[Request] Asus Rampage VI Encore modded Bios

I was referring to the stock V6 VROC from the original bios file.

If the V7.5 VROC the most up to date then go ahead and update that one.

Thanks.

Yes, me too, talking about V6, update to what, V7 or V7.5?
Same as before, V7 is latest in thread and not sure where/why 7.5 is not in our thread for this and or where he got it or why @tistou77 was using it. He never replied back, and I think Fernando didn’t either?
Ohh, other than this, which is unclear to me (unless both = same, neither newer than the other, except by one day?) - Intel EFI “RaidDriver” BIOS Modules (56)
I think you can use either, but have to use 7.0 BIOS modules with 7.0 drivers, and 7.5 BIOS modules with 7.5 drivers.

Really, none of this matters to you now, and I can leave v6 stock in there, since you are using RST, just update RST from v17 to v18 and that is all you need (+ Microcode update)

Spot on Lot_N_bios,

For some reason I though that the latest VROC was the 7.5v but it is irrelevant now since i do not use it, you can leave it on v7 if you don’t mind please.

“just update RST from v17 to v18 and that is all you need (+ Microcode update)” THIS !!

Once you can complete the mod bios let me know so i can flash it accordingly.

Many thanks for your help.

@Safado2 - Stock VROC stuff is V6
Here is mod BIOS with only RST v17 updated to v18 + all microcodes updated to latest version
*Edit - On Pause - Please ask Fernando to clarify on the EFI RAID thread >> Note: This module will not work with 100-/200-Series Chipset systems. << Does that apply to your X299 board, because I see 299 as being part of 200
Also! Are you booting UEFI or Legacy? There is ONLY v18 for EFI, no legacy module available.

@Lost_N_BIOS ,

Howdy?
Yes, I boot from pure UEFI bios

@Fernando ,

Can you help us to clarify what Lost_N_Bios has wrote?

Is x299 100-/200-Series Chipset systems and thus the module will not work?

Thank you all.

@Lost_N_BIOS @Safado2 :
The Intel X299 chipset is the successor of the X99 chipset and belongs to the “Enterprise Edition” chipsets, which were designed by Intel for High-End Desktops (HEDT). Contrary to the other Intel 200-Series chipsets the X299 chipset supports the Intel Core X-Series processors (codenames: Skylake-X and Kaby Lake-X). All supported processors use the LGA 2066 socket. Although Intel may have listed somewhere the X299 chipset among the 200-Series ones, there may be differences even regarding the DeviceIDs of the on-board Intel SATA Controller. Since the shown external DeviceID DEV_2822 of the on-board Intel SATA RAID Controller doesn’t indicate the specific model, the best way is to check the HardwareIDs of the on-board Intel SATA Controller while running in AHCI mode. Only this way the user can see to which Intel chipset series it belongs and which Intel RST driver/BIOS RAID module version will support it.

"the best way is to check the HardwareIDs of the on-board Intel SATA Controller while running in AHCI mode. Only this way the user can see to which Intel chipset series it belongs and which Intel RST driver/BIOS RAID module version will support it."

@Fernando ,

Does this information shows on BIOS or only on Windows?
I can not changed to AHCI because I am running Intel RST RAID at the moment.

Thanks for your help.

@Safado2 :

The exact HardwareIDs of the on-board Intel SATA Controller can be checked from within any OS while running the Intel SATA Controller in AHCI mode.
I suspect, that the DeviceID of the Intel X299 chipset SATA AHCI Controller is either DEV_9D03 or DEV_9DD3. Don’t trust the Controller names given by Intel (DEV_9D03: "Intel(R) 6th Generation Core Processor Family Platform I/O SATA AHCI Controller", DEV_9DD3: "Intel(R) 300 Series Chipset Family SATA AHCI Controller")