Question Firmware for manually flashing firmware to Samsung EVO 870 SSD

timeToSleepNow

Commendable
Jan 20, 2021
25
2
1,535
Hi there,

I think my Samsung EVO 870 SSD firmware got corrupted and for looking for the firmware to manually flash it with, I headed over to:
to the firmware section, but there's no firmware file for it.

Do you have any idea if there's a place where I can find it?
Also, would the firmware for 870 QVO work with 870 EVO, since the firmware for it is present in the link above?

My SSD's latest firmware is SVT01B6Q, while for 870 QVO, the firmware file is SVQ02B6Q.

I got in touch with Samsung from my country, but the lady that I was talking to was like "firm what?", and by trying to explain to her what I meant by that, she ended up suggesting me to shoot an email about the issue to a third-party service called hanaro.eu.
Since it's friday, they might not see the email until next week, so I decided to bring up the issue over here, in the hope someone could help me out before the next week.

Thank you!

P.S:
I'm using Windows.
 
Last edited:

Lutfij

Titan
Moderator
The two drives are not the same, so no you can't drop in the QVO firmware onto the EVO. You might want to explain why you think your SSD's firmware might be corrupt(...?) As for your build, please list the specs to it like so:
CPU:
Motherboard:
Ram:
SSD/HDD:
GPU:
PSU:
Chassis:
OS:
Monitor:

Include the version(not edition) of the OS and the age of the PSU(apart from it's make and model + wattage). BIOS version for motherboard? Which SATA port is the SSD populating on the motherboard?
 

timeToSleepNow

Commendable
Jan 20, 2021
25
2
1,535
Ah, I see.

The problem is that 2 months ago my Delux (Model: DLP-50A, 650 W) gave out partially, without smoking, with it still being able to be powered on, although I don't know how old it was, but I assume it must have been around 10 years old, as I was the third user.

I suspect that time there was a shock that might have corrupted the firmware of the SSD, because, quite often, it fails to boot after replacing the PSU, saying it can't see the SSD or saying that there occurred some sort of corruption of the files. I'm suspecting firmware corruption, because in the past a DVD Writer drive firmware got corrupted due to a short, using a totally different PC, but it was still able to work, although it could write only at certain speeds.
This is the PSU replacement:
be quiet!, model: BQ SU7, 400 W (2 months old)

Kindly give this a read, because I have explained the issue in more depth over here:
, but here I was mostly concerned about the SATA cable, as I haven't moved it around before the PSU failure, if I recall correctly.

What I plan to do before taking the steps suggested by zbook in that thread, is to flash the firmware of the SSD, to eliminate the possibility of a firmware corruption in case there was one, then install Windows on the SSD on a different PC and test it out for a couple of days using a different SATA cable than the one I was previously using.

In case no errors would show up, I'd would reinstall Windows on the PC that I was having troubles with, and also test it out for a couple of days.


CPU:
AMD Phenom II X3 710

Motherboard:
K9N2 SLI Platinum (MS-7374), version 1.2
BIOS version: V3.5

Ram:
8 GB DDR2 @ 800 MHz

3 x 2 GB Module Manufacturer: Nanya Technology
Module Part Number: M2Y2G64TU8HD5B-AC

1 x 2 GB Module Manufacturer: Kingmax Semiconductor
Module Part Number: KLDE88F-B8HS5

SSD/HDD:
Samsung SSD 870 EVO 500GB
It's populating SATA port 1, as seen here:

Ru2CeFU.png


GPU:
XFX Radeon HD 5770 (1 GB)

PSU:
be quiet!
Model: BQ SU7
400 W

Chassis:
N/A (I can't find the name or model, I'm no the first user)

OS:
Windows 7 Service Pack 1 (Build 7601.24214)
Version 6.1 (Build 7601: Service Pack 1)

Monitor:
HP 1825
 
Last edited:

Lutfij

Titan
Moderator
At this point, I'm surprised you have a system to begin with, given how a seemingly badly built PSU died on you, meaning that it could've taken other components out on it's way out. As for the new PSU, you're underpowered since you're advised to have a PSU with at least 450W at the entire system's disposal.
 

timeToSleepNow

Commendable
Jan 20, 2021
25
2
1,535
I was aware of that, that it could've taken other components out, but sometimes life is life.

About being underpowered, when I got the brand new PSU, I measured the power consumption , using a UPS, by stress testing the CPU and the GPU. Thereafter doing calculations to take into account the other parts (SSD and DVD Writer at peak usage), with the power consumption resulting to a maximum of about 320 W.

What do you suggest I should do regarding the firmware for the 870 EVO, because being underpowered doesn't seem to be the problem?
 

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