![]() I assume you didn’t touch that padding, so probably broken from either MMTool edit, or AFU /GAN flash (Not good!), at least your board specific details didn’t get messed up in thereĭo you have a backup of BIOS before you flashed anything? If yes, send to me. You only need NvmExpressDxe_4.ffs by itself, and nothing else. Plus you have NVME V4 Mod + NVME BIOS files (x3) form other boards that are NVME compatible by default + Samsung M2 in there as well. That BIOS is a Mess! I see padding file messed up (main padding file, before main DXE volume). When Win10 prompt where it must be installed to, the NVme SSD isn’t accepted as marked as not - Thanks. Is the same USB i use for every UEFI installation on modern desktops.Īs i mentioned before, even without any USB attached, the NVme SSD (it’s not RAW and already inizialized as it was previously used) start to have activity flash led… as it seems to be “found” from NVme Bios module added. The Win10 installation comes from a Rufus GPT USB drive with a 1909 Win10 Edition The NVme module has been compressed inserted by hilight the CSMCore section before to "insert it" Or, if you can’t make that work, maybe Secure Boot is disabled, which is dumb for them to add CSM in there then, anyway if this is case make USB MBR and then install to RAW NVME stillĪlso, you can probably flash mod BIOS on this system with EZ Flash, use stock name.extensionĬonfirmed working EZ Flash and Mod NVME BIOS + Proper OS install for these boards here on page 193 - How to get full NVMe support for all Systems with an AMI UEFI BIOS - You cannot add NVME mod (UEFI) into CMSCore (legacy), however looking at your image it doesn’t look like you did what you said (inserted NVME into CSM), so i think you are good to goĬonfirmed working EZ Flash and Mod NVME BIOS + Proper OS install for these boards here on page 193 - How to get full NVMe support for all Systems with an AMI UEFI BIOS (193) Install from GPT initialized USB stick, to RAW NVME (no initialization or partitions etc). You cannot add NVME mod (UEFI) into CMSCore (legacy), however looking at your image it doesn’t look like you did what you said (inserted NVME into CSM), so i think you are good to goĬSM is enabled by default for your BIOS, so secure boot mode enabled or disabled doesn’t matter and assume enabled otherwise no point to add CSM/Auto Settingįollow all steps at #4 point of the “This is what you should do” section here - How to get full NVMe support for all Systems with an AMI UEFI BIOS
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