On Wed, 5 Dec 2001 12:50:55 -0600
"Austad, Jay" <austad at marketwatch.com> wrote:
 
> Chernobyl wipes the bios.  No way to fix it except to send it in to the
> manufacturer.

There are actually several ways to potentially recover a corrupted flash
BIOS. I've never had to send a board in to the manufacturer. Here are a
few methods:

1) Reprogram the BIOS chip on an PROM/EPROM programmer; any EPROM
programmer software should accept the BIOS .bin file format that you can
d/l from the manufacturer. Call around till you find a shop that has one,
and is willing to take the 5 minutes to do the job. Bring them some MGD
light.

2) If it is a later Award BIOS, you can use the 'boot-block' recovery
method. This is documented on some manufacturer's sites as well as the
wmbios page. You will need an ISA video card, a floppy drive, a specially
prepared floppy disk, and a six of full-bodied, hoppy ale.

3) Swap the bad chip for a BIOS chip from an identical or similar
motherboard. Even with the hardware issues, it should be able to get you
far enough to boot from a floppy. Once you have it booted, CAREFULLY pull
the BIOS chip out (hot-swap) and replace with the old, bad chip. Now run
the BIOS flash program to restore the old chip. In preparation, two
double-scotches with a little water on the side, FIRST.

Note: BIOS chip repair is considered optional in all cases.


          -.bill.layer.- .-frogtown.mn.usa.-

.-Microsoft.Windows.XP.- -.suddenly.everything.sucks-.