Unsolved
This post is more than 5 years old
19 Posts
0
6560
August 12th, 2016 16:00
Alienware Aurora R4 Bios reset and UEFI
I was interested in transforming my Alienware Aurora R4 Bios into Uefi to gain Uefi's benefits. I had a few questions first :
1-After replacing the coin battery following a mother board problem (it fixed the problem), I realized I completely forgot to write down the BIOS parameters, including the Voltage, and other complicated things. It reset the BIOS to its default settings. I'm really worried. Did the settings changed ? Can it damage my whole computer ? How to know ?
2-Before replacing the battery coin, I tried to change the pin to reset CMOS. However, I also forget to check the little green pin side; here is a picture : http://en.community.dell.com/cfs-file/__key/communityserver-discussions-components-files/3746/4747.AuroraR4Jumpers.jpg
There's chances that I put the second green component facing left (or right) instead of having it facing right (or left).
Is it a problem/does it change anything ?
3-As for UEFI, is it possible for my mother board to handle it ? I remember "flashing" the BIOS with a program (upgrade to A11) and as far as I know, it was a BIOS flashing, not UEFI flashing, and I know that if such update goes bad, it can kill the whole computer with no possible repair. I was wondering if going to UEFI was that simple, and if UEFI was somewhat included in the A11 flashing program.
If so, is all I have to do is change in the BIOS Legacy to UEFI (after hitting OK in the big red box), and then perform a clean command on my ssd, then create a clean windows 10 install on it with GPT (UEFI+GPT as opposed to BIOS+MBR, if I understood it right) ?
Thank you for any information regarding those 3 questions.



dupre_7
19 Posts
0
August 13th, 2016 06:00
Anyone ?
Tesla1856
8 Wizard
•
17.1K Posts
0
August 13th, 2016 12:00
AFAIK, the Aurora R4 is already UEFI-based.
Yes, if you must replace battery, it is correct to reset BIOS values to Default on first power-up. It should be fine, but write correct ones down this time. Download its PDF Service-Manual and read it.
Try setting BIOS to:
SATA Mode = AHCI Mode
Boot Mode = UEFI
Win7-DVD, Win-8-DVD, or Win-10 USB flash drive should now boot. Use F12 one-time-boot menu.
For Win-8 or Win-10 installs, if SecureBoot option is available, it should be Enabled.
Install to completely blank C: drives (no existing partitions). Windows will pick optimal MBR/GPT partition type automatically.
And if UEFI Mode doesn't work, you can always try MBR (Legacy BIOS).
dupre_7
19 Posts
0
August 13th, 2016 18:00
Thank you for your answer.
I'll take a look at the uefi setting next time I'm reinstalling Windows 10.
So you confirm the BIOS reset I did, the green jumper side I wasn't sure of, and trying the UEFI mode, those 3 things are not damaging my system ?
Tesla1856
8 Wizard
•
17.1K Posts
0
August 13th, 2016 18:00
dupre_7
19 Posts
0
August 13th, 2016 20:00
Thank you again. As for the jumper, nothing was said about the side in the Manuals. However I found a youtube video where it is said that the side doesn't matter as long as the top/bottom is in the right place : youtu.be/-9RnIj-EcdQ