I have an dual nic both intel and Killer GBE adapters … The board has the MAC adress stickers on each port… I couldn’t find a way to transfer/edit the MAC so I went ahead and flashed it , thinking I can edit it later if needed
Everything works fine , both Ethernet ports no problem . I have a feeling the MAC address is hardcoded into the ethernet IC on this board . .I might be wrong but working ok anyhow
It does depend how you flash the modified BIOS, if you use Gigabyte tools (Q-flash or EFIflash) then the MAC address will not be overwritten, if you use Intel FPT or a hardware programmer then it will erase the MAC. I didn’t have time to make that disitinction initially but it matters not as you have flashed succeessfully. Enjoy your new CPU.
The gigabyte ‘@Bios’ flash tool will not work with modded bios , it typically detects modifications .
Interestingly I flashed with Intel FPT , but MAC addresses must be intact , since both Ethernet ports work. I spent so much time concerned about this but , it seemed no way to write them other than AMI’s ‘DMIEdit’ which writes edits straight to the chip , rather than a .bin file , hence why I flashed a downloaded rom without editing the MAC
@chinobino Hey everyone, I’m not sure if this will fit in here but I already tried to get an answer in other threads regarding this issue (apparently they are all dead lol).
I tried to run a Xeon Skylake (E3 1270v5) on my Asus H110T. However, I wasn’t able to do so with the modified BIOS. CPU-Fan spins very briefly when pressing the power button, but nothing else happens. Can someone help me out?
You will need to use the Corporate v11.8.77.3664 ME firmware version that comes with CoffeeTime or you can also try using the newer version modified by dsanke:
I actually already used the coffetime utility but in the guide only the Me Recovery Module needed to be removed. So thats the only thing I did. Turns out, I only need to carefully read the documentation and readme to achieve my goal. Replaced the ME firmware with the corporate version you already mentioned. After that, I set the ME state to “disable” (as described in the documentation to get xeons working) and also unlocked the FD locks.
And would you look at that, it boots!
Next step is to get an i9-9900 installed and working lol
I’m new to this forum so be nice please - Or throw rocks at me, i will try to dodge!
Long story short: I dont want to update my whole System as i am happy with as it is, except for the CPU. I’ve seen online, that there a bios mods which allow us to use a newer CPU on old Motherboards. This is my Setup ATM (Just the important stuff):
i7 6700k
Asus Maximus Extreme 8
760 Watt Corsair AX760
Was anyone able to make this kind of combination work? Or maybe has a good idea on what to do? So far i’ve only found guides for AsRock or MSI Boards and many different statements on which CPU will work and which won’t.
Looking forward for a Pro to help me…thanks in advance!
Asus motherboards usually have protection against flashing a modified BIOS so it is highly recommended to purchase a hardware programmer (such as the ch341a) to flash the BIOS EEPROM and to be able to recover from a potential brick.
You should also make sure you have a complete backup of your BIOS chip that contains the motherboard serial number and ethernet MAC address for the Intel Gigabit ethernet adapter.
You will need to modify a BIOS that has Kaby Lake support, so you will need BIOS 2202 or later.
You can use CoffeeTime v0.99 to easily modify the BIOS as it has a nice GUI and there are fields to insert the serial number and MAC address.
You will need to make sure that the ME FW is version downgraded to 11.7.1xxx (or 11.6.xxxx) and swap the relevant CPU microcodes depending on which Coffee Lake CPU you buy. Make sure to leave the microcode for your Skylake (506E3) or Kaby Lake (906E9) CPU for testing.
If you need help with CoffeeTime or have any questions just ask.
Once you have backed up your current BIOS and made the modified BIOS you are ready to flash it to the motherboard. Note that using software to do this is extremely difficult on Asus boards as the Flash Descriptor is often locked and difficult to bypas (read this) so a hardware programmer is highly recommended.
Once the modified BIOS has been flashed you need to test it with your Skylake/Kabylake CPU first and then insulate the motherboard pins before inserting any 6 or 8 core Coffee Lake CPU. There is a diagram of the pins you need to insulate in the CoffeeTime folders (CoffeeTime_0.99\data\info). It is easiest/best to insulate the pads on the back of the CPU with Kapton tape.
You will also need to connect the 2 pins that tell the motherboard that the CPU socket is occupied, for which a car rear window defogger repair kit can be used (although you can use graphite from a lead pencil for initial testing).
I tried to find a ch134a programmer, but when i google it, i only find the ch341a - will this one work as well? Is there anything i have to be aware of when buying one? I am currently looking for a i9 9900k as it seems to be the most powerful version that i can find which should work.
Thanks by the way for the REALLY informative answer, it really helped me and i will surely give it a try!
I can’t say for sure that your motheroard will be able to run the 9900K with all core boost @ 5GHz, as it will depend on the ability of the VRM circuitry and the heatsink to keep it cool, however if there is any Z170 board to try it on yours would be at the top of my list (as the VRM and cooling looks very good).
It’s been a while since visited here last time. Anyway I got bored and found an Asus board (H110M-K) board from my stocks. Although the board has a weak VRM-section it’s probably fine with stuff like i5 8400/8500 as long as everything is kept at stock speeds.
I used Coffeetime 0.99 to mod the latest official bios update with ME 11.6.10.1196 (mod.rom) and added board specific data (SN,UUID etc.) to mod.rom by using F4DD editor.
I unlocked FD/ME write protection according to this guide. Then I flashed mod.rom to SPI by using AFUWIN 3.05.04 with /GAN command as I did years ago with another Asus board. After that I dumped the newly flashed image file (dump.rom) by /O command and this is what I got
So it looks like that either AFUWIN is incapable to rewrite the FD-region or Asus bioses have separate lock for descriptor. I highlight that ME itself has been changed (originally it was 11.8XXXXX).
I am pretty sure that the mod works fine with B0-revision CPUs but since SKU-modification is not present in the dumped image the system won’t boot with U0 rev. stuff. To be fair, I haven’t yet tested the system with any new CPU.
Other possibilities are to use Intel’s FPT to rewrite FD-region or flash mod.rom with a CH341A -programmer. For the latter option the bios chip is socketed (Winbond 25Q128FV) and I have a programmer but not sure if it’s safe to use. Data lines draw 5V and instead of CH341A it has marking CH341B on the controller chip.
EDIT: As I suspected FD is locked separately. FPTw64 was able to re-flash ME-area but not FD
Error 451: The host CPU does not have write access to the target flash area. To enable write access for this operation you must modify the descriptor settings to give host access to this region.
FPT Operation Failed.
Apparently launching GRUB from efi.shell and then off-setting the re-flash variable only unlocks ME-area in this case.
Hi, not sure if you will reply to this post but i will get a dell micro 3050 soon, it has a i5 7500T and i want to know if it would be possible to modify the bios with coffeetime to support 8/9th gen and ES processors.
Hi, i will get a dell micro 3050 with a i5 7500T desktop cpu soon (B250 Chipset), and i want to upgrade the processor in the future with the QTJ1 but i want to confirm if it’s possible. I always used Coffeetime and to make this work i would need to add the ‘906ED’ microcode and disable ME. Do you have exoerience with this model or similar ones?
A little update on my previous post. Couldn’t figure out how to unlock FD region without an external programmer and almost bricked the board in the process. So I ended up flashing the SPI using the “bad” programmer with AsProgrammer and eventually it worked. In the case of AsProgrammer, pay attention to which version of you are using. For some reason certain older version couldn’t flash the image properly (verification failures).
.1C1 = ME 11.7 Enabled, no xeon or mutant bga 1440 support
.1C2 = ME 11.8 Disabled, Any LGA 1151 cpu supported (except skylake/kabylake engineering sample)
Added support for Rebar if Rebar option in the bios is not available but Above 4G Decoding/Cryptocurrency is available in the bios (works for turing gpus too).
Also here is the pin shorting guide for 8-9th gen on LGA 1151:
Hi people! I tried to make a i5-8500 work on a MS-B9071 motherboard. It is not working.
I moded the original bios i got from the website of MSI. I used Allinone_tool because CoffeTime said that my motherboard was not suported. Allinone_tool moded the bios without a problem. I flashed the BIOS using FPT and that went well as well.
I moded the cpu pins for MSI first to try it. It wouldn’t get power because #SKTOCC wasn’t shorted so I applied the pinmod for ASUS.
Now what happens is that the pc tries to boot. It runs for a second and turns off. I checked the rams, no problem. Tried to run it without GPU to see if the power was the issue but no. It boots up fine when I put the old CPU back in.
Does anybody know why this is? Can anybody help?
EDIT: Turns out it was tottaly my fault. I disabled windows defender but it quaranteened some Allinone_tool files anyway and that was the reason thait it didn’t work.
For anybody with a MS-B9071 motherboard; you have to use Allinone_tool and you have to do the ASUS pinmod. Even tho it is a MSI motherboard you still need to short SKTOCC.