Quote:
Look at the PCI-connector on this card. You need a
riser that has a connector looking exactly like that.
Make sure you plug in the riser in the correct direction!
Well, what you would prefer is one which is 3.3V keyed as then it will be impossible to plug in a 5V card by accident on the other side, and incredibly intuitive as to which way it fits into the Efika PCI slot (there is only one way)
PCI cards (and risers) have two sides - A side and B side. 'A' side is the one on the back of the board (for instance the side facing the CPU on a graphics card) and a B side is the normal component side (where nearly every PCI card has it's major electronics).
What you need is a 3.3V riser with the slot on the 'A' side to hang over the board, and 'B' side to hang away from the board. If it is flexible it at least needs to be notably 3.3V compatible, and if you hold it straight, hopefully the datasheet for the riser will tell you which way around it is meant to go.
The PCI keying is there for a reason - do NOT think that because it fits in backwards that this is correct. 99.99% of PCI devices will destroy the PCI card or Efika if they are connected backwards. We have already had users insist they know what they are doing, and plug in a graphics card backwards because "it fits".
Please ONLY use risers which are dictated as 3.3V compatible. Make sure the back of the card (where the VGA connector or ethernet connector would be) is at the BACK of the Efika board. There is no other correct way to fit it. If the card or riser does not fit that way it is NOT compatible. Bridging a 3.3V connector on the Efika to a 5V connector on the riser is NOT compatible without active components.
I updated the Gentoo Efika wiki with some PCI risers which should work; however I have not gotten hold of any personally to test their compatibility, the datasheets for them are very concise about it and there are several part numbers determining which exact riser configuration is required;
http://gentoo-wiki.com/Efika#PCI_Riser_cards