Because it is an OEM board, finding an official, standalone manual can be difficult. This comprehensive guide serves as your complete manual, covering technical specifications, layout diagrams, jumper settings, and troubleshooting steps. Technical Specifications

Front panel USB 2.0 headers (supports 4 additional USB ports)

Properly connecting your internal cables ensures your system powers on and functions correctly. Front Panel Header Pinout

While Windows 7 and Windows 10 may install generic drivers automatically, legacy ATI graphics drivers might require manual installation using "Compatibility Mode."

The board provides legacy expansion options suitable for the XP/Vista era. 1 slot (for graphics card upgrades). PCIe x1: 1 slot. PCI Slots: 2x 32-bit PCI slots. SATA: 4x SATA I (1.5 Gb/s) connectors. IDE/PATA: 1x Floppy interface, 1x IDE interface. USB: 8x USB 2.0 ports (4 rear, 4 via headers). FireWire: 1x IEEE 1394 FireWire 400 port. 4. Rear I/O Panel Layout The rear I/O panel typically includes: 1x PS/2 Keyboard port 1x PS/2 Mouse port 1x VGA (Analog) monitor output 1x Parallel Port (Printer) 1x RJ-45 LAN port 4x USB 2.0 Ports 1x S/PDIF Output Audio Jacks (Line-in, Line-out, Microphone) 5. Troubleshooting: Jumpers and BIOS

Any specific you hear during boot

Inspect the board for bulging or leaking electrolytic capacitors (common in hardware from this era). If capacitors are damaged, the board requires replacement or soldering repair. System Time Resets Constantly

Follow these steps to safely assemble or re-seat your RC415T-AM motherboard. 1. Preparing the Case

The RC415T-AM motherboard is a legacy Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) motherboard manufactured by ECS (Elitegroup Computer Systems). It was widely used in mid-2000s desktop computers, most notably within the Acer Aspire T660 and various Packard Bell iMedia desktop series.

Move the plastic jumper cap from pins 1-2 (Normal) to pins 2-3 (Clear) for 15 seconds. Return the jumper cap to pins 1-2. Plug in the power cable and boot the machine. ❓ Troubleshooting Common Issues