F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Yes, it is feasible to reflash or downgrade the BIOS on Intel DH61WW.

Yes, it is feasible to reflash or downgrade the BIOS on Intel DH61WW.

Yes, it is feasible to reflash or downgrade the BIOS on Intel DH61WW.

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GamelonLp
Junior Member
8
07-10-2016, 12:25 AM
#11
When the motherboard rests on cardboard, you must lift it slightly so the slot clips descend below it. A completely different image exists, but notice the metal bracket at the end. If the motherboard's edge isn't sufficiently raised, the PCIe power connectors may not fully insert.
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GamelonLp
07-10-2016, 12:25 AM #11

When the motherboard rests on cardboard, you must lift it slightly so the slot clips descend below it. A completely different image exists, but notice the metal bracket at the end. If the motherboard's edge isn't sufficiently raised, the PCIe power connectors may not fully insert.

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LennoxMacduff
Junior Member
34
07-10-2016, 08:55 AM
#12
I'm curious about whether the hidden pins under the PCIE slot and board might be loose or damaged, causing intermittent contact.
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LennoxMacduff
07-10-2016, 08:55 AM #12

I'm curious about whether the hidden pins under the PCIE slot and board might be loose or damaged, causing intermittent contact.

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Zorro340
Junior Member
48
07-12-2016, 09:03 PM
#13
It might be due to a mismatch in dimensions between the R9 290 connector and the PCIE slot. The photos you shared show the R9 290 part, and it appears to be deeper than the slot. You could try using a PCIE extension cable to test compatibility.
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Zorro340
07-12-2016, 09:03 PM #13

It might be due to a mismatch in dimensions between the R9 290 connector and the PCIE slot. The photos you shared show the R9 290 part, and it appears to be deeper than the slot. You could try using a PCIE extension cable to test compatibility.

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swedish_melon
Member
109
07-14-2016, 02:37 PM
#14
Some ideas about this situation: The board is based on PCIE 2.0 and probably built for cards under 75 watts using PCIe power, without any external supply. The UEFI firmware might have been added later to a system that originally used Legacy, where some boards started with Legacy and UEFI was introduced afterward. So the first theory is that the board is trying to connect and gets stuck on F1 or Del, possibly leading into Windows, which might show a screen. The second theory suggests the mainboard just can't provide enough power—whether for firmware or for the slot itself, maybe a PSU issue. These are my current thoughts... No beep codes? That leans toward theory 1...
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swedish_melon
07-14-2016, 02:37 PM #14

Some ideas about this situation: The board is based on PCIE 2.0 and probably built for cards under 75 watts using PCIe power, without any external supply. The UEFI firmware might have been added later to a system that originally used Legacy, where some boards started with Legacy and UEFI was introduced afterward. So the first theory is that the board is trying to connect and gets stuck on F1 or Del, possibly leading into Windows, which might show a screen. The second theory suggests the mainboard just can't provide enough power—whether for firmware or for the slot itself, maybe a PSU issue. These are my current thoughts... No beep codes? That leans toward theory 1...

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thesaw045
Member
63
07-14-2016, 10:08 PM
#15
You’re correct about both explanations: the BIOS update transitioned from a legacy system to a GUI-based setup with UEFI options. The beep sequence you described matches the standard four-beep pattern indicating no video output. It seems the issue might stem from the PCIe slot delivering extra power beyond what the PSU provides, potentially interfering with the system.
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thesaw045
07-14-2016, 10:08 PM #15

You’re correct about both explanations: the BIOS update transitioned from a legacy system to a GUI-based setup with UEFI options. The beep sequence you described matches the standard four-beep pattern indicating no video output. It seems the issue might stem from the PCIe slot delivering extra power beyond what the PSU provides, potentially interfering with the system.

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EgyptionCow
Junior Member
14
07-26-2016, 05:04 AM
#16
The PCI-E port should support 75 watts. I'm uncertain about a 2.0 slot's ability to handle a 3.0 power-hungry card. The port is split between 12V and 3.3V. If one side is too pressed, the 3.3V might only provide 15 watts... likely causing a VGA error code. Is this an Award bios?
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EgyptionCow
07-26-2016, 05:04 AM #16

The PCI-E port should support 75 watts. I'm uncertain about a 2.0 slot's ability to handle a 3.0 power-hungry card. The port is split between 12V and 3.3V. If one side is too pressed, the 3.3V might only provide 15 watts... likely causing a VGA error code. Is this an Award bios?

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Tex0x93
Junior Member
45
08-12-2016, 05:11 AM
#17
It doesn’t seem to appear in the BIOS settings. It appears to be an Intel custom BIOS version I located online. The beep sequence matches the described pattern: two 1.0-second beeps followed by a 2.5-second pause, then a repeat. Ensure the graphics card is properly seated and compatible with your processor.
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Tex0x93
08-12-2016, 05:11 AM #17

It doesn’t seem to appear in the BIOS settings. It appears to be an Intel custom BIOS version I located online. The beep sequence matches the described pattern: two 1.0-second beeps followed by a 2.5-second pause, then a repeat. Ensure the graphics card is properly seated and compatible with your processor.

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W3ld3r
Member
51
08-19-2016, 07:22 PM
#18
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W3ld3r
08-19-2016, 07:22 PM #18

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iPhan
Member
183
08-27-2016, 09:34 AM
#19
Other users might see these as similar discussions in different communities.
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iPhan
08-27-2016, 09:34 AM #19

Other users might see these as similar discussions in different communities.

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