Chipe
New Member
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2023
- Messages
- 6 (0.01/day)
Let me tell you about my experience...
I have an Asus P6T Deluxe V2 motherboard with the X58 chipset (yes, quite old; I've had it since it was new, about 10 years ago, I believe). A few months ago, I decided to install an M.2 drive. I purchased a PCIe card and the M.2 drive. To my surprise, the system (BIOS) didn't recognize it. I spent some time searching for solutions and only found a boot loader on a USB drive that serves as a bridge for booting up. Well, while browsing forums (TechPowerUp Forums), I came across a technician (İsmailTPC_Hastanesi), it seems he's from Turkey, and if you know him i mean his work you know, he is the man! the master for that, also the comments and gratitude regarding his work and assistance were all positive, he is a crack on the topic. he help the people to modifies X58 BIOS he already have alot of firmware for several mothers.
I have an XPG M.2, apparently not on the firmware's list. When I sent him the M.2's code information for he enters the code lines on his firmware and work, it was too late; he announced that he couldn't help anymore because it takes too much time and he has obligations at work.
I wrote to ask for his help, offering compensation for his work, but he didn't respond. However, another forum member sent me a message (inbox), offering to help for the same compensation to add the M.2 to the firmware. I agreed, sent the information, but after some time, nothing happened. After several weeks, he contacted me, sent it, and said that if it worked, I should help with the compensation. Everything worked smoothly without any issues. I tried to contact him to express my gratitude and compensate him, but he never responded again.
I have an i7 950 3.07GHz with a liquid cooling AIO Cougar Gamer 120m, and here's where it all begins. Suddenly, the temperature gradually rises from one moment to another, reaching up to 100 degrees without having many apps open or using a significant percentage of CPU. Obviously, before it reaches the peak, I turn it off and wait for it to cool down, sometimes until for a couple of hours or more. When I turn it back on isn’t goes back to normal continue up the temperature it seems almost in the same point that turned it off. But when this one not happened the CPU working well at 25 or 30 degrees, even when using multiple programs. Currently, as I write this, it's at 27 degrees, and even when gaming and performing other tasks simultaneously, it only goes up to 70 or 75 degrees.
Even without entering Windows, just in the BIOS, the temperature keeps rising to the maximum and reaches 100, either inside the BIOS or within Windows. After reaching the peak, whether only in the BIOS or in Windows, it either shuts down on its own or I turn it off, and when I restart it without waiting for it to cool down, it works normally, returning to its normal levels, as if reaching 100 degrees were a task, and once completed, it returns to normal levels.
I think it could be a virus in the BIOS mining, causing the processor to accelerate and overheat. A virus that cannot be detected or removed because it's in the BIOS and activates from time to time, pushing it to the limit for intense mining. It's also possible that the BIOS is corrupted from being modified by a third party, infected or is incorrectly modified by the firmware modified by the forum member (not İsmailTPC_Hastanesi). If so, I can't revert to the original manufacturer's BIOS because I lose access to the M.2 and, consequently, the entire system.
my big quesiton... Is it possible for this to happen? it is a virus in the bios, what can I do to detect it and if positive, eliminate it?
Or could it be a problem with some other hardware like CPU or some other compon of the motherboard, could it be the AIO cooling? The strangest thing is that... the CPU heats up, it goes up, it doesn't go down until it reaches 100 degrees, after that it returns to normal temperature with any out wait time for cooling. It is worth mentioning that the percentage of CPU used is not greater than 20% or maximum 30% when the CPU is already reaching its maximum 100 degrees.
Greetings in advance and thank you for your support.
I have an Asus P6T Deluxe V2 motherboard with the X58 chipset (yes, quite old; I've had it since it was new, about 10 years ago, I believe). A few months ago, I decided to install an M.2 drive. I purchased a PCIe card and the M.2 drive. To my surprise, the system (BIOS) didn't recognize it. I spent some time searching for solutions and only found a boot loader on a USB drive that serves as a bridge for booting up. Well, while browsing forums (TechPowerUp Forums), I came across a technician (İsmailTPC_Hastanesi), it seems he's from Turkey, and if you know him i mean his work you know, he is the man! the master for that, also the comments and gratitude regarding his work and assistance were all positive, he is a crack on the topic. he help the people to modifies X58 BIOS he already have alot of firmware for several mothers.
I have an XPG M.2, apparently not on the firmware's list. When I sent him the M.2's code information for he enters the code lines on his firmware and work, it was too late; he announced that he couldn't help anymore because it takes too much time and he has obligations at work.
I wrote to ask for his help, offering compensation for his work, but he didn't respond. However, another forum member sent me a message (inbox), offering to help for the same compensation to add the M.2 to the firmware. I agreed, sent the information, but after some time, nothing happened. After several weeks, he contacted me, sent it, and said that if it worked, I should help with the compensation. Everything worked smoothly without any issues. I tried to contact him to express my gratitude and compensate him, but he never responded again.
I have an i7 950 3.07GHz with a liquid cooling AIO Cougar Gamer 120m, and here's where it all begins. Suddenly, the temperature gradually rises from one moment to another, reaching up to 100 degrees without having many apps open or using a significant percentage of CPU. Obviously, before it reaches the peak, I turn it off and wait for it to cool down, sometimes until for a couple of hours or more. When I turn it back on isn’t goes back to normal continue up the temperature it seems almost in the same point that turned it off. But when this one not happened the CPU working well at 25 or 30 degrees, even when using multiple programs. Currently, as I write this, it's at 27 degrees, and even when gaming and performing other tasks simultaneously, it only goes up to 70 or 75 degrees.
Even without entering Windows, just in the BIOS, the temperature keeps rising to the maximum and reaches 100, either inside the BIOS or within Windows. After reaching the peak, whether only in the BIOS or in Windows, it either shuts down on its own or I turn it off, and when I restart it without waiting for it to cool down, it works normally, returning to its normal levels, as if reaching 100 degrees were a task, and once completed, it returns to normal levels.
I think it could be a virus in the BIOS mining, causing the processor to accelerate and overheat. A virus that cannot be detected or removed because it's in the BIOS and activates from time to time, pushing it to the limit for intense mining. It's also possible that the BIOS is corrupted from being modified by a third party, infected or is incorrectly modified by the firmware modified by the forum member (not İsmailTPC_Hastanesi). If so, I can't revert to the original manufacturer's BIOS because I lose access to the M.2 and, consequently, the entire system.
my big quesiton... Is it possible for this to happen? it is a virus in the bios, what can I do to detect it and if positive, eliminate it?
Or could it be a problem with some other hardware like CPU or some other compon of the motherboard, could it be the AIO cooling? The strangest thing is that... the CPU heats up, it goes up, it doesn't go down until it reaches 100 degrees, after that it returns to normal temperature with any out wait time for cooling. It is worth mentioning that the percentage of CPU used is not greater than 20% or maximum 30% when the CPU is already reaching its maximum 100 degrees.
Greetings in advance and thank you for your support.