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??GB: 10/12/1998-i440BX-W977-2A69KM4FC
Posted: Sat Jan 03, 2004 5:27 pm
by gizzmo
hi
can't find any bios update for this v4.51pg sucker.
some more info:
BIOS Date: 10/12/98
BIOS Type: Award Modular BIOS v4.51PG
BIOS ID: 10/12/1998-i440BX-W977-2A69KM4FC
OEM Sign-On: VMP 1.0B4a * MSI MS-6151
Chipset: Intel 440BX/ZX rev 3
if you happen to have an update that works for this one, i'd be very glad
thanks
Posted: Sat Jan 03, 2004 11:11 pm
by NickS
There's a newer BIOS for this Maxdata OEM'ed version of the MSI MS-6151,
07/01/1999-i440BX-W977-2A69KM4FC-00
VMP 1.0B12d * MSI MS-6151
There's a patched version of it at the "Tested" link in my signature. Try that.
Posted: Sun Jan 04, 2004 2:31 am
by gizzmo
i saw that, but due to the signiture i thought it was another board version.
i'm gonna try it now...
thanks a lot
Posted: Sun Jan 04, 2004 3:22 am
by gizzmo
alright, i tried it, and it worked...kinda.
the flashing went w/o errors.
first reboot: nothing, beep, restart, nothing
second: same...same...same
5th reboot: new HD had been taken out, all drives out: well, something different, still no pic.
6th: old drive in: looked weird, wrong colors, 133mhz instead of 100 for bus freq....hung up at startup, at least a picture...
7th: for some reason it works
8th: all drives in, and it still works, and the new hd has been recognized..!
so yeah, it does work.
Posted: Sun Jan 04, 2004 10:44 am
by edwin
Cleared CMOS after the flash? And have a look at the age/condition of the power supply...
Posted: Sun Jan 04, 2004 12:53 pm
by gizzmo
no didn't.
why should i? everything works...is it necessary? read about it somewhere, but forgot what the use of clearing the cmos was.
as to the power supply: i think the general supply is not a problem, everything works stable, and since the old HD goes out of the sys, that should not be a problem.
Posted: Sun Jan 04, 2004 9:32 pm
by NickS
If the BIOS has been updated, they may have changed where they store various parameters in the CMOS, or how they use the parameters. When you flash the new BIOS they could (for example) put the wrong drive strength into the AGP driver, or the wrong value into the clock generator giving you 133 MHz instead of 100 MHz.. If you clear the CMOS, the BIOS will see a "CMOS checksum error" and will set the default values into the CMOS.