by d.j.h. » Sun Oct 26, 2003 8:19 pm
I'd like to add to this discussion if I may. I am a Senior Network Administrator where I work. I've been looking high and low all over the net to figure out how to flash the Bios of my Gateway D875PBZ motherboard at home with the normal retail BIOS version from Intel. After reading this thread, I took the advice here and removed the BIOS jumper to allow it to go into recovery mode. I then made a boot disk with the retail Intel BIOS and made an AUTOEXEC.BAT file to run the IFLASH utility automatically since recovery mode has no video. After several "clicks" from the onboard speaker (about 30 seconds), the machine automatically power itself off. I hesitantly pressed the power button, and saw that it worked! My Gateway board now has the most up to date Intel Retail Bios on it. I bought the board off eBay, along with a 3.2 Ghz OEM processor. Got a great deal on it. It looks like it was probably pulled from an E-6100 Gateway Desktop. The reason why I think that is 2 paragraphs below.
The reason for me trying like crazy to flash the bios is because my computer has trouble detecting my 100GB Western Digital hard drive. The only time it has trouble though is when it is powered up after being powered down for a long time. In other words, if I turn the PC off at night, then turn it on the next morning, the hard drive will not be detected. The PC would just sit at the Gateway logo, then eventually give the message about not being detected. I turned the logo off in the BIOS, to see what was "behind the curtain", but there's no error message as it is "trying" to detect the hard disk. My IDE CD-Roms detect just fine. The drive spins up normal as well. The strange part is that after I press reset a few times, the motherboard finally detects the hard disk and I'm off and running.
I figured this HAD to be a BIOS issue. Gateway's last BIOS update (they call their board "WASP") was posted back in May of this year. Since Intel just released their newest BIOS on Oct 24th, I decided to try to flash. Like I said above, it worked.
I've got a few questions though. When I go into the BIOS, it displays the correct BIOS ID and additional options that were not present with Gateway's BIOS. That's awesome. On the first BIOS page however, I click on "Additional Information". It says the board was made by Gateway, that it is an E-6100, and gives the serial number for the board, etc. Also, now that I've flashed the BIOS, the read DIAG light on the motherboard is lit. How can I make this motherboard a "true" Intel D875PBZ motherboard, getting rid of the Gateway code completely, and also make that red DIAG light disappear? The light was not illuminated prior to flashing the BIOS. I know there's got to be a flash utility out there somewhere that changes the "unchangeable" in the BIOS. If a Dell rep ever has to come where I work and put in a new motherboard in a laptop, the motherboard's BIOS is blank until he runs a utility that puts in the serial number, etc.
My PC runs great by the way after installing that latest BIOS update. I turned the PC off for about 2 hours, then turned it back on and it detected the hard drive just fine. Windows XP redetected everything beautifully.
I called Intel to see if they would help with the hard drive detection issue, but they couldn't because it was OEM. Obviously I can't call Gateway for help since I bought the board off eBay.
I searched for awhile and finally found this site and eventually this post which really helped out. Thanks a lot guys.
By the way, if the DIAG light does not go out, and I can't get rid of the Gateway info in the BIOS, that's fine. At least I'm up to the latest Intel BIOS, my hard drive is getting detected properly, and now I can just go to Intel's site and get a newer BIOS if I need to without hassle.
Any help on answering the questions above would be appreciated.
Thanks again,
d.j.h.