Question Need 100% Exact Steps for upgrading Bios for a CPU Upgrade Please!

Tomidie

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Sep 28, 2012
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I am DANG nervous about doing this bios upgrade. I want to make sure im doing EVERYTHING right so i dont brick my mobo as i do not think it's a recoverable one. I have a few specific questions, but I also need a complete and detailed guide to go from a Ryzen 7 1800X to a Ryzen 7 5900X. Here are the questions:

1. I found conflicting reports on this. after each bios update, do I boot up and login to windows? or do I restart and then do the next update?

2. When do I clear CMOS. How, EXACT steps, do I clear CMOS successfully.

3. Do I clear CMOS EVERY update or just once?

4. Do i use a flash drive to do the bios updates? or is there some other method?

5. When do I put the CPU in?

Please be as specific as possible with your guide, including common pitfalls. while im a fairly advanced user (I am able to install DDWRT to my modem), I do not have any knowledge in this area. I have included all specs in case any concerns arise or additional information im not aware of is needed.

Here are the specs:
CPU: Ryzen 7 1800X
Bios Version: P3.0 (Bridge)
MOBO: ASRock Taichi X370
RAM: 32 GB 2333 Dual Channel DDR4
GPU: NVIDIA RTX 2080

Thank you very much in advance
 
Your best option is to consult your motherboard manual, for the correct way to do bios updates, and for CMOS reset. Asrock will also have notes on their bios download page, if you need to install a certain revision prior to the latest revision. You do not need to login to windows at any point for bios updates. I do a CMOS reset only after a bios update.
 
I am upgrading from the 1800X to the 5900X which as far i was can tell requires P. 7.30 to be compat with Zen 3 cpus


Pay very close attention with that Taichi in that it has a couple of "bridge BIOS" that have to be installed in order or will brick the board. The official guide will tell you that as you near the 3xxx to 5xxx jump in BIOS revisions that it drops support for 1xxx. This could be an issue if you don't happen to have a 2xxx or 3xxx available to you. This issue revolves around a BIOS chip that was too small to retain 1xxx support with the new firmware.
 
Pay very close attention with that Taichi in that it has a couple of "bridge BIOS" that have to be installed in order or will brick the board. The official guide will tell you that as you near the 3xxx to 5xxx jump in BIOS revisions that it drops support for 1xxx. This could be an issue if you don't happen to have a 2xxx or 3xxx available to you. This issue revolves around a BIOS chip that was too small to retain 1xxx support with the new firmware.
i appreciate the concern on that, but i did already confirm it still works with limited function (just enough to still boot) from a few other accounts, so i dont need a 2 or 3 thankfully. I do know about bridging as well, those two are the very few things i actually know.
Your best option is to consult your motherboard manual, for the correct way to do bios updates, and for CMOS reset. Asrock will also have notes on their bios download page, if you need to install a certain revision prior to the latest revision. You do not need to login to windows at any point for bios updates. I do a CMOS reset only after a bios update.
The full update? or each one? mine requires a specific path to follow that takes like 5 or 6 different updates.
Have you downloaded and read whatever instructions may or may not be available on the Asrock website?

I'd expect any such instructions to be somewhat cryptic and vague, but I'd at least look.
I have and they are extremely vague at best as you mention, there's a bunch of information in them that others have advised againest, such as the version path it recommends as one of the them is bad. (though i think that one has been removed from thier bios page)

I more need the process instructions itself. I dont know what to do and when. i've done a lot of googling already and there is just so much conflicting info. so i figured the best place to ask is here as usually it has people with more knowhow than just your average reddit or the mobo manual.
 
I've seen it recommended to clear cmos AFTER updating the BIOS. Right here on this forum, by a well known participant.

I have no idea how necessary that is. I can tell you that I have updated a BIOS only 2 or 3 times in my life and I cannot recall clearing cmos at any time.

Vague, non-specific, and entirely laughable "instructions" are part and parcel of the entire PC industry. It's always been the case and there are no flattering reasons for it. I don't expect that to change.
 
I've seen it recommended to clear cmos AFTER updating the BIOS. Right here on this forum, by a well known participant.

I have no idea how necessary that is. I can tell you that I have updated a BIOS only 2 or 3 times in my life and I cannot recall clearing cmos at any time.

Vague, non-specific, and entirely laughable "instructions" are part and parcel of the entire PC industry. It's always been the case and there are no flattering reasons for it. I don't expect that to change.
You understand my conundrum then. I've seen people say do it before, and i've seen before say do it after, I've also seen people say do it after each one. So im entirely confused on which it is. I wouldn't be doing this if i didn't have to, bios updates scare me.