BIOS 1050 on the official site now for download.
Printable View
BIOS 1050 on the official site now for download.
*sorry wrong post - please delete.
($%^# BING search engine..)
I went to the Asus Website, went to the motherboard, downloads tab, its there.
/face palm
I mistyped, i meant 1015, my apologies.
Does anyone know if Asus is making a Rampage board with 4 PCI-E x16 slots. Even if only 2 will run at 16x and the other 2 at 8x.
Hi Raja,
Another issue to report with megaraid. I have installed Nvidia 690 and that makes megaraid vanish from all slots except first full speed slot, put back in 7970 and it comes back.
Hi Raja, just want to say you and Asus are doing an awesome job. It's far to often you hear what is wrong with this or that and not what's right, so thank you! :clap:
well what wrong for new Z77 mobo about bios recovery if we setting for OC and stuck at Debug code 10, it'll can't recovery after press power button to turn off
and turn again it still stuck at code 10 same time and loop boot up always. but if stuck at other code oc recovery still working
Thanks :)
What setting in the bios do I need to set in order for my cpu to reduce voltage when idle?
I'm using manual mode, I don't want to use offset mode, because it's giving me problems, I don't like the fact that when you lower the offset voltage it also lowers the voltage when the multiplier is at 16, plus when I reduce the offset by -5 and reboot the voltage is at 1.026 which is not enough for my 3570k 4.5ghz overclock, which causes the bios to freeze :mad:
I did disable Asus Multicore Enhancement and enable Intel speedstep, my core multiplier is down clocking, but the voltage is not, any ideas?
Is offset mode the only thing I can use to lower my voltage when idle?
I run my 2600k @ 4.5Ghz with offset voltage and it works fine. Asus multicore enchancement is disabled and all power saving features are enabled.
Have a play with the offset voltage as it's a very useful way of managing your overclock
Raja quick question after a failed and resetting CMOS, upon booting into the bios I notice that vccio, vccsa, vcore are at high values (1.25vccsa 1.35 vccio 1.38vcore) until I do a load optimized defaults and then everything is back to true default voltages.
Yeah, it is normal to shoot the volts up, probably just to boot. Every time I clear CMOS it will show those volts on the first boot no matter what BIOS version you run.
I have a card reader Akasa AK-ICR-07U3. When connected to the USB connector Asus P8Z77-V Deluxe computer either does not start (error b4) or runs a very long time. After disconnecting the reader everything works fine.