I believe I damaged my motherboard.
I believe I damaged my motherboard.
Hey! I want to verify if I damaged my motherboard while attempting to set up hardware RAID in the BIOS for a server build. Details: CPU – Gigabyte B550 AM4 ITX; RAM – 16GB DDR4 Corsair (two sticks in proper channels); PSU – Corsair 650W; Storage – Samsung 970 Pro 500GB, two WD 4TB NAS drives and two WD 1TB Blue drives. I had a successful boot and installed Ubuntu, working on the RAID configuration. In BIOS I enabled two RAID 1 arrays and saved changes. After reboot, the system failed to appear. I waited an hour without a display, then cut power to both monitors and the machine, rebooted again but still no screen. Finally, I removed everything except the CPU and one RAM stick, but nothing worked. I suspect the BIOS might be corrupted. Most components were new except the PSU, case, and fans. Any suggestions for next steps? Thanks ahead!
Update your system's firmware settings
Visit the official guide: https://www.wikihow.com/Reset-Your-BIOS
Disconnect power from your system, then remove the CMOS battery for roughly ten minutes. This will revert the BIOS to its original factory state. Reinsert the battery and restore power, then turn the computer back on. NOTE: Your motherboard may have a CMOS reset jumper—connect the appropriate pins for an additional reset. Edited January 20, 2024 by Godlygamer23
Use Flash Plus to refresh the BIOS when clearing CMOS doesn't resolve the issue.
Ensure no output appears and avoid any interaction signals during submission.
Confirming the process: BIOS update via USB stick, a renamed file on that stick, and the back panel button while the system is powered off but the power supply is active. The rear IO section lists the USB port. For Q Flash Plus, you don’t need to modify the BIOS.