


The product research and development: the company product research and development in the process of burning test chips.ģ. Appliance repair: suitable for household appliances maintenance industry flash color TV, DVD, computer motherboards, hard disk memory chips.Ģ. But in this case, it works fine.New EZP2019+ High-Speed USB SPI Programmer is Better than EZP2013 EZP2010 Support 24 25 26 93 EEPROM 25 Flash Bios. PS - renaming an official bios download typically does not work with most other brands. bin and load it in the software and then write, followed with verify. After that, just rename the downloaded bios to.

Then read the chip and save the dump into a bin file for safe keeping. Once you have its orientation correct, use the software to detect the chip. But in some cases, I can't get a good read/write, then I will solder the chip to the board and desolder it once done. I typically use a binder style clip (office supplies) to clamp the chip to the green board so I don't have to solder it. The chip itself has a small circular indent, on the face, that notes pin 1. Put the bios chip on it, noting that pin 1 of the chip is lined up correctly. Solder the two four pin headers to that green board. The green pcb is what you will put the bios chip on. Since these are 25 series, it goes closest to the usb end. To make this a little simpler, see the attached image. This shows you which end of the socket is for which type and what direction it should be facing. There are two "icons" on the pcb next to the socket. The orientation image in the software is incorrect. I've accidentally had them on backwards before and haven't ruined one yet. That's when I decided to try renaming the official download from MSI. Tried one and it didn't work, computer powered on to a blank screen. Note - I found other BIN dumps across the web. The programming software version I used was 1.29. And luckily it worked with my program when renamed to E1759IMS.BIN. I downloaded the latest bios from the drivers page - E1759IMS.80C. Going to put a little time on it and make sure it is stable before returning it to the customer.īios chip is a cFeon Q64-104HIP. And using my programmer, erase the chip and write a newer bios version to it. I ended up having to remove the bios chip. For this case, it was a corrupt bios and I have no idea what version it did have on it. Fan would spin up after a short bit of being on. Unit would power on, show the MSI logo and then hang there. If you're under warranty, I would suggest sending it in. Here at the shop, we have the necessary equipment. If you aren't technically inclined to perform such a repair, I wouldn't attempt it. So I registered here in order to post my experience with it.

And I see a lot of folks posting the same problem. I ran into the same issue at my shop with a customers GE70 2PE Apache Pro.
