Monday, June 6, 2011 - 17:19
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Bios — Gbdw1-verb.d

A common hardware flaw across global Hystou, Kingdel, and Eglobal units running the GBDW1 motherboard is an , regardless of CPU operating temperatures or system load. The Root Cause

If the system is completely unresponsive, you may need a physical BIOS programmer (like a CH341A) to flash the .bin file directly onto the Winbond 25Q64 chip. gbdw1-verb.d bios

| Feature | VERB.B / VERB_B | VERB.BB | VERB.D | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Winbond W25Q64BV | Winbond W25Q64BV | Winbond W25Q64JV | | Common CPUs | i5-5250U, i7-5557U | i7-5650U | i5-5257U | | File Archive Name(s) | GBDW1 VERB.B | GBDW1 VER B.B | GBDW1-VERB.D | | Reported Issues | 30-min shutdown, ME corruption | 30-min shutdown | Power-loss boot failure, No display | A common hardware flaw across global Hystou, Kingdel,

The BIOS (Basic Input/Output System) is a vital piece of firmware stored on a chip on the motherboard. It initializes the hardware when you turn on the PC and allows the operating system to boot. On the GBDW1-VERB.D, the BIOS is typically stored on a , which has a capacity of 64 Megabits (8 Megabytes). It initializes the hardware when you turn on

BIOS corruption, which leads to a "blue light" (power on, no display) state. 2. Troubleshooting: BIOS Corruption and "Bricking"