I went to the asus site and downloaded a file, i can't remember its format exactly but it was something like .awf, how do i use that file to update my biosAMD Athlon XP 2600+ 1.9GHz
2 x 512MB Corsair PC3200
Soundblaster Live 24-bit
ATI Radeon 9600SE 128MB (why did i buy this card? desperatly need upgade)
Asus A7V8X-X Motherboard
Microsoft USB Wireless Mouse (Intellipoint)
IEEE 1394 Firewire Card
ASUS CRW-5232AS
Sony CD-RW CRX300E
How do I update my bios?
Moderator: Forum Moderators
How do I update my bios?
-
Woo Elephant Yeah
- Heavy

- Posts: 5433
- Joined: October 10th, 2004, 17:36
- Location: Bristol, UK
- Contact:
You'll be wanting this http://dlsvr02.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/soc ... v8xx13.zip
I'll find out now what to do with it, but if my memory serves me right, you have to load it onto a floppy, and then update it through DOS somehow.
Wait 5 secs..
I'll find out now what to do with it, but if my memory serves me right, you have to load it onto a floppy, and then update it through DOS somehow.
Wait 5 secs..
-
Woo Elephant Yeah
- Heavy

- Posts: 5433
- Joined: October 10th, 2004, 17:36
- Location: Bristol, UK
- Contact:
Right then, have a look at this page
http://usa.asus.com/download/mbdriver/mb-flash.htm
I believe you update the bios using the ASUS Plug and Play BIOS Flash Utility v1.32.
Don't ask me how, but hopefully that should be enough info for you to get it sorted.
http://usa.asus.com/download/mbdriver/mb-flash.htm
I believe you update the bios using the ASUS Plug and Play BIOS Flash Utility v1.32.
Don't ask me how, but hopefully that should be enough info for you to get it sorted.
A good tip with bios flashing is that if you've got no need to flash it, don't.
I had an ASUS P4S8X and it was the most problematic board I've ever had from ASUS (in that it didn't like any Windows NT derivative), but a quick flash fixed almost all the issues with it swiftly.
My Shuttle needed a quick flashing to understand the language of Sempr0n, but if I'd had an Athlon chip in there, I would have left it as stock.
There are a few benefits to flashing other than fixing a specific problem; sometimes extra features in the bios are enabled or added. But unless you really need those options or have a nasty problem that only a flashing can fix, you should just stay away from tampering.
I had an ASUS P4S8X and it was the most problematic board I've ever had from ASUS (in that it didn't like any Windows NT derivative), but a quick flash fixed almost all the issues with it swiftly.
My Shuttle needed a quick flashing to understand the language of Sempr0n, but if I'd had an Athlon chip in there, I would have left it as stock.
There are a few benefits to flashing other than fixing a specific problem; sometimes extra features in the bios are enabled or added. But unless you really need those options or have a nasty problem that only a flashing can fix, you should just stay away from tampering.
-
Woo Elephant Yeah
- Heavy

- Posts: 5433
- Joined: October 10th, 2004, 17:36
- Location: Bristol, UK
- Contact:
-
Woo Elephant Yeah
- Heavy

- Posts: 5433
- Joined: October 10th, 2004, 17:36
- Location: Bristol, UK
- Contact:
-
deject
- Berk

- Posts: 10353
- Joined: December 7th, 2004, 17:02
- Location: Oklahoma City, OK, USA
- Contact:
You need to make a bootable floppy with the flash utility and the new BIOS code on it (i.e.: the stuff Woo Elephant Yeah linked to). If you're on WinXP or 2000 and can't make a DOS bootdisk, you can find what you need here.




