If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Thank you very much for entire Gigabyte team's hard work!
I think the DVID issue when changing back to fixed or auto vcore modes, from a previous DVID mode, is a bug (feature?) with the AMI Base Bios.
"Overclocking Performance Menu" allows you to set adaptive mode (new option appears: Additional Turbo Voltage) or Override mode.
But in override mode, offsets can still be used! And if you had an offset applied in adaptive mode, when you switch to override mode, the previous offset is still there.
This has been tested on unlocked MSI and Clevo laptops.
To use override mode, you have to set the offset to 0mv if you don't want an offset.
The Gigabyte AMI basebios has the same options there (Overclocking performance menu, hidden AMI Menu), so that may be the cause of the issue (Guessing).
Where are you finding the Overclocking Performance Menu in the UEFI?
Intel Core i9-9900K @ 5.15 GHz | Gigabyte Z390 AORUS MASTER | Corsair 1000W PSU | Corsair H115i CPU Cooler | Corsair 32GB RAM | EVGA RTX2080 Ti FTW3 11GB | BenQ PD3200U 32" 4K LCD | 3-512GB Samsung 970 PRO NVMe | 2TB Samsung 860 EVO | 1TB Sabrent Rocket NVMe | Windows 10 Pro | BIOS F11jGK
Where are you finding the Overclocking Performance Menu in the UEFI?
It's not exposed to the user in the UEFI.
It's in the AMI Bios capsule.
You can view it by using AMIBCP 5.02.0031 but you can't edit the full original downloaded Gigabyte file or it's an instant brick if you try to flash, so do NOT try to save it if you view it. period. If you want to be safe, make your own UEFI capsule dump. The Asus bios also has this exact menu there too.
You can edit your own capsule dump (without a brick) by dumping with FPTW64 -d bios.bin -BIOS (flash programming tool from win-raid.com forums) and then using AMIBCP 5.02.0031, then using -f -bios to flash it back,
but they still won't appear in the UEFI. But at least you can view what's there :) I tried setting the menu to supervisor and user and then flashing it. Didn't brick but it's not visible.
(the people on win-raid know how to make it appear but that's at your own risk). There is some method involving amisetup extractor or something and then moving around menus to make them visible. You'll have to ask over on win-raid. I was going to have Lost_N_Bios help me but I chickened out.
Some person on a recent thread wanted this menu visible with the XI Gene, because they wanted the PLL Voltage trim settings visible and I think two people made edits for him but only one made the menu visible (they had to do some sort of extraction and reinsertion, I know nothing about it, it's confusing).
Serial Port isnt exposed to the bios so it cant be disabled
It would also be nice to be able to disable the PS2 Port as i presume its taking irq 12 when not in use
Can this get passed onto gigabyte
Its actually present in the bios just hidden as i have managed to glitch the serial port flag into favorites
which i wont go into here as i dont want the glitch fixed incase they never re insert it
Serial Port isnt exposed to the bios so it cant be disabled
It would also be nice to be able to disable the PS2 Port as i presume its taking irq 12 when not in use
Can this get passed onto gigabyte
Its actually present in the bios just hidden as i have managed to glitch the serial port flag into favorites
which i wont go into here as i dont want the glitch fixed incase they never re insert it
[ATTACH]8414[/ATTACH]
Please check your PM when you have time! If your PM isn't opening, please spill the beans for us :) I can use this trick. (want to add HPET)
I got two issues, one is a feature request. X570 MASTER 11a
Request --> Allow folks to disable Bluetooth and WIFI in the BIOS --> Much cheaper boards come with these features and it makes no sense not to include them.
Bug: During a software reset the faster Realtek LAN controller will not be initialized or show in the BIOS and of course if you continue to load into Windows you will have no net connection.
TempFix: This problem will not correct until you power off the machine using the power switch for 5 seconds then powering it back up. This issue wasn't happening with the BIOS that came with the board.
i want to report the following issues with Z390 Aorus Master F11c:
F11c is not going to be the final BIOS. The DVID mode overvoltage bug when changing to fixed/auto vcore has been addressed and will be released in a future update, and that should make a lot of people happy.
I've never encountered your issues before. I checked and there were no problems. Please try to reproduce this in an exact way so it can be submitted as a bug report.
Some USB devices can wake up the computer also.
The only thing I've seen is certain USB devices plugged in can make BIOS hang on POST (certain USB flash drives, certain game controllers, like Saitek/Logitech flight sticks, etc), but unplugging them instantly unfreezes it.
The 300 khz vs 500 khz stability issue (300 khz allows a lower load voltage for stability than 500khz, about 15-20mv or so) is going to require a lot of work to address, so use 300 khz VRM switching frequency. This improves higher level loadline calibration levels more than lower LLC levels, although all LLC levels will benefit. High and Extreme LLC benefit more than Low/Medium/High, etc, but the same basic rules for LLC still apply--transient response at the same load "VR VOUT" will always be worse at stronger LLC than at weaker LLC. Anyway, the switching frequency issue may be a VRM controller specific issue that Gigabyte will not be able to work around, but I did report it. There have been other boards where a higher VRM switching frequency caused instability.
Comment