What is internal USB jack for?

  • Thread starter Thread starter mm
  • Start date Start date
M

mm

What is an internal USB jack for?

Running XP SP3, using an ASUS mobo that had only usb1.1, so I bought a
USB2 card a few months ago and everything is fine.

It has another USB jack on the card, not the mounting bracket, and
since it's hard to reach the back of the computer and the side cover
was open, I inserted a flash drive into the port. Everything stopped,
the cursor wouldn't move, the keys didn't work, the icon for a USB
device didn't show up.

It's possible my belly hit the keyboard :-( , but I would expect
things to soon get back to normal if that were the problem.

Had to use Reset button to warm start the computer.

Now I'm afraid to plug anything into that internal port?/jack.

Documentation with the card didn't even mention it existed. I wasn't
sure it was even a jack until I read something that made a vague
reference to an internal jack.

What is it for?

P.S. Flashdrive has worked fine in the past and has worked fine since,
plugged into a jack on the mounting bracket.

Thanks a lot.
 
Its for connecting a front mounted USB port from the case

peter



If you find a posting or message from me offensive,inappropriate
or disruptive,please ignore it.
If you dont know how to ignore a posting complain
to me and I will be only too happy to demonstrate :-)
"mm" wrote in message
What is an internal USB jack for?

Running XP SP3, using an ASUS mobo that had only usb1.1, so I bought a
USB2 card a few months ago and everything is fine.

It has another USB jack on the card, not the mounting bracket, and
since it's hard to reach the back of the computer and the side cover
was open, I inserted a flash drive into the port. Everything stopped,
the cursor wouldn't move, the keys didn't work, the icon for a USB
device didn't show up.

It's possible my belly hit the keyboard :-( , but I would expect
things to soon get back to normal if that were the problem.

Had to use Reset button to warm start the computer.

Now I'm afraid to plug anything into that internal port?/jack.

Documentation with the card didn't even mention it existed. I wasn't
sure it was even a jack until I read something that made a vague
reference to an internal jack.

What is it for?

P.S. Flashdrive has worked fine in the past and has worked fine since,
plugged into a jack on the mounting bracket.

Thanks a lot.
 
In message <[email protected]> mm
What is an internal USB jack for?

Running XP SP3, using an ASUS mobo that had only usb1.1, so I bought a
USB2 card a few months ago and everything is fine.

It has another USB jack on the card, not the mounting bracket, and
since it's hard to reach the back of the computer and the side cover
was open, I inserted a flash drive into the port. Everything stopped,
the cursor wouldn't move, the keys didn't work, the icon for a USB
device didn't show up.

It's possible my belly hit the keyboard :-( , but I would expect
things to soon get back to normal if that were the problem.

Had to use Reset button to warm start the computer.

Now I'm afraid to plug anything into that internal port?/jack.

Documentation with the card didn't even mention it existed. I wasn't
sure it was even a jack until I read something that made a vague
reference to an internal jack.

What is it for?

Typically internal USB jacks are no different than external ones. I've
added internal USB ports to my own system for years, typically to add
Bluetooth adapters or similar to a desktop.

For many moons I used a card reader that had a standard USB cable
connector on it rather than connecting directly to motherboard USB
headers. The instructions suggested that you snake the cable through
the case, out the back and connect it to an external USB port. I had
this card reader connected to an internal USB port that I added as well.

It's possible that your USB card used a similar formfactor for something
else, but honestly, I can't imagine why they'd bother with a USB header,
it would make more sense to skip the connector and go with bare pins if
the port had some other purpose.

It is also possible that the internal USB port wasn't a dedicated port
but rather that it electrically shared pins with an external port (in
other words, the card's chipset might support 4 ports, the card might
have 4 on the back and 1 inside, allowing you to use 4-external or
3-external + 1-internal) -- I've got a SATA card that "shares" one of
the internal SATA ports with the ESATA slot on the back in this fashion.
If you connected two devices to one pair of hybrid ports the results
would be unpredictable.
 
Somewhere on teh intarwebs JohnA wrote:
[snip]
If you are using the same motherboard as mine, you might
like to disable the on-board USB 1.1 in the BIOS as there is a known
compatability issue which causes random errors on plug-in USB 2
boards.

Now that's interesting! I have a cheap'n'nasty USB card from one of those
electronics clearing houses in HK that's given me trouble on both of the
computers that I've tried it in. (Both Tualatin PIII boards, so worth
keeping, without USB2.)

Thanks for the tip. I don't think I threw the card out, if I find it and try
it again I'll try disabling on-board USB 1.1 in BIOS.

Cheers,
--
Shaun.

"He who fights with monsters might take care lest he thereby become a
monster. And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also
into you." Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
 
Back
Top