Retronerd878 wrote on 2025-08-11, 10:36:
I actually know the guy and he works at a recycling center. He knows little about computer stuff but he learned which components are valuable and sells them as untested because he doesn't really know how. I bought a lot of 4 untested awe64 gold from him and all were working straight up. So, the untested part is legit more or less.
But he doesn't sound like the sort of person who'd strip the board of re-usable components before selling it on, so my point stands: whoever took that BIOS EEPROM most likely considered this board dead, and he probably did know how to test.
Writing the bios myself seems like a valid option as the tool itself is not expensive. How to tell which chip do I need? And when i flash the chip with this tool, do I use the same file I use to update the bios on my computer? Or is it something else?
Which chip? First thing is to determine the size. That's easy: the size of the BIOS image file. And yes, that's the file you'd also use on your computer (unless it's a very non-standard Intel or Compaq thing - which this Gigabyte board isn't). In this case it looks like a 128kB = 1Mb file, so you need a 1Mb EEPROM.
As for what type, ideally you should find out what was normally used on the board. To do that, google image search board+revision.
I found this:

The sticker obscures full details, but that's a Winbond chip. Almost certainly a BIOS from this era will be a 29-series EEPROM, so a Winbond 29-series 1Mb EEPROM (in DIP-32 format) will do the trick. That sounds like a Winbond W29C010 to me, but given 29-series EEPROMs are basically interchangeable, pretty much any vendor's 29-series EEPROM should do the trick. I've seen pics of rev 5 boards (which will not be any different when it comes to EEPROM) with the SST29SF010 chip mentioned above as well, so - as you'd expect - that will work too.