- OVERCLOCK INTEL G45 G43 EXPRESS CHIPSET HOW TO
- OVERCLOCK INTEL G45 G43 EXPRESS CHIPSET INSTALL
- OVERCLOCK INTEL G45 G43 EXPRESS CHIPSET UPDATE
Pay attention to the dates too.Ĭlick to expand.Well of all the people on this forum, I am more than well aware it is a PRE BIOS POST problem. Start from the lowest rating review and work up. Interesting reading on Newegg of all places. The BIOS was modded to stop the same problem we now have with socket 771 CPU's.Some motherboards are very specific about which stepping will work on them.There is likely a difference between 33x3 series CPU's depending on stepping.The X38T-DQ6 likely has at least one CPU socket pin wired differently (Y3?).So I'll list some data to chew on for a bit on the X38T-DQ6 and how it may relate to other boards. This is why I want your CPU batch code kikice13. Whether or not a X33xx CPU works may be dependent on which stepping CPU you have. I can't verify if this change was done to the 771 socket version Xeons or not as Intel AFAIK, hasn't published any specific data sheet info on them, only the socket 775 version. This also happens to coincide with when Intel changed one of the lands on the socket 775 Xeons (Y3). If the official Gigabyte BIOS was bricking boards. I surly wouldn't trust somebody just because they know their way around a BIOS modding tool.
OVERCLOCK INTEL G45 G43 EXPRESS CHIPSET HOW TO
It is for this reason I believe you can modify the POST to bypass the "bad" test, but that would take somebody who knows how to write BIOS.
OVERCLOCK INTEL G45 G43 EXPRESS CHIPSET UPDATE
The DDR3 version was either fixed by BIOS update or replaced when the BIOS update bricked the board. It was so bad Gigabyte pulled the DDR2 version off the shelves.
OVERCLOCK INTEL G45 G43 EXPRESS CHIPSET INSTALL
In short it behaved just like when you install a socket 771 CPU into any "X" series chipset board. For a while the X38T-DQ6 was plagued by serious problems. Here is a list of the cpu's that support VT-DĬlick to expand.That article is misleading, Just because it worked on the X38T-DQ6 doesn't mean it will work on other X38 or "Q" series chipsets. the VT-D was the only similarity I could see between the Q and X 775 chipsets. What I wonder is if this chipset or bios thinks the E54x0 is a Q9x50, and thinks it needs to enable support for this technology, but the signalling is not there to allow it to completely fulfill the requirements, and it just sits there and basically rejects the cpu. These are 12MB 1333 Bus 775 cpus that indeed support VT-D. What cought my eye was for the Q9x50 series. In fact only few socket 775 cpu's supported this. What I checked to see if the E5400 series supports VT-D, and they do not. So I think when it sees the new cpu it is running defaults until you go back into the bios and tell it to go ahead and run with the previous settings. The problem is, with mine anyway, is it sees a new cpu installed if I put the E5430 in, then put the X3220 back into the system. Click to expand.I tried to disable "Vanderpool Technology" on my P5E, and then swapped to the E5430 cpu, still no boot.