[HowTo] Get full NVMe Support for all Systems with an AMI UEFI BIOS

Hi,
I would like to ask two questions:
1:I have an Asus H 87 Plus mobo and it havent Flashback feature.
Can I use EZ flash to update the mod.bios?
2.Is it possible to install also cloned windows 10 via Acronis true image tool or need to fresh Win install?
Thanks
Charles

@charlesko1
Welcome to the Win-RAID Forum!
Here are my answers:

  1. The answer can be found >here<.
  2. It is possible to get a cloned Win10/11 installed onto an NVMe SSD, but I do not recommend to do it (the risks of a failure are much higher and you miss the chance to get rid of the garbage).

Good luck!
Dieter (alias Fernando)

3 posts were merged into an existing topic: [Guide] How to flash a modded AMI UEFI BIOS

I just want to thank you for this amazing guide, i successfully modded and flashed the modded bios of my gigabyte H81M-H and now it can boot win 11 from a kioxia kbg40zns256g nvme ssd attached to a pci adapter. I was using the clover method to boot but this is a much better way.

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@wfantasma
Welcome to the Win-Raid Forum and congratulations for having succeeded and now being able to boot off an NVMe SSD.
Enjoy it!
Dieter (alias Fernando)

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A post was split to a new topic: [Request] NVMe Support for GA-A75M-UD2H BIOS

Hi! I followed your guide to add “NvmExpressDxe_5” into a bios file on my Asrock X79 Fatal1ty pro motherboard. I am a newbie to this sort of things but I must have done something right. The disk shows in UEFI as PATA. Been workin for about two weeks trying to install a linux os on the disk, no go…until yesterday, success. Although it isn’t as fast as I imagined. The disk is an Intel ssd nvme 670p. I thank you for your time an enthusiasm about this. It is funny when everywhere it is said that this disk do not boot on my motherboard, and here we are. -Sam

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@samson
Welcome to the Win-RAID Forum and thanks for your feedback!
It is fine, that got it working your own by just following my Guide.
Enjoy it!
Dieter (alias Fernando)

Hi, just wanted to ty for the great write-up. Got my Gigabyte Z77X-UD4H working with nvme and it worked with a previous sata ssd (840evo > 970nvme), just cloned directly using macrium usb. Please correct me if i’m wrong, but i read that cloned drives wouldn’t work properly, don’t want to mislead others. Will continue testing and report back. Also, is there a thread i can link my bios file to, for others with same board?

@megastee
Welcome to the Win-RAID Forum and thanks for the feedback! It is fine, that you succeeded and now can boot off an NVMe SSD with your old system.
If you want to offer your modded BIOS for other users with the same mainboard model, you can start a new thread within >this< Forum section.
Enjoy this Forum and your updated system!
Dieter (alias Fernando)

wow hey everyone. I’m really sorry. was in the hospital and couldn’t come online.
now that i’m home again I’ll get back to that in a moment.

5 posts were merged into an existing topic: [Guide] How to flash a modded AMI UEFI BIOS

I’ve successfully patched Supermicro X9DR3-F 3.4 BIOS and was able to boot from bifurcated x16 slot. Here’s patched bios with “NvmExpressDxe_5.ffs” module: https://mega.nz/file/h1pBSDxS#T_sHlVDE7kH7rwNiBDdm7qwhXnOJlzRjgDETH9yh-f4

@kido5217
Welcome to the Win-RAID Forum and thanks for your feedback!
It is fine, that you succeeded and want to offer your modded BIOS for other interested users with the same Supermicro mainboard model.
To make it easier to find your offer, I recommend to start a separate thread within the “BIOS Modding Offers” section.
Enjoy the NVMe booting with your old mainboard!
Dieter (alias Fernando)

Howdy!

First of all thanks for the guide. I retrieved a Apple SSD from a MacBook that I attached on a PCIe-4x adapter. My modern PC sees it and I could install and boot from it.

But now I inserted that adapter on a HP Pavillion desktop tower with 3rd gen Intel Core i7 (see : HP Pavilion p6-2393ef Desktop PC | HP® Customer Support) and I tried the Clover method to not avail.

I tried modding the BIOS with UEFITool with both the v5 and small NVMe drivers but both ways add a pad-file to my work…

Any idea?
Cheers and have a good day/night

PS: I could boot the USB windows 10/11 setup and install windows on the SSD but I cannot boot from it after that on Clover… that’s why I wanted to try this guide instead.

@bapteash
Welcome to the Win-RAID Forum!
Please attach the extracted “pure” original *.ROM BIOS as *.zip archive. Then we may be able to search for a solution.
Regards
Dieter (alias Fernando)

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Thank you for a fast answer Fernando.

Here is the original untouchable BIOS:

You can also download the .exe from HP’s website and open the .exe file with WinRAR and retrieve that same file here:

https://ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/software13/COL57553/cp-143638-2/sp70376.exe

Again, thank you for your help. Trying to make that good HP tower to a use. I know I could use a SATA SSD but I just got THREE Apple PCI-E NVME SSDs for 0 bucks.

Cheers

Hello, thanks to everyone for this awesome guide :smiling_face_with_three_hearts:
I was using method #1 with AMI’s MMTool and I had to use the NvmExpressDxe_Small module.

My MB is the ASRock Z77 Extreme4-M.

I use the Samsung 980 with Icy Box PCIe Adapter:
https://icybox.de/en/product.php?id=366

ASRock was releasing NVME Bios support for the Extreme4 but not for the Extreme4-M variant.

Greetings.

@bapteash
Thanks for the upload of the oribinal BIOS file.
Although I tried several different MMTool and UEFITool versions, none of them were able to insert any NVMe module without creating a natively not present Pad-file.
Nevertheless I succeeded finally by doing the following:

  1. As first step I opened the original BIOS with the AMI MMTool 4.50.
  2. To get more space within the extremely compressed DXE Driver Volume I deleted the biggest listed Network DXE Driver named Ip6Dxe (Volume: 03:02-00, Index: AD). As the other network modules this DXE Driver is only required for the “Wake-on-LAN” feature (booting by a LAN command). So the missing Ip6Dxe module will not harm any other BIOS function.
  3. After having saved the work of point 2 I opened the pre-modded BIOS again with the AMI MMTool 4.50 and inserted the NVMe module according to my guide with the NVMe module named NvmExpressDxe_5.ffs.
  4. After having saved the finally modded BIOS I compared the content of the original BIOS with the content of the modded one. Result: I could not find any freshly created or moved Pad-file.

Good luck!

@Aladdin
Welcome to the Win-RAID Forum and thanks for your feedback!
Did you succeed and are you now able to boot off the NVMe SSD?
If yes, enjoy it! If not, please let us know it.
Dieter (alias Fernando)

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