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Khenglish

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Posts posted by Khenglish

  1. What do people think the odds are of Vega showing up in some sort of MXM format? It's hard to tell, but it seems to be offering GTX 1080 performance with similar power draw. If it did I'd immediately jump to AMD. Their MXM cards back when they were competitive were always far cheaper than Nvidia cards. The $1200+ price tag for the MXM 1080 and $900+ for the MXM 1070 are utter BS.

  2. 2 hours ago, custom90gt said:

     

    Strange, I'll see if it boots into windows and detects anything.  It also would periodically beep while in the bios screen, I assumed that was it's way of telling me there is no card.  Does your 980m show anything in bios?  I assumed that because the M5000m was based on the 980m it would work. 

     

    If it's beeping that means either your mxm slot is dirty or there is something wrong with the card.

     

    See if windows sees the card or not.

  3. 11 minutes ago, custom90gt said:

     

    Does that mean the p150em can not support the quadro M5000M?  I hope that's the case for the cards sake...  If this is the case, is there anyway to get that added to the bios?

     

    No the card works fine. The BIOS just doesn't recognize the device ID and thus says there's no card. It's communicating with the card fine.

  4. 45 minutes ago, custom90gt said:

    Was wondering if anyone has any experience with a Quadro M5000M in a P150EM.  I'm running the latest prema bios but when I boot the system with the card in it nothing shows up in bios.  I don't know if it's a bad card or if it's just not supported.  Thanks for your help.

     

    That is normal. It means nothing.

  5. 2 hours ago, Mr. Fox said:

    Yes, if it works out that way it would be wonderful. AMD releasing a socketed mobile CPU with 6700K performance would force Intel to back off of their BGA garbage kick as well. We could not ask for a better outcome than that. We would definitely need an AMD MXM GPU that holds its own against 1070 and 1080 to make that attractive to everyone. I don't know that I would like the idea of mixing AMD CPU with NVIDIA GPU. That just doesn't seem right. The possibility of great things is always welcome, and since I do not believe in brand loyalty, I'd kick Intel and NVIDIA to the curb without batting an eye. The winner is the winner. Brand is irrelevant.

     

    AMD coming back in the GPU department would be amazing. Modding AMD vBIOS is a breeze. Power limits, clocks, voltages, and even memory timings is very easy to do. None of this inconsistent clocks crap that Pascal has. AMD vBIOS just works logically.

     

    I'm still skeptical on Zen. We still don't know how it will clock. IPC has been rumored to be at the Broadwell level for some time, which is good enough. The Ryzen 3.4GHz+ on an 8 core sounds competitive with Intel, but Intel's been sandbagging so hard for so long it's hard to compare stock clocks to how well a chip can actually clock. The big question is when the voltage is raised, does Zen reach the 5GHz clocks that have been leaked for Kaby Lake so far, or does it struggle to break 4GHz.

  6. Settings like these are stored in the NVRAM, which is a section of the bios. Changing hardware triggers resets in the NVRAM for the hardware that was changed.

     

    I find it very odd that raising voltages triggered a brick. I personally have bricked my p150em due to quirks in changing memory speeds. You should first pull a memory stick and boot. If that does not fix it, pull the cpu and try booting. Obviously it won't work without a cpu, but when you put the cpu back in the motherboard will read it as a hardware change and reset cpu settings.

  7. 1 hour ago, Hilariousz said:

    I had an Asus G751JY, the 2 chip that i mark in circle is burned. i didn't take a original photo from my motherboard because dont want to make confusion. and i'd like to ask if that chip burned is there any possibility to fix by replacing it with new one? or the motherboard already dead too?

     

    Because if i replace the whole motherboard with newer one should be very expensive.

     

    If you have a hot air gun and can locate a source for replacement chips its definitely doable. Laptop motherboards are very good at shutting down when components fail to prevent additional damage.

     

    How do you know those chips failed?

  8. 4 hours ago, carrretero said:

    And does anyone know how this BIOS lock (it only prevents prevents BIOS prom being updated nothing more) can be removed and where it comes from?

     

    It is bypassable but I can't remember how. There's no need to flash the BIOS anyway though.

     

    For Dell systems you need to modify your own ME FW dump or else the ME FW will be crippled. You can try modding it yourself and I can look over it. I can mod it but I have a lot of other stuff going on right now.

    • Thumbs Up 1
  9. Is the GPU listed in the Device Manager under Display Adapters? If so, is it listed with any errors, or does it say "This device is working properly."?

     

    If there are no errors, can you right click the desktop and access the Nvidia or AMD control panel?

  10. 42 minutes ago, Advokit said:

    Thank you for the reply. Unfortunately the TV is not listed. This morning it began working however. It was glorious. Steps I took after my post was simply reinstalling the Intel(R) HD 3000 Graphics drivers with my eGPU disconnected. I then found the following order of operation allows me to utilize the eGPU but this is not my first choice. If there is an alternate way to make this function more elegantly I would love to here about it.

     

    1) Turn Laptop off

    2) Place both switches at 1

    3) Turn PSU on

    4) Insert ExpressCard Adapter

    5) Turn PC on

    Note: At this point the eGPU spins up and then spins down, the TV acts like it received a signal but failed and displays "No Signal". Laptop cycles and boots using the Intel drivers and the internal display.

    6) Insert HDMI Cable into the eGPU - Signal is broadcast to TV, sound and all. Glorious. Dxdiag reports that I am running through the Radeon and my FPS in game jumps from 24 to 60+ with greater detail. 

     

    I would love to have a more elegant solution other than booting with ExpressCard inserted. What I would prefer is being able to insert the ExpressCard Post boot and utilize the external display. I believe this has something to do with initializing the device. When I boot without the ExpressCard adapter inserted and insert it post boot the Display Adapter does not show in the Device Manager. I understand this is a jakey setup anyway but I don't think it has be, it's a very impressive feat. 

     

    If anyone has questions about this particular setup on the Thinkpad T420, I will do my best to answer them with my limited knowledge. This is a great a forum by the way.

     

    The purpose of the switches on the PE4C are to mimic the expresscard being plugged in after boot. Try switch combinations like 1-1, 1-2, 2-1, and 2-2.

  11. On 11/30/2016 at 10:23 AM, VIRVeX said:

    2- After turning on the power supply and connecting the HDMI-miniPCI-E cable, and the HDMI cable of the graphics card to an external monitor and turning on the notebook, the computer turns on normally and even, in the device manager, appears in The screen adapters section, the graphic card with a yellow triangle error.

     

     

    What error number was listed in the device manager? Common error numbers are 10, 12, and 43.

  12. On 11/22/2016 at 7:21 PM, p150em_user said:

    I'd just like clarifications on 2 things:

    1. can I solder wires from a DP cable directly to the dGPU eDP lines?

    2. why did you need to add a jumper? it seems the dGPU HPD is already connected to the same place as the iGPU HPD

     

    1. You can, but that doesn't really help you and you may as well use the socket.

    2. The jumper is present on the motherboard schematic, but pulled for actual production. In the motherboard schematic anything listed with a * means it was in design, but pulled for production.

     

    Also I found on NBR where Darcoder modded a P375SM for 40 pin eDP for 4K displays that you can break up the glue on the eDP cable at the motherboard connector, and pull out and replace the wires as needed. He cut the glue with a razor then pushed the pins out with a needle. This seems to be much better than my cut and resolder method.

  13. If you can match the display interface and manage to fit the screen in the laptop it will work. If your laptop has a cable for 40-pin eDP then you have many screen options available. Be warned though, screens are tailored to fit particular laptop models. While the screen size may be the same none of the screw locations may line up with the laptop frame, and the LCD circuit board may be in a very inconvenient location for your particular model.

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