R rec_laratta Reputable Mar 27, 2018 65 0 4,630 Mar 30, 2018 #1 I have a ASRock A320M Motherboard but the BIOS is AMI version P3.10 dated back to August 28th of last year My cpu is a Ryzen 3 1200
I have a ASRock A320M Motherboard but the BIOS is AMI version P3.10 dated back to August 28th of last year My cpu is a Ryzen 3 1200
Solution herrwizo Mar 30, 2018 No. First 3.20, then directly 4.50. No need for any intermediate steps. But if everything is working fine for you at the moment, there is no reason to upgrade.
No. First 3.20, then directly 4.50. No need for any intermediate steps. But if everything is working fine for you at the moment, there is no reason to upgrade.
herrwizo Illustrious Feb 17, 2009 5,152 43 40,240 Mar 30, 2018 #2 If you currently don't have any issues, there is no reason to upgrade BIOS at all. That being said, if you still wish to update, the latest BIOS for your mobo can be found here: https://www.asrock.com/MB/AMD/A320M/index.asp#BIOS You first need to update BIOS to version 3.20, and only then can you update to the latest version, 4.50. Upvote 0 Downvote
If you currently don't have any issues, there is no reason to upgrade BIOS at all. That being said, if you still wish to update, the latest BIOS for your mobo can be found here: https://www.asrock.com/MB/AMD/A320M/index.asp#BIOS You first need to update BIOS to version 3.20, and only then can you update to the latest version, 4.50.
R rec_laratta Reputable Mar 27, 2018 65 0 4,630 Mar 30, 2018 #3 Do I have to do 4.40 too or just 3.20 then 4.50...I should just do them all Upvote 0 Downvote
herrwizo Illustrious Feb 17, 2009 5,152 43 40,240 Mar 30, 2018 Solution #4 No. First 3.20, then directly 4.50. No need for any intermediate steps. But if everything is working fine for you at the moment, there is no reason to upgrade. Upvote 0 Downvote Solution
No. First 3.20, then directly 4.50. No need for any intermediate steps. But if everything is working fine for you at the moment, there is no reason to upgrade.
R rec_laratta Reputable Mar 27, 2018 65 0 4,630 Mar 30, 2018 #5 Ah okay I thought you had to update the bios each time there's an update, Thanks Upvote 0 Downvote
herrwizo Illustrious Feb 17, 2009 5,152 43 40,240 Mar 30, 2018 #6 Not at all, usually you do it if you experience RAM incompatibility, need new CPU microcodes or patch existing BIOS issues. Since you got no problems, no reason to do anything. Upvote 0 Downvote
Not at all, usually you do it if you experience RAM incompatibility, need new CPU microcodes or patch existing BIOS issues. Since you got no problems, no reason to do anything.