Weeman,
you have to use the cd command to enter the path where your afudos.exe tool is located. Either that or both the BIOS filename and the flasher have to have the full path in them. For example:
a:\flasher\afudos /i ....
or:
c:\ a:
a:\ cd flasher
a:\ afudos /i0007.bin /pbnc /n
DOS can hardly guess where in the hierarchy your tool is after all
And yes, if your optical drive is on E:, you would have to replace the A with an E. But keep in mind that drive letters can change when booting DOS, also due to DOS not recognizing NTFS partitions. See below.
A: and B: usually refer to floppy drives, C: and beyond can be HDs or optical drives. You can certainly put your flasher and BIOS files on your harddrive but this HD partition MUST be FAT 32 formatted. DOS does not support NTFS! Floppies as a medium are stupid nowadays, and CDs or DVDs are stupid too since they're not writable under DOS. Another option would be a USB stick with a bootable DOS to hold the flasher and all possible BIOSses...just in case. Whatever it is, keep the drive letter in mind when changing pathes. In case you want to know which subdirectories there are on your current drive, use the dir command.
To all:
On a side note, I am running BIOS 0007 on my V2 board. But I can't tell if the throttling is disabled, it is a matter of principles to me to have errors straightened out even tho my system might not be affected.
I am currently running my C0 920 at 3.8 GHz, unable to get to 4 GHz despite disabling power saving options.
VCore: 1.26 (200x19, all power saving options enabled!), Vqpi: 1.375, Vpll: 1.80, IOH: 1.34V (Feels faster than 1.26, so I assume that the chipset feels better with more juice)
DRAM: 1.6V, 1200 MHz, 7-7-7-18 Corsair XMS3 sticks. Better than 1600 at CL9 and 1.86V!
Just a quick summary. Maybe it's the most economical spot there at 3.8 and power savings on.






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