F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop The CMOS button sets the system clock, ensuring stable power and timing for the microcontroller.

The CMOS button sets the system clock, ensuring stable power and timing for the microcontroller.

The CMOS button sets the system clock, ensuring stable power and timing for the microcontroller.

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FakerDude
Member
147
11-14-2024, 03:10 AM
#1
Hey there, friends. I’ve looked into this online and found several explanations about the CMOS button. On your Asus Dark Hero 1 motherboard, pressing or holding it usually resets the system to its default BIOS settings. It also restores the BIOS version back to the factory level. Clearing the CMOS chip brings everything back to the original factory state, just like when you first installed it.

Regarding your questions:
4. The methods for resetting BIOS differ in how they handle CMOS clearing—options include BIOS settings, physical buttons, or jumper connections.
5. After updating BIOS, whether you load optimized defaults and then configure everything from there depends on the specific BIOS version you’re using.

Thanks again for your questions! Let me know if you need more details.
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FakerDude
11-14-2024, 03:10 AM #1

Hey there, friends. I’ve looked into this online and found several explanations about the CMOS button. On your Asus Dark Hero 1 motherboard, pressing or holding it usually resets the system to its default BIOS settings. It also restores the BIOS version back to the factory level. Clearing the CMOS chip brings everything back to the original factory state, just like when you first installed it.

Regarding your questions:
4. The methods for resetting BIOS differ in how they handle CMOS clearing—options include BIOS settings, physical buttons, or jumper connections.
5. After updating BIOS, whether you load optimized defaults and then configure everything from there depends on the specific BIOS version you’re using.

Thanks again for your questions! Let me know if you need more details.

X
Xpers_Gaming
Junior Member
43
11-14-2024, 06:00 AM
#2
It doesn't perform a full factory reset of your BIOS. Instead, it removes any custom configurations and brings everything back to the standard settings.
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Xpers_Gaming
11-14-2024, 06:00 AM #2

It doesn't perform a full factory reset of your BIOS. Instead, it removes any custom configurations and brings everything back to the standard settings.

D
derk4321
Senior Member
482
11-20-2024, 02:26 PM
#3
To perform a factory reset on the BIOS, flash the device to the original first version you believe was the factory setting. This typically involves using a USB drive with the appropriate BIOS image.
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derk4321
11-20-2024, 02:26 PM #3

To perform a factory reset on the BIOS, flash the device to the original first version you believe was the factory setting. This typically involves using a USB drive with the appropriate BIOS image.

J
jokkis32
Junior Member
32
11-24-2024, 05:16 AM
#4
After activating the CMOS button, you should press the "restore to defaults" option in the BIOS (or load optimized defaults for ASUS boards).
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jokkis32
11-24-2024, 05:16 AM #4

After activating the CMOS button, you should press the "restore to defaults" option in the BIOS (or load optimized defaults for ASUS boards).

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miraikenkyusyo
Junior Member
18
11-27-2024, 02:23 AM
#5
Once it was displayed, all traces of the initial BIOS disappeared and were replaced. To restore it, you'd need to install a previous version of the BIOS.
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miraikenkyusyo
11-27-2024, 02:23 AM #5

Once it was displayed, all traces of the initial BIOS disappeared and were replaced. To restore it, you'd need to install a previous version of the BIOS.

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RoTa_Mags
Member
94
11-27-2024, 03:25 AM
#6
Thanks for the update, Skiiwee29. It's really helpful to know what's going on. I've been looking for two days now and everyone seems confused about how CMOS interacts with BIOS updates—whether it overwrites your current BIOS or switches to a factory version. There are many mixed opinions online. Your questions are valuable, and I'm happy to help clarify further. Thanks again!
R
RoTa_Mags
11-27-2024, 03:25 AM #6

Thanks for the update, Skiiwee29. It's really helpful to know what's going on. I've been looking for two days now and everyone seems confused about how CMOS interacts with BIOS updates—whether it overwrites your current BIOS or switches to a factory version. There are many mixed opinions online. Your questions are valuable, and I'm happy to help clarify further. Thanks again!

D
50
11-27-2024, 05:15 AM
#7
I noticed the same query but different responses from others. It’s important to resolve this so everyone stays clear. I’m feeling a bit confused right now. https://forums.
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DapperEnderman
11-27-2024, 05:15 AM #7

I noticed the same query but different responses from others. It’s important to resolve this so everyone stays clear. I’m feeling a bit confused right now. https://forums.

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Fireking124
Senior Member
576
12-03-2024, 08:58 PM
#8
people are providing unclear and overly complicated responses to what seems like a basic inquiry.
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Fireking124
12-03-2024, 08:58 PM #8

people are providing unclear and overly complicated responses to what seems like a basic inquiry.

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McBroke
Member
168
12-03-2024, 09:50 PM
#9
Also @Skiiwee29 Consider using different or same BIOS depending on the issue. If the CMOS button just resets the current version back to defaults, it likely won’t fix a corrupted BIOS. Also, flashing to the same BIOS version is generally safe. (During my update, after finishing I saw no signal on the monitor. After pressing reset everything worked again, but I’m unsure if the installation was complete.)
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McBroke
12-03-2024, 09:50 PM #9

Also @Skiiwee29 Consider using different or same BIOS depending on the issue. If the CMOS button just resets the current version back to defaults, it likely won’t fix a corrupted BIOS. Also, flashing to the same BIOS version is generally safe. (During my update, after finishing I saw no signal on the monitor. After pressing reset everything worked again, but I’m unsure if the installation was complete.)

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Minegus_Dub
Member
172
12-06-2024, 11:51 AM
#10
When BIOS is damaged, posting the system often becomes impossible and may need a USB flashback for recovery if supported, or switching to a different BIOS if available. Issues with faulty BIOS are frequent, particularly with Gigabyte models. Updating to an older or newer BIOS can help, though it isn't guaranteed.
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Minegus_Dub
12-06-2024, 11:51 AM #10

When BIOS is damaged, posting the system often becomes impossible and may need a USB flashback for recovery if supported, or switching to a different BIOS if available. Issues with faulty BIOS are frequent, particularly with Gigabyte models. Updating to an older or newer BIOS can help, though it isn't guaranteed.

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