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So I have a Asus Tuf Gaming X570-Plus, I recently updated bios yesterday and everything was working fine this morning when after a couple hours, my word document stopped responding. It wasn't resolving or closing out so I just held the power button to restart my computer. As I pulled up Microsoft edge, the whole system began lagging horribly so I restarted again. Thats when I got the yellow dram light. Bios showed the D.O.C.P. profile I had for my Ram to run 3000 MHz was pulling 1.35 voltage and apparently that was preventing it to post so I pulled out CMOS battery to reset MOBO, but after BIOS came back up, neither my M.2 or SATA hard drive were showing in boot priority. After a little playing around, I've been able to find the hard drive with the CMS, but the NVME still won't show and it has my windows download. Did I somehow kill it? I don't have another one to test out the slots against the card, but I did put it in both slots and neither showed up. Sorry for the saga. Any advice appreciated!

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7 minutes ago, BlueBear said:

So I have a Asus Tuf Gaming X570-Plus, I recently updated bios yesterday and everything was working fine this morning when after a couple hours, my word document stopped responding. It wasn't resolving or closing out so I just held the power button to restart my computer. As I pulled up Microsoft edge, the whole system began lagging horribly so I restarted again. Thats when I got the yellow dram light. Bios showed the D.O.C.P. profile I had for my Ram to run 3000 MHz was pulling 1.35 voltage and apparently that was preventing it to post so I pulled out CMOS battery to reset MOBO, but after BIOS came back up, neither my M.2 or SATA hard drive were showing in boot priority. After a little playing around, I've been able to find the hard drive with the CMS, but the NVME still won't show and it has my windows download. Did I somehow kill it? I don't have another one to test out the slots against the card, but I did put it in both slots and neither showed up. Sorry for the saga. Any advice appreciated!

So you pulled out the cmos while it was running?

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1 minute ago, BlueBear said:

Can I do that without getting into windows? How?

Choose the BIOS version which is older than your current version and download it. Extract the BIOS file and place it into a flash drive. Reboot your system and go to BIOS setup and go to bios update section, select your flash drive and finally select the extracted BIOS file and hit OK

 

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