shown in the third illustration.  
DISPLAY SHOWS:  
MEANING:  
Channel number 1 through 4,  
steadily lit  
That channel is selected  
As above, with flashing dot in  
lower right-hand corner  
USB Plus models only: Switch is  
receiving PS/2 keyboard or  
mouse data  
Zero  
Video is disabled, but not controls  
Channel number 1 through 4,  
flashing  
Switch is performing  
enumeration  
Alternately, channel number and  
clockwise progression of lit  
segments  
Switch is in autoscan mode,  
scanning from channel to  
channel, pausing at each one  
for user-selected period  
Figure 5-2. The front-panel status display during regular operation.  
30  
 
CHAPTER 5: Operation  
5.4 Sending Commands from the PS/2 Keyboard (Optional, USB Plus Only)  
You can control many functions on the ServSwitch USB Plus—such as CPU-  
channel selection, autoscanning, or disabling video—from an attached PS/2  
keyboard, using commands triggered with the Switch’s currently selected hotkey  
combination. All of the hotkey-control commands are invoked by holding down  
the one or two hotkeys and then pressing a command key. By default, the two  
hotkeys are [Ctrl] and [Alt], although other keystroke combinations can be  
selected (see Section 3.4). (The Switch cannot recognize commands from USB  
keyboards, because hardware and software have not yet become advanced enough  
for a switch to be able to isolate and absorb individual keyboard characters from a  
USB data stream on the fly.)  
Normally, when you send a hotkey command, you have to release the hotkeys  
and the command key before you can send another one. The one exception to this  
rule is {Hotkeys} + [Tab], the “switch to next CPU channel” command; you can  
“tab through” the channels by holding down the hotkeys and repeatedly pressing  
[Tab].  
It is particularly easy to enter commands with extended keyboards on which  
additional keys can be programmed to act as combinations of other keys. PS/2-  
interface versions of such keyboards are supplied with many Gateway™ computers.  
If you program one of these “spare” keys to produce both hotkey keystrokes, or if  
you program a set of these keys to produce the hotkey and channel-number  
keystrokes, you’ll be able to select channels and do other things with as few as one  
or two keypresses.  
The hotkey commands are summarized below. Note that to generate the  
numeric digits in the commands that contain them, you need to press the number  
keys on the top row of the main section of the keyboard, not the number keys on  
the keypad; the Switch will not recognize keypad numbers.  
• Use {Hotkeys} + [x], where x is either one or two (on the 2-port models) or a  
number from one to four (on the 4-port models), to switch to the  
corresponding CPU channel. If you try to select a channel with a higher  
number than the Switch has ports, the Switch will ignore the command and  
pass it through to the currently selected computer.  
• Use {Hotkeys} + [Tab] to switch to the next higher-numbered channel. This  
channel can either be the next in sequence or the next active channel,  
depending on how the Switch is configured (see Section 3.3).  
31  
 
SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
• Use {Hotkeys} + [A] to have the Switch start autoscanning (briefly displaying  
the video from each CPU channel in turn). You can control whether or not  
the Switch scans empty channels and how long it pauses at each channel; see  
Sections 3.3 and 3.4. To stop autoscanning, simply select a fixed channel by  
pressing and releasing the Switch’s front-panel pushbutton, sending a channel-  
selection command from the PS/2 keyboard, clicking to a higher or lower  
channel with the PS/2 mouse, or, if you have a Remote-Control Module, by  
pressing its SELECT button. For more about autoscanning, see Section 5.2.3.  
• Use {Hotkeys} + [0] to select nonexistent “channel zero” in order to shut off  
the video output from the Switch to the shared monitor. The Switch’s front-  
panel display will show “0”. You can re-enable video by selecting another  
channel in any of the available ways.  
Examples of common hotkey commands (assuming the hotkeys are [Ctrl] and  
[Alt]):  
To select channel 2:  
Press and hold [Ctrl] and [Alt], press and release [2], release [Ctrl] and [Alt].  
To “tab through” channels:  
Press and hold [Ctrl] and [Alt], press and release [Tab] (repeat as many times  
as necessary), release [Ctrl] and [Alt].  
5.5 Using the PS/2 Mouse (Optional, USB Plus Only)  
Yet another convenient way to select CPU channels on the ServSwitch USB Plus is  
through a three-button PS/2 type mouse, if this feature is enabled (see  
Section 3.5). Simply hold down the central mouse button or “wheel” button, then  
click on the left-hand mouse button to switch to the next higher-numbered  
channel or the right-hand button to switch to the next lower-numbered channel.  
Keep in mind that the “next channel” will be either the next channel in sequence  
or the next active channel, depending on how the Switch is configured (see  
Section 3.3).  
If you disconnect the shared PS/2 mouse from the ServSwitch USB Plus by  
accident during operation, the mouse will not work right when you plug it back in.  
To avoid having to reboot the entire system in this situation, the Switch has an  
automatic mouse-recovery system. With the PS/2 mouse disconnected, you can  
trigger the recovery system by changing the channel using the Switch’s front-panel  
pushbutton or the keyboard hotkeys. The ServSwitch USB Plus detects that the  
mouse has been disconnected and triggers the recovery system. Plug in the PS/2  
mouse and the Switch will re-initialize it.  
32  
 
CHAPTER 5: Operation  
5.6 Using the Remote-Control Module (Optional, USB Plus Only)  
An optional Remote-Control Module (“RCM” for short, our product code  
KV6REM, specify the length of the cable component) is also available for the  
ServSwitch USB Plus. It’s a small hand-held accessory—with a SELECT key that  
mimics the Switch’s pushbutton and an identical copy of the Switch’s front-panel  
display—whose cord you can plug into the Switch’s OPTIONS port. This is  
particularly useful in applications such as training and demonstration when you  
need to be able to switch CPU channels while standing or walking some distance  
from the Switch and its other attached user equipment. The RCM can be  
conveniently attached to most surfaces with the included Velcro strips so you can  
have channel information and channel-selection control at your fingertips.  
33  
 
SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
6. Troubleshooting  
6.1 Things To Try  
This section suggests possible answers for a number of problems that people  
sometimes encounter when trying to operate the ServSwitch USB. If the suggested  
actions don’t solve your problem, or if you don’t see a listing for the type of trouble  
you’re having, contact Black Box Technical Support as described in Section 6.2.  
The Switch doesn’t seem to work with my PCs that run DOS, Windows 3.x,  
Windows 95, or Windows NT.  
USB support in these operating systems ranges from inadequate to nonexistent.  
You will need to upgrade the operating systems on those PCs. See Section 4.2.  
The Switch doesn’t accept hotkey commands from my USB keyboard.  
The Switch can only accept hotkey commands from a PS/2 keyboard attached to a  
ServSwitch USB Plus. Unfortunately, the Switch can’t recognize commands from  
USB keyboards. See Section 5.4.  
My PCs don’t seem to recognize my USB peripherals.  
Make sure the operating-system versions they are running actually support USB  
properly. Even if they do, you might need to attach a regular PS/2-type keyboard  
or keyboard emulator before they will be able to recognize USB devices. See  
Section 4.2.  
I don’t get any video signal from my Mac CPUs.  
When you power up your ServSwitch USB system, make sure to power up the  
Switch or a directly attached monitor before you boot your Mac CPUs. Mac CPUs  
that don’t sense a video device when they boot up often simply turn off their video  
output. See Section 4.4.  
My computers crash at odd intervals.  
Make sure the operating-system versions they are running actually support USB  
properly (see Section 4.2). If they do, call Black Box Technical Support.  
My computers or USB devices crash almost every time I switch between CPUs.  
Make sure the operating-system versions they are running actually support USB  
properly (see Section 4.2). If they do, the enumeration guard time that your  
ServSwitch USB is set for is probably too short (see Section 3.1); see how long it  
takes your system to enumerate and set the guard time longer than that.  
34  
 
CHAPTER 6: Troubleshooting  
The Power key on my Mac USB keyboard doesn’t seem to work.  
For its Power key to function properly, a Mac USB keyboard must be plugged into  
the ServSwitch USB’s rightmost USB-peripherals port (see Section 4.3.2).  
I can’t do any of the Mac Power-key functions with my PC USB or PS/2 keyboard.  
Unfortunately true. For Power-key functions, you must plug a Mac USB keyboard,  
at least temporarily, into the ServSwitch USB’s rightmost USB-peripherals port (see  
Section 4.3.2).  
My video quality is poor (smearing, fuzziness, rippling, etc.).  
Use shielded or screened coaxial video cables to connect your monitor and CPUs  
to the ServSwitch USB.  
ServSwitch USB Plus only: My PS/2 mouse doesn’t move the cursor/pointer.  
Check the mouse connection to the Switch; if it’s OK, try changing the CPU  
channel to recover the mouse (see Section 5.5).  
ServSwitch USB Plus only: My PS/2 or PC/AT type keyboard doesn’t function when  
it’s attached to the Switch, or functions only intermittently. The Num Lock LED  
doesn’t always light when the Num Lock key is pressed.  
Some older keyboards were designed for use with specific computers and are not  
truly PC/AT or PS/2 compatible. These are not common, but if you’re having  
problems like this and you’re using an old keyboard, try a newer keyboard.  
ServSwitch USB Plus only: Just using my PS/2 mouse normally causes the Switch to  
change the CPU channel unexpectedly.  
Some cheaper PS/2 mice are not fully compatible with the ServSwitch USB Plus  
and can lose data, which—if mouse switching is enabled (see Sections 3.5 and  
5.5)—sometimes causes the Switch to interpret a data stream as a channel-change  
®
®
request. Try using a Microsoft, Logitech, IBM, Compaq , or Hewlett-Packard  
mouse instead.  
35  
 
SERVSWITCH™ USB AND USB PLUS  
6.2 Calling Black Box  
If you determine that your ServSwitch USB is malfunctioning, do not attempt to alter  
or repair the unit. It contains no user-serviceable parts. Contact Black Box Technical  
Support at 724-746-5500.  
Before you do, make a record of the history of the problem. We will be able to  
provide more efficient and accurate assistance if you have a complete description,  
including:  
• the nature and duration of the problem;  
• when the problem occurs;  
• the components involved in the problem—that is, what types of computers,  
what types of peripherals, make and model of monitor, etc.;  
• any particular application that, when used, appears to create the problem or  
make it worse; and  
• the results of any testing you’ve already done.  
6.3 Shipping and Packaging  
If you need to transport or ship your ServSwitch USB:  
• Package it carefully. We recommend that you use the original container.  
• If you are shipping the ServSwitch USB for repair, make sure you include its  
power supply. If you are returning the Switch, make sure you include  
everything you received with it. Before you ship, contact Black Box to get a  
Return Authorization (RA) number.  
36  
 
NOTES  
 
NOTES  
 
Customer Support Information:  
FREE tech support 24 hours a day, 7 days a week: Call 724-746-5500 or fax 724-746-0746.  
Mailing address: Black Box Corporation, 1000 Park Dr., Lawrence, PA 15055-1018  
World-Wide Web: www.blackbox.com • E-mail: [email protected]  
 
© Copyright 2001. Black Box Corporation. All rights reserved.  

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