- Joined
- Jun 16, 2021
- Messages
- 72 (0.05/day)
System Name | 2nd-hand Hand-me-down V3.0, Mk. VIIb |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen R7-5700X |
Motherboard | ASRock X370 |
Cooling | Wraith Spire |
Memory | 2 x 16Gb Mushkin @ 3200Mhz |
Video Card(s) | XFX RX 6750 XT |
Storage | 500 Gb Crucial MX500 x 2, 2Tb WD SA510 |
Display(s) | LG 31.5.0" 1440p |
Case | (early) DeepCool |
Audio Device(s) | Ubiquitous Realtek |
Power Supply | 650W FSP |
Mouse | Logitech |
Keyboard | Logitech |
VR HMD | What? |
Software | Yes |
Benchmark Scores | [REDACTED] |
So, I've been slowly collecting various odds'n'ends to cobble together a somewhat more modern system than what I have at present. It won't be what I once had, but money is still an issue for me, and this will be more than enough. I have the following thus far:
ASRock X370 Killer SLI/ac (BIOS version 7.10)
Ryzen 5 1600
XFX RX 480 (8Gb)
2 x 8Gb DDR4 2666MHz
Team PCI 3.0 1Tb NVMe SSD (formatted as GPT)
FSP 80+ Gold 550W PSU
Windows 10 Pro
My understanding is that this particular motherboard doesn't enjoy the greatest reputation, but as I think you can see, I'm not asking all that much of it. It's "been around" for awhile, but every single USB, SATA and PCIe port seems to work properly, and the board has been entirely stable during use. The issue is that, even with BIOS defaults being in use, it *will not* boot unless CSM mode is enabled. Any attempt to start with UEFI will fail completely, and I will then need to discharge the CMOS. I don't even get as far as the "splash" screen. I believe all my hardware should be UEFI-compliant, but I don't have any spare components that are UEFI to substitute as a means of trouble-shooting.
Being confined to CSM isn't the end of the World, but I was hoping to grab a more modern CPU at some point, (which the current BIOS supports), and set myself up to eventually run the horror that is known as Windows 11. At this point, I'm just wondering if anyone has any insight as to why UEFI is a no-go?
ASRock X370 Killer SLI/ac (BIOS version 7.10)
Ryzen 5 1600
XFX RX 480 (8Gb)
2 x 8Gb DDR4 2666MHz
Team PCI 3.0 1Tb NVMe SSD (formatted as GPT)
FSP 80+ Gold 550W PSU
Windows 10 Pro
My understanding is that this particular motherboard doesn't enjoy the greatest reputation, but as I think you can see, I'm not asking all that much of it. It's "been around" for awhile, but every single USB, SATA and PCIe port seems to work properly, and the board has been entirely stable during use. The issue is that, even with BIOS defaults being in use, it *will not* boot unless CSM mode is enabled. Any attempt to start with UEFI will fail completely, and I will then need to discharge the CMOS. I don't even get as far as the "splash" screen. I believe all my hardware should be UEFI-compliant, but I don't have any spare components that are UEFI to substitute as a means of trouble-shooting.
Being confined to CSM isn't the end of the World, but I was hoping to grab a more modern CPU at some point, (which the current BIOS supports), and set myself up to eventually run the horror that is known as Windows 11. At this point, I'm just wondering if anyone has any insight as to why UEFI is a no-go?