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SOP 8 to SOP 16 conversion for BIOS programming with CH341a programmer
Hi,
I'm trying to save my bricked ASRock x470 Taichi motherboard. After a bios update it unfortunately doesn't boot anymore. Hence, I'm trying to program it with an CH341a programmer (MiniProgrammer). The bios chip on board is a 16 PIN, 1.8V Macronix MX25U25645GMI00 chip.
I have used the black version of the the programmer with a 1.8v converter (to reduce it from 5v) in combination with ASProgrammer (Windows) and IMSProg (Linux) tool. With both I was able to read out some 8 PIN chips with an SOP 8 testing clip.
Now I'm wondering how I can convert the 8 PINs from the programmer to attach it to the 16 PIN bios chip. I have a SOP 16 testing clip. Based on my research the PIN conversation should look as following:
8 PIN CH341 programmer -> 16 PIN SOP Testing Clip
1 -> 7 (CS)
2 -> 8 (MISO)
3 -> 9 (WP)
4 -> 10 (VSS)
5 -> 15 (MOSI)
6 -> 16 (SCK)
7 -> 1 (HOLD)
8 -> 2 (VCC)
I tried to do the conversion with with DuPont cables, but wasn't able to get any results. I'm aware that the SOP testing clips can be very finicky to attach, but at this point I'd still try to avoid soldering.
Does this PIN conversion look right?
Thank you!
I'm trying to save my bricked ASRock x470 Taichi motherboard. After a bios update it unfortunately doesn't boot anymore. Hence, I'm trying to program it with an CH341a programmer (MiniProgrammer). The bios chip on board is a 16 PIN, 1.8V Macronix MX25U25645GMI00 chip.
I have used the black version of the the programmer with a 1.8v converter (to reduce it from 5v) in combination with ASProgrammer (Windows) and IMSProg (Linux) tool. With both I was able to read out some 8 PIN chips with an SOP 8 testing clip.
Now I'm wondering how I can convert the 8 PINs from the programmer to attach it to the 16 PIN bios chip. I have a SOP 16 testing clip. Based on my research the PIN conversation should look as following:
8 PIN CH341 programmer -> 16 PIN SOP Testing Clip
1 -> 7 (CS)
2 -> 8 (MISO)
3 -> 9 (WP)
4 -> 10 (VSS)
5 -> 15 (MOSI)
6 -> 16 (SCK)
7 -> 1 (HOLD)
8 -> 2 (VCC)
I tried to do the conversion with with DuPont cables, but wasn't able to get any results. I'm aware that the SOP testing clips can be very finicky to attach, but at this point I'd still try to avoid soldering.
Does this PIN conversion look right?
Thank you!
↧
[HELP] 2.5MB rom to 4MB bios - unsure how to proceed
I recently encountered a BIOS issue with my Acer M3970 (motherboard IPISB-VR). It started acting strangely, like enabling the RAID controller without my input, even after clearing the CMOS. Eventually, it failed completely, leaving me with a black screen.
My plan now is to flash a clean BIOS using the SPI header on the motherboard. After identifying the correct pinout and connecting it to my Raspberry Pi, I used flashrom to detect and dump the current BIOS image.
The problem I'm facing is that the only available BIOS I could find is from WayBack, as Acer removed it from their site. It's a slightly updated version, which should be fine, but it's only 2.5MB while my original BIOS image was 4.0MB. I'm unsure if the file is compressed or if I need to merge it with another image, which might not be feasible since my current BIOS image is likely corrupt.
I'm also open to using the previous BIOS version (P03-A1) since it supports Ivy Bridge and USB 3.0, but unfortunately, I haven't been able to locate it.
I'm currently at a standstill and would greatly appreciate any advice or guidance from those with expertise in this area.
EDIT: Upon further investigation, I've come to realize that I may require a RAW donor image from someone who has the same board. Alternatively, there might be a method to decompress the ROM that I haven't explored yet. I've attempted to use various AMI tools, but they haven't yielded much success so far.
My plan now is to flash a clean BIOS using the SPI header on the motherboard. After identifying the correct pinout and connecting it to my Raspberry Pi, I used flashrom to detect and dump the current BIOS image.
The problem I'm facing is that the only available BIOS I could find is from WayBack, as Acer removed it from their site. It's a slightly updated version, which should be fine, but it's only 2.5MB while my original BIOS image was 4.0MB. I'm unsure if the file is compressed or if I need to merge it with another image, which might not be feasible since my current BIOS image is likely corrupt.
I'm also open to using the previous BIOS version (P03-A1) since it supports Ivy Bridge and USB 3.0, but unfortunately, I haven't been able to locate it.
I'm currently at a standstill and would greatly appreciate any advice or guidance from those with expertise in this area.
EDIT: Upon further investigation, I've come to realize that I may require a RAW donor image from someone who has the same board. Alternatively, there might be a method to decompress the ROM that I haven't explored yet. I've attempted to use various AMI tools, but they haven't yielded much success so far.
Code:
Windbond flash chip "W25Q32.V" (4096 kB, SPI)
Current BIOS: P03-A1 bricked.bin 4.0MB 02.17.2012
WayBack BIOS: P03-A3 P03-A3.ROM 2.5MB 04.18.2012
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SOP 8 to SOP 16 conversion for BIOS programming with CH341a programmer
Hi,
I'm trying to save my bricked ASRock x470 Taichi motherboard. After a bios update it unfortunately doesn't boot anymore. Hence, I'm trying to program it with an CH341a programmer (MiniProgrammer). The bios chip on board is a 16 PIN, 1.8V Macronix MX25U25645GMI00 chip.
I have used the black version of the the programmer with a 1.8v converter (to reduce it from 5v) in combination with ASProgrammer (Windows) and IMSProg (Linux) tool. With both I was able to read out some 8 PIN chips with an SOP 8 testing clip.
Now I'm wondering how I can convert the 8 PINs from the programmer to attach it to the 16 PIN bios chip. I have a SOP 16 testing clip. Based on my research the PIN conversation should look as following:
8 PIN CH341 programmer -> 16 PIN SOP Testing Clip
1 -> 7 (CS)
2 -> 8 (MISO)
3 -> 9 (WP)
4 -> 10 (VSS)
5 -> 15 (MOSI)
6 -> 16 (SCK)
7 -> 1 (HOLD)
8 -> 2 (VCC)
I tried to do the conversion with with DuPont cables, but wasn't able to get any results. I'm aware that the SOP testing clips can be very finicky to attach, but at this point I'd still try to avoid soldering.
Does this PIN conversion look right?
Thank you!
I'm trying to save my bricked ASRock x470 Taichi motherboard. After a bios update it unfortunately doesn't boot anymore. Hence, I'm trying to program it with an CH341a programmer (MiniProgrammer). The bios chip on board is a 16 PIN, 1.8V Macronix MX25U25645GMI00 chip.
I have used the black version of the the programmer with a 1.8v converter (to reduce it from 5v) in combination with ASProgrammer (Windows) and IMSProg (Linux) tool. With both I was able to read out some 8 PIN chips with an SOP 8 testing clip.
Now I'm wondering how I can convert the 8 PINs from the programmer to attach it to the 16 PIN bios chip. I have a SOP 16 testing clip. Based on my research the PIN conversation should look as following:
8 PIN CH341 programmer -> 16 PIN SOP Testing Clip
1 -> 7 (CS)
2 -> 8 (MISO)
3 -> 9 (WP)
4 -> 10 (VSS)
5 -> 15 (MOSI)
6 -> 16 (SCK)
7 -> 1 (HOLD)
8 -> 2 (VCC)
I tried to do the conversion with with DuPont cables, but wasn't able to get any results. I'm aware that the SOP testing clips can be very finicky to attach, but at this point I'd still try to avoid soldering.
Does this PIN conversion look right?
Thank you!
↧
[HELP] 2.5MB rom to 4MB bios - unsure how to proceed
I recently encountered a BIOS issue with my Acer M3970 (motherboard IPISB-VR). It started acting strangely, like enabling the RAID controller without my input, even after clearing the CMOS. Eventually, it failed completely, leaving me with a black screen.
My plan now is to flash a clean BIOS using the SPI header on the motherboard. After identifying the correct pinout and connecting it to my Raspberry Pi, I used flashrom to detect and dump the current BIOS image.
The problem I'm facing is that the only available BIOS I could find is from WayBack, as Acer removed it from their site. It's a slightly updated version, which should be fine, but it's only 2.5MB while my original BIOS image was 4.0MB. I'm unsure if the file is compressed or if I need to merge it with another image, which might not be feasible since my current BIOS image is likely corrupt.
I'm also open to using the previous BIOS version (P03-A1) since it supports Ivy Bridge and USB 3.0, but unfortunately, I haven't been able to locate it.
I'm currently at a standstill and would greatly appreciate any advice or guidance from those with expertise in this area.
EDIT: Upon further investigation, I've come to realize that I may require a RAW donor image from someone who has the same board. Alternatively, there might be a method to decompress the ROM that I haven't explored yet. I've attempted to use various AMI tools, but they haven't yielded much success so far.
My plan now is to flash a clean BIOS using the SPI header on the motherboard. After identifying the correct pinout and connecting it to my Raspberry Pi, I used flashrom to detect and dump the current BIOS image.
The problem I'm facing is that the only available BIOS I could find is from WayBack, as Acer removed it from their site. It's a slightly updated version, which should be fine, but it's only 2.5MB while my original BIOS image was 4.0MB. I'm unsure if the file is compressed or if I need to merge it with another image, which might not be feasible since my current BIOS image is likely corrupt.
I'm also open to using the previous BIOS version (P03-A1) since it supports Ivy Bridge and USB 3.0, but unfortunately, I haven't been able to locate it.
I'm currently at a standstill and would greatly appreciate any advice or guidance from those with expertise in this area.
EDIT: Upon further investigation, I've come to realize that I may require a RAW donor image from someone who has the same board. Alternatively, there might be a method to decompress the ROM that I haven't explored yet. I've attempted to use various AMI tools, but they haven't yielded much success so far.
Code:
Windbond flash chip "W25Q32.V" (4096 kB, SPI)
Current BIOS: P03-A1 bricked.bin 4.0MB 02.17.2012
WayBack BIOS: P03-A3 P03-A3.ROM 2.5MB 04.18.2012
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Medion Akoya E5218 Bios possibilities?
Hello fellow humans on this forum ill skip straight to the point, i wanna know if there are any possibilities to unlock or even mod a bios on a Medion Akoya E5218 thanks in advance.
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SOP 8 to SOP 16 conversion for BIOS programming with CH341a programmer
Hi,
I'm trying to save my bricked ASRock x470 Taichi motherboard. After a bios update it unfortunately doesn't boot anymore. Hence, I'm trying to program it with an CH341a programmer (MiniProgrammer). The bios chip on board is a 16 PIN, 1.8V Macronix MX25U25645GMI00 chip.
I have used the black version of the the programmer with a 1.8v converter (to reduce it from 5v) in combination with ASProgrammer (Windows) and IMSProg (Linux) tool. With both I was able to read out some 8 PIN chips with an SOP 8 testing clip.
Now I'm wondering how I can convert the 8 PINs from the programmer to attach it to the 16 PIN bios chip. I have a SOP 16 testing clip. Based on my research the PIN conversation should look as following:
8 PIN CH341 programmer -> 16 PIN SOP Testing Clip
1 -> 7 (CS)
2 -> 8 (MISO)
3 -> 9 (WP)
4 -> 10 (VSS)
5 -> 15 (MOSI)
6 -> 16 (SCK)
7 -> 1 (HOLD)
8 -> 2 (VCC)
I tried to do the conversion with with DuPont cables, but wasn't able to get any results. I'm aware that the SOP testing clips can be very finicky to attach, but at this point I'd still try to avoid soldering.
Does this PIN conversion look right?
Thank you!
I'm trying to save my bricked ASRock x470 Taichi motherboard. After a bios update it unfortunately doesn't boot anymore. Hence, I'm trying to program it with an CH341a programmer (MiniProgrammer). The bios chip on board is a 16 PIN, 1.8V Macronix MX25U25645GMI00 chip.
I have used the black version of the the programmer with a 1.8v converter (to reduce it from 5v) in combination with ASProgrammer (Windows) and IMSProg (Linux) tool. With both I was able to read out some 8 PIN chips with an SOP 8 testing clip.
Now I'm wondering how I can convert the 8 PINs from the programmer to attach it to the 16 PIN bios chip. I have a SOP 16 testing clip. Based on my research the PIN conversation should look as following:
8 PIN CH341 programmer -> 16 PIN SOP Testing Clip
1 -> 7 (CS)
2 -> 8 (MISO)
3 -> 9 (WP)
4 -> 10 (VSS)
5 -> 15 (MOSI)
6 -> 16 (SCK)
7 -> 1 (HOLD)
8 -> 2 (VCC)
I tried to do the conversion with with DuPont cables, but wasn't able to get any results. I'm aware that the SOP testing clips can be very finicky to attach, but at this point I'd still try to avoid soldering.
Does this PIN conversion look right?
Thank you!
↧
Gigabyte GA-970A-D3 REV. 3.0
Hi, can you please SLIC 2.1 this bios:
thank you modders.
Manufacturer: Gigabyte
MotherBoard Model: GA-970A-D3 REV. 3.0
Bios Version: FEi
Bios Type: AMI BIOS
BIOS Download:
https://download.gigabyte.com/FileList/B...f8ab64f78a
mb_bios_ga-970a-d3_v.3.x_fei.zip (Size: 2.76 MB / Downloads: 0)
thank you modders.
Manufacturer: Gigabyte
MotherBoard Model: GA-970A-D3 REV. 3.0
Bios Version: FEi
Bios Type: AMI BIOS
BIOS Download:
https://download.gigabyte.com/FileList/B...f8ab64f78a

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Possible update needed for ZOTAC Magnus One
Hello, guys! I have a Zotac MAGNUS ONE ECM73070C with the latest BIOS. I read many topics that said 11th CPU gen isn't supported. So i replaced a 10700 to 10900F CPU which is supported. The system started and working fine except one thing - the PC doesn't wake up from sleep properly. It reacts on mouse and keyboard, however the display stays black and even wifi and hdd leds don't function. Only power led goes green and nothing happens. I have to manually hold power button to turn it off. With 10700 CPU there wasn't such a problem. I found some weird option C6DRAM appeared in BIOS (which didn't show up with 10700 CPU), i tried both disabled and enabled.. it doesn't change anything.
Please help me with this issue, i'm sure probably there's some problem in BIOS? If you need any additional information i will gladly provide it. I don't want to downgrade to 10700 again...
P.S. the issue might be with some C6 state incompatibility, probably they're different with those CPUs... i have no clue honestly but this new option in BIOS worried me.
Please help me with this issue, i'm sure probably there's some problem in BIOS? If you need any additional information i will gladly provide it. I don't want to downgrade to 10700 again...
P.S. the issue might be with some C6 state incompatibility, probably they're different with those CPUs... i have no clue honestly but this new option in BIOS worried me.
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[REQUEST] Lenovo V15 G2-ALC Laptop Type 82KD (GLCNxxWW) Whitelist Removal
Bios from manufacturer:
https://download.lenovo.com/consumer/mob...cn57ww.exe
Bios dump from device:
https://www.sendspace.com/file/fup4eg
PCI ID of the original Wifi card:
VEN_10EC&DEV_C822&SUBSYS_C12317A
https://download.lenovo.com/consumer/mob...cn57ww.exe
Bios dump from device:
https://www.sendspace.com/file/fup4eg
PCI ID of the original Wifi card:
VEN_10EC&DEV_C822&SUBSYS_C12317A
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[Request] Adding 7th Gen CPU support to HP ProDesk 400 G3 (MS-7957)
Hi, I have some HP ProDesk 400 G3 (without CPU) lying around and I'm planning to buy some cheap LGA1151 CPUs to make them work again. However, the cheapest CPU that I could find is Celeron G3930, which belongs to the Kaby Lake generation and is not natively supported by my HP machine. I've personally tried to boot it up with an i3-7100 to no avail, but an i5-6500 works just fine. Can anybody help me to make a Kaby Lake mod for this HP (the motherboard model is MS-7957)? I already have a CH341A at hand. Thanks in advance.
![[Image: hp-prodesk-400-g3-ms-7957-ver10-mainboar...21511.webp]](http://computerstoreberlin.de/media/image/product/376414/lg/hp-prodesk-400-g3-ms-7957-ver10-mainboard-micro-atx-sockel-1151-321511.webp)
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Packard Bell TR85
Hello,
A friend of me uses a old Packard bell for a Hobby thing.
He have a Packard Bell TR85 (SJM50MV).
Phoenix SecureCore Setup Utility (is showed in BIOS).
BIOS version V1.18 (i remember that i updated that ever, but it was a very long time a go...)
Since that upgrade was also the UUID removed from the BIOS (serial number of device?).
But now is the problem he is reaching the limits of MBR, he wants to change the disk to GPT, but for GPT i tought we need a UEFI BIOS.
But at this moment the BIOS can't boot any GPT disk.
What we can do?
Sorry for the questions but i am not so home at this BIOS things...
It is for me a very long time a go that i did things like this...
I read on some fora that there sometimes is a hidden menu to activate the UEFI option?
Thanks in advance
EDIT: Is this the right channel? I think i missed me, I posted in Phoenix UEFI but i didn't have the UEFI option at this moment in this BIOS.
A friend of me uses a old Packard bell for a Hobby thing.
He have a Packard Bell TR85 (SJM50MV).
Phoenix SecureCore Setup Utility (is showed in BIOS).
BIOS version V1.18 (i remember that i updated that ever, but it was a very long time a go...)
Since that upgrade was also the UUID removed from the BIOS (serial number of device?).
But now is the problem he is reaching the limits of MBR, he wants to change the disk to GPT, but for GPT i tought we need a UEFI BIOS.
But at this moment the BIOS can't boot any GPT disk.
What we can do?
Sorry for the questions but i am not so home at this BIOS things...
It is for me a very long time a go that i did things like this...
I read on some fora that there sometimes is a hidden menu to activate the UEFI option?
Thanks in advance
EDIT: Is this the right channel? I think i missed me, I posted in Phoenix UEFI but i didn't have the UEFI option at this moment in this BIOS.
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