F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Adjusting system preferences after a hard drive failure

Adjusting system preferences after a hard drive failure

Adjusting system preferences after a hard drive failure

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Pimousse62620
Member
234
12-21-2025, 08:08 PM
#1
I've set up a Dell XPS 9510 with four distinct motherboards, including two for power rail issues which appear fixed now. Unfortunately, Bluetooth is turned off in the BIOS, and it doesn't seem to be enabled despite being previously selected during service tag programming. I understand this might have been an error made twice, or perhaps once disabled now it's locked by the hard drive. Windows hasn't been reinstalled, and everything else functions properly.
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Pimousse62620
12-21-2025, 08:08 PM #1

I've set up a Dell XPS 9510 with four distinct motherboards, including two for power rail issues which appear fixed now. Unfortunately, Bluetooth is turned off in the BIOS, and it doesn't seem to be enabled despite being previously selected during service tag programming. I understand this might have been an error made twice, or perhaps once disabled now it's locked by the hard drive. Windows hasn't been reinstalled, and everything else functions properly.

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Hellswalrus
Junior Member
45
12-22-2025, 04:55 AM
#2
The BIOS configuration remains unchanged. To verify, disconnect the hard drive, restart the BIOS, and observe no differences.
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Hellswalrus
12-22-2025, 04:55 AM #2

The BIOS configuration remains unchanged. To verify, disconnect the hard drive, restart the BIOS, and observe no differences.

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PinkWabbitz3
Junior Member
16
12-23-2025, 10:33 PM
#3
On HP laptops, a backup BIOS file is stored on the boot drive, which works well when the device allows BIOS flashback, though in cases requiring it, the hardware didn’t support that feature.
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PinkWabbitz3
12-23-2025, 10:33 PM #3

On HP laptops, a backup BIOS file is stored on the boot drive, which works well when the device allows BIOS flashback, though in cases requiring it, the hardware didn’t support that feature.

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Potato_Playz
Junior Member
7
01-11-2026, 12:24 AM
#4
It's completely feasible, though unless you attempt to load the save file yourself, it won't choose to load it automatically.
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Potato_Playz
01-11-2026, 12:24 AM #4

It's completely feasible, though unless you attempt to load the save file yourself, it won't choose to load it automatically.

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jf_poli
Member
111
01-11-2026, 07:54 AM
#5
If a damaged BIOS is found, the system will try to use the saved state during startup.
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jf_poli
01-11-2026, 07:54 AM #5

If a damaged BIOS is found, the system will try to use the saved state during startup.

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Kacper_Bored
Senior Member
389
01-13-2026, 03:54 AM
#6
It's quite intriguing. I wasn't expecting a subroutine to detect corrupted BIOS, given how uncommon it seems. Still, for the person asking, disconnecting the hard drive would effectively block the system and would clearly indicate whether the BIOS was removed from the drive (I'm skeptical about that happening).
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Kacper_Bored
01-13-2026, 03:54 AM #6

It's quite intriguing. I wasn't expecting a subroutine to detect corrupted BIOS, given how uncommon it seems. Still, for the person asking, disconnecting the hard drive would effectively block the system and would clearly indicate whether the BIOS was removed from the drive (I'm skeptical about that happening).

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Orrange
Junior Member
13
01-13-2026, 12:49 PM
#7
It looks like a straightforward condition: if BIOS check fails, then retrieve the BIOS recovery image.
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Orrange
01-13-2026, 12:49 PM #7

It looks like a straightforward condition: if BIOS check fails, then retrieve the BIOS recovery image.

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Ani2112
Member
138
01-13-2026, 02:12 PM
#8
I've managed and kept more than fifty PCs, and I've never encountered BIOS corruption. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ The original poster can simply check for it easily.
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Ani2112
01-13-2026, 02:12 PM #8

I've managed and kept more than fifty PCs, and I've never encountered BIOS corruption. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ The original poster can simply check for it easily.