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M
McMello
Junior Member
13
05-18-2019, 07:37 PM
#1
Hi everyone, trying to reach the BIOS to configure the XMP profile but it always jumps back to Windows. I've pressed F2/del repeatedly without success. Checked settings/recovery/restart options and UEF firmware settings, but nothing changes. It restarts straight into Windows. I'm using ASUS TUF Pro X570 with MSI Optix Mag341 at 100Hz running Windows 10 Home version 2004. Any suggestions?
M
McMello
05-18-2019, 07:37 PM #1

Hi everyone, trying to reach the BIOS to configure the XMP profile but it always jumps back to Windows. I've pressed F2/del repeatedly without success. Checked settings/recovery/restart options and UEF firmware settings, but nothing changes. It restarts straight into Windows. I'm using ASUS TUF Pro X570 with MSI Optix Mag341 at 100Hz running Windows 10 Home version 2004. Any suggestions?

M
MrWalid72
Junior Member
35
05-30-2019, 09:01 AM
#2
Open the control panel and search for "startup" in the settings, then select "change advanced startup options." Click "Restart now" in the advanced startup section. After restarting, you'll see an option to add BIOS information. Proceed to Troubleshoot -> Advanced options -> UEFI Firmware Settings.
M
MrWalid72
05-30-2019, 09:01 AM #2

Open the control panel and search for "startup" in the settings, then select "change advanced startup options." Click "Restart now" in the advanced startup section. After restarting, you'll see an option to add BIOS information. Proceed to Troubleshoot -> Advanced options -> UEFI Firmware Settings.

2
21savage_
Junior Member
22
06-15-2019, 06:28 PM
#3
Sure, I followed the UEFI choice but it just brought me back to Windows.
2
21savage_
06-15-2019, 06:28 PM #3

Sure, I followed the UEFI choice but it just brought me back to Windows.

X
xAndersalsdux
Member
184
06-19-2019, 09:12 PM
#4
Are you sure? This seems unusual. Just disconnect the drives, go into BIOS, adjust RAM settings, and reconnect them. It’s a quick fix compared to searching for a permanent solution. Also turn off Fast Boot in both BIOS and Windows—it improves chances of entering BIOS later. You might also attempt a hard reset by holding power for five seconds before trying again. I believe unplugging the drives is the most effective approach.
X
xAndersalsdux
06-19-2019, 09:12 PM #4

Are you sure? This seems unusual. Just disconnect the drives, go into BIOS, adjust RAM settings, and reconnect them. It’s a quick fix compared to searching for a permanent solution. Also turn off Fast Boot in both BIOS and Windows—it improves chances of entering BIOS later. You might also attempt a hard reset by holding power for five seconds before trying again. I believe unplugging the drives is the most effective approach.

D
DumpyPutty
Member
172
06-20-2019, 04:02 AM
#5
Great suggestion, I hadn't considered it. Cheers!
D
DumpyPutty
06-20-2019, 04:02 AM #5

Great suggestion, I hadn't considered it. Cheers!