I got E-mail from my Asus support representative and he said: "As the mainboard is older one, you most likely need to install the drivers for ssd during the installation"Īccording to my own experience this is not correct. It is not really difficult to insert the required NvmeExpressD圎.ffs module into any AMI Aptio IV UEFI BIOS according my guide, which you can find within the start post of this thread. Is not there anyone out there who succeeded in modifying the BIOS for the Asus Rampage IV Extreme installing the Intel 750 series PCIe SSD? I would like to install an Intel 750 series PCIe SSD in my computer, but I have no knowledge about modifying the BIOS, and moreover, I do not dare. I do not see blank type guids in g752 bios, maybe there is a problem with Uefitool recognizing types in Aptio 4 G751 bios?įernando: Hi. Does it stand for free something? Some of the filename less guids have a type RAW,some have blank type field, so I think they are needed and can not be deleted,right? In mmtool report I see a lot of GUIDs without a filename and listed as type FRFM. I found a post which someone wrote that it is safe to delete IPv6 modules from bios unless I use them for network P圎 boot, is that right? A lot less padding files are in G752 bios in volume 2.Īny problems I should take into consideration when adding nvme. There is only 4kb space in second volume of G751 bios, and I can not just simply add them, I would have to delete some modules or padding files and there are a lot of them in G751 bios. GUID in deps do not match GUIDs of any modules inside the bios image, strange, or should they match? I can not see the denpendencies, I just see GUID numbers and PUSH, AND operator in deps. Are the modules compatible between Aptio versions? I see with UEFItool Aptio 5 modules have dependices in them and aptio 4 modules have their dependencies in them. I have extracted 4 nvme modules from G752 bios which is Aptio 5. (Thanks Asus, now I have reason to hate you too.I trying to add nvme support to the bios of Asus G751. Luckily this makes my setup of mentioned motherboard together with Intel i7-3770K and 32 GB DDR3 RAM less obsolete. I didn’t try that yet but based on all the feedback it seems working pretty well. Just follow this How to get full NVMe support for Intel Chipset systems from 6-Series up on how to mod and flash BIOS for your motherboard. The most amazing thing is that you actually can get full NVMe support in your BIOS. Asus introduced NVMe boot support to newer lines of motherboards and (as usual) not backported it to older lines. As these motherboards already have UEFI and we use modern operating systems (Windows 8/8.1/10), it’s all about software. However the most trivial yet most complicated thing is to get the NVMe storage in PCI-E adapter boot as system drive. The great thing about PC modularity is that even few years old PC can get USB-C or M.2 support via PCI-E adapters (that provide enough speed and power). With my less than 4 year old motherboard (Asus P8Z77-V PRO Thunderbolt), I can upgrade to few fast non-NVMe starages on PCI-E but it won’t be as fast and efficient as NVMe. No single new feature ever comes to old motherboard BIOS. Just like in the smartphone market, most motherboards usually receive few BIOS updates within one year and that’s it. Jin Hardware by Marcel Dopita (updated 2424 days ago)
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