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Programming BIOS on DFI Lanparty P45-T2RS Plus Motherboard using DIY SPI FlashProgrammer

tivor2 7992 16
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  • #1 16464729
    tivor2
    Level 11  
    Hello everyone, I have a problem programming bios bones in the computer motherboard.
    The motherboard I have is the DFI Lanparty p45-t2rs plus it is after a unsuccessful bios update, the symptoms I observed are the motherboard turns on, there is no image, the fans are working and no signals from Buzzer.
    Unfortunately, I do not have an appropriate programmer, but I would like to build one.
    I read a lot about it and the solution that came to my mind was to construct an SPI FlashProgrammer.
    Subject from which I drew knowledge: https://www.elektroda.pl/rtvforum/topic2602823.html
    A friend gave me an idea to desolder the bone from an inoperative board, fire a second functional board, enter the Dos and turn on a special flasher, prepare everything for loading the bios and change the systems before the installation and simply upload the bios, but not completely I can get it and now my question is, how do you recommend or is there any other option to bring it to life. If so, please help :)
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  • #2 16464748
    xury
    Automation specialist
    And what? Will you be turning bones on the switched on disc? Good luck.
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  • #3 16464776
    tivor2
    Level 11  
    I did not think about soldering to 2 sets of cables with connectors (female), and instead of soldering the connectors (male) and then the bone can be easily removed.
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  • #4 16464875
    Dra98
    Moderator of Computers service
    Definitely a better solution is programming in the service, there is even no need to desolder the system.
    If not, purchase, loan, programmer design. I advise against playing with another board and connectors.
  • Helpful post
    #5 16466914
    Karaczan
    Level 42  
    If you didn't get over the bios too much and the bootblock was not overwritten, the disc has a failsafe mode.
    It will support FDD, sometimes a pen drive can also. Although the computer seems to be dead.
    Prepare a diskette or USB stick with dose, flasher and bios. Edit the autoexec.bat file to fire the flash from the machine. There is a chance that it will succeed.

    I also have this album and beat it a few times by modifying the bios. She always managed to rise from the dead ;)

    If the bios is a total chapel, buy Programmer CH341A on Allegro. But without desoldering the bones, you won't program it. At least I never managed to program anything in the ISP with it. Even releasing external power ...

    After desoldering, programs OK. Only has some problem with some cubes
    SST. Program them for almost 2 hours. Others go quickly.
  • #6 16467691
    tivor2
    Level 11  
    I have everything prepared for a flash drive, I will try soon. the bottom screen shows error C1 or something like that.

    Added after 15 [minutes]:

    Unfortunately, I'm still at the same point
  • #7 16467729
    sylweksylwina
    Moderator of Computers service
    That is @cockroach wrote, buy a programmer, for example on CH341A, desolder the bone and program.
  • #8 16469028
    Karaczan
    Level 42  
    C1 is something alive. In any case, bios is already trying to detect memory, but it can't. The BIOS released probably doesn't get to C0 even.
    Reset the CMOS jumper several times. On unplugged power supply!
    It is possible that after the flash she destroyed the settings, and earlier there was some OC.
    Quite capricious records, they have their frills.
    For example, I have to run mine sometimes 3x before it gets up correctly on the OC settings, but only when the computer has not worked for several days. From day to day this problem does not exist.
    Sometimes he will also blow her off and she doesn't get up. CMOS reset, gets up. Reload profile with strong OC, save settings. Gets up... ;)
    Under Win7 it is impossible to turn off the computer. Power off results in its restart. Only on Win7 :D
  • #9 16469084
    WojtasJD
    Level 43  
    Karaczan wrote:
    Under Win7 it is impossible to turn off the computer. Power off results in its restart. Only on Win7
    Interesting. Recently on this disc I am testing Xeony and I have uploaded W7 64-bit on SSD and it turns off properly.
    With these whims it is a fact :wink:
  • #10 16477427
    tivor2
    Level 11  
    The programmer has already arrived, all program drivers have been downloaded and the bone is being programmed, I'm just wondering why it is extremely slow to program it 15% in 10 minutes :)
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  • #11 16477436
    sylweksylwina
    Moderator of Computers service
    Maybe because:
    Karaczan wrote:
    Only has some problem with some cubes
    SST. Program them for almost 2 hours. Others go quickly.


    Personally, I didn't have a problem with slow programming, but I probably don't do it enough :P
  • #12 16477498
    tivor2
    Level 11  
    Time to remove everything is fast, but unfortunately programming is long. Exactly like "Karaczan" wrote the time about 2 hours, for me a little over an hour :)

    Added after 1 [hours] 57 [minutes]:

    The board stood up nicely, but I accidentally removed the jumper from clear cmos and the problem returned. I want to buy several pieces of the SST25VF080B system but I would have to import them. The question is, can you somehow replace it with another system?
  • #13 16478419
    Karaczan
    Level 42  
    Provide the exact computer configuration.
    STRAP jumpers (those next to the CPU socket at the top) prophylactically at 200MHz, which is closest to the capacitor.
    Tire the Reset, Power, and TOTAL power off buttons on the power supply.
    Finally she should get up.

    Also, you don't like placing all 4 RAM slots with some cubes.
    When you get up and raise RAM voltage, you can add additional modules.

    Since she got up, and after CLEAR CMOS again does not get up, the problem of some settings.
    Capricious slabs, can be problematic for the less experienced. A multitude of options + whims = problems ;)
    Also remember that you have 2 Clear CMOS jumpers. On the board, near the PCIE connectors, and at the back, near the ports. Sometimes you can forget about it and get tired :D
  • #14 16478552
    tivor2
    Level 11  
    Restart, power gave nothing showed error C1 as at the very beginning. All jumpers are set to normal / default. After re-uploading the programmer, "Chip with the contents are in disagreement" appears. It is likely that the system is compacted and will not do without its replacement, only the problem is to get it from us.
  • #15 16478569
    Karaczan
    Level 42  
    Virtually any Flash SPI with sufficient capacity will approach.
    I think there is 8Mbit there, because the bios image has 1MB. Available as bundles for poor money.

    After programming and booting successfully, you made Load BIOS Defaults?
  • #16 16479263
    tivor2
    Level 11  
    I did that, the bone is 100% beaten. I turn on the disc, I enter the bios, everything is beautiful, suddenly it freezes and then the same problem returns. I checked the bone after uploading, everything was okay, but after desoldering it from the disc and verifying the ".bin" charge, it doesn't agree anymore. The only solution is to buy a new bone (same or replacement) and everything should function normally. Only now the problem is that I do not know what replacement to look for. SST25VF080B sits there originally.
  • #17 16480519
    Karaczan
    Level 42  
    I will not agree. Any setting will change and verification will no longer take place.
    If you want to check the bone, save it and verify it several times with exactly the same charge. Without putting it in a record.
    Since it enters the bios it's probably not the fault of the bones but the rest of the equipment.
    Send me your DUMP, I'll look at him.

Topic summary

The discussion revolves around programming the BIOS of a DFI Lanparty P45-T2RS Plus motherboard after a failed update, resulting in no display and unresponsive behavior. Users suggest building a DIY SPI Flash Programmer or purchasing a CH341A programmer to desolder and reprogram the BIOS chip. Various troubleshooting steps are discussed, including using a failsafe mode to recover the BIOS, resetting CMOS settings, and ensuring proper RAM configurations. The original BIOS chip, SST25VF080B, is identified, with users exploring potential replacements and verifying programming success. The conversation highlights the challenges of BIOS recovery and the importance of proper equipment and techniques.
Summary generated by the language model.
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