Cbrom Exe Bios

Gratis I have the eVGA Nf41 SLi Motherboard. EVGA has a large Logo on the startup of the machine. It is very annoying as the regular post screen will display usefull information.

EVGA has left no way for the user to turn off thier post screen except editing the BIOS file and completly removing the images from the BIOS and then reflashing. I would like to modify a BIOS in such a way that there is an option to turn on or off the eVGA Post Screen. I remember when I was playing around with Abit Nf7-S modded BIOS that sometimes the author would move around options or add some options, ect. How would I go about adding an option to remove the eVGA post screen from within the BIOS? Also here are the instructions to delete the Poast Screen from the BIOS entirly.

Ensure that you have CBROM.EXE and TIFF2AWBM.EXE (from AWBMTools) somewhere in your PATH (if you don't know what this means, it's best that you don't play with your BIOS). The easiest way of ensuring this is to put all the EXEs in the same folder as your BIOS file.

Originally posted by TEtherton at this location: Steps: Download the latest bios from evga.com (I performed this on the NF41 SLI myself): Direct links to E42 which is currently the latest as of 11/10/05 NF41 - ftp://evga.com/NF41_E42.bin NF43 - ftp://evga.com/NF43_E42.bin Next, download the utility you will use to alter the above BIOS.bin file (CBROM 2.07) @ biosmods.com - Extract cbrom207.zip into some directory (C: cbrom for this example). Copy your bios file into the C: cbrom directory as well. Now change to the C: cbrom directory and run the following command to ensure that the version of CBROM you have is compatible with your BIOS file (NF41 BIOS used in this example): cbrom.exe NF41_E42.bin /d The output should look like this: CBROM V2.07 (C)Award Software 2000 All Rights Reserved. ******** NF41_E42.bin BIOS component ******** No. Item-Name Original-Size Compressed-Size Original-File-Name ================================================== ============================== 0. System BIOS 20000h(128.00K) 1351Ah(77.28K) NF41.BIN 1.

XGROUP CODE 0E2F0h(56.73K) 099C9h(38.45K) awardext.rom 2. CPU micro code 02000h(8.00K) 00390h(0.89K) CPUCODE.BIN 3. ACPI table 05FDBh(23.96K) 01FDEh(7.97K) ACPITBL.BIN 4. EPA pattern 0168Ch(5.64K) 002AAh(0.67K) AwardBmp.bmp 5. YGROUP ROM 0F4A0h(61.16K) 044E3h(17.22K) awardeyt.rom 6.

GROUP ROM[ 0] 05320h(20.78K) 023D4h(8.96K) _EN_CODE.BIN 7. Other(40B5:0000) 01C00h(7.00K) 00B38h(2.80K) _ITEM.BIN 8. OEM0 CODE 0C300h(48.75K) 00A94h(2.64K) BSMICODE.ROM 9. PCI driver[A] 0C000h(48.00K) 064EDh(25.23K) NVRAID.ROM 10. PCI driver[ ] 10000h(64.00K) 070C7h(28.19K) CK804PXE.NIC 11.

Other(4067:0000) 01EEEh(7.73K) 00A3Fh(2.56K) AGESACPU.939 12. LOGO BitMap 4B30Ch(300.76K) 01330h(4.80K) EVGA2.bmp Total compress code space = 5B000h(364.00K) Total compressed code size = 366A1h(217.66K) Remain compress code space = 2495Fh(146.34K) If you only see a couple of lines and/or a bunch of garbage, STOP now - this will not work for you. Although for us, since we are using Award BIOS, nobody should encounter this problem. Looking at the above output, you'll see the last line (#12) is the infamous eVGA bitmap logo that splashes across our BIOS POST screens.

We want to remove that, so issue the following command to do so (note: this only removes it from the BIOS file - this program does NOT interact directly with your BIOS): cbrom.exe NF41_E42.bin /LOGO Release This will remove the logo file from the NF41_E42.bin BIOS file. You can check this by once again running the following command against your newly edited file: cbrom.exe NF41_E42.bin /d Output is now missing line #12 as evidenced in the following: CBROM V2.07 (C)Award Software 2000 All Rights Reserved. ******** NF41_E42.bin BIOS component ******** No. Setki pricelov dlya stalker tv. Item-Name Original-Size Compressed-Size Original-File-Name ================================================== ============================== 0. System BIOS 20000h(128.00K) 1351Ah(77.28K) NF41.BIN 1. XGROUP CODE 0E2F0h(56.73K) 099C9h(38.45K) awardext.rom 2.