Hi ux-3,
I did found an up-to-date GA-586ATX3 Award BIOS afterall. 😀
It is a 04/2000 BIOS upgrade from Unicore Software, specifically for the GA-586ATX3.
It contains all fixes, like the UDMA bugfix and 32GB limit fix for full 128GiB IDE HDD support. It also supports the K6-2+/K6-III+ CPUs.
The attachment 2A59IG0E.ZIP is no longer available
Please let us know how this BIOS works on your GA-586ATX3.
Repo Man11 wrote on 2024-07-18, 21:45:
There is a BIOS for that board listed here that has been patched to support 128 gigabyte hard drives. You would be better off waiting for Jan's BIOS which will have that and much more fixed, but just in case you want to try it.
https://web.archive.org/web/20051105011452/ht … ex.php?count=-1
The link from Repo Man11 is also a great resource of BIOSes that have the 32GB HDD limit fixed for proper 128GiB support. I contributed to this list myself, but these patched BIOSes don’t contain fixes for other bugs.
ux-3 wrote on 2024-07-18, 20:51:
Are you using the procedure that Sappa3dfx outlined? I could try that myself. I guess I should learn doing this, at the rate I run through these boards. Should I do a complete fix or only those two items? Are there any critical steps to be aware of, before one takes them?
No, I use a different BIOS patching method.
The BIOS Patcher by developer “apple_rom” is a nice tool though.
Member soggi wrote about this tool in Re: Modding support for AMD K6-2 into a Socket 5 Award BIOS? and member Scorp did a video about it in his Necroware YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VwZT40sRMzM
The latest stable version 4.23 works only on compressed Award BIOSes v4.5x and v6.x and usually works well, as Sappa3dfx showed it this thread. But there have been several cases where it bricked a system, so I would only recommend it when you’re board has the BIOS flashchip in a socket and you have an EEPROM programmer to re-program the BIOS chip if needed. Luckily the developer(s) have put in a fall-back feature that allows you to boot with the original BIOS. Just hold down the “–“ (minus) key on the numeric keypad during boot.
My BIOS patching method of directly editing the BIOS firmware is a different (and more time consuming) approach but works on both compressed and uncompressed BIOSes. It also allows me to fix rare bugs that apple_rom’s tool doesn’t know about.
I have my patched BIOSes tested on real hardware before publishing them on my k6plus webpage. These “ready to go” BIOSes then work like downloading and flashing a BIOS update from the board manufacturer.
Cheers, Jan