![]() ![]() ![]() The list of cards that began shipping with a ReBAR BIOS include: Lastly, some cards originally ship with a Resizable BAR BIOS, and newly built 30 Series cards will also ship with a Resizable BAR BIOS. Plenty of people on this forum can help you figure out what you need to do to get your system ready for Resizable BAR. If you discover that you have an issue when you disable CSM, it's far better to learn what you need to do to fix those issues before you flash your card to an unrecoverable state. However, you can resolve those issues by re-enabling CSM. Note - It's true that you could run into some issues with booting into your OS or legacy hardware if you disable CSM. However, for those of you with an XC3 card, you only get one BIOS, and it will likely lead to an RMA if CSM is not disabled. For FTW3 cards, which you can flip the switch on the card to go to a non-ReBAR BIOS, you can quickly fix this and get picture again. If you need to learn how to enable NVIDIA Resizable BAR, visit our FAQ: ĭisable CSM in your motherboard BIOS, or you run the risk of getting a black screen at boot. If you forget to disable CSM in your motherboard BIOS before flashing a ReBAR BIOS, then you may end up with a black screen upon your next boot. At that point, you can restart and re-enable Fast Boot again, if you wish.Ĭlose PSA#2: DISABLE CSM IN YOUR MOTHERBOARD BIOS BEFORE FLASHING A REBAR BIOS. So, please make sure to turn off Fast Boot until you are done flashing, and you've decided on which BIOS switch you want to use. It's still worth it to restart a couple times after flashing or flipping the switch over to a different BIOS to make sure everything is working normally. If fast boot is disabled, Windows should check the DeviceID of each hardware component during each boot. Because Windows doesn't update the information automatically, it will give Precision X1 the wrong information, which is how many of you have run into an MCU flashing issue. Otherwise, Windows will just assume that nothing in your system has changed, including the DeviceID, which will change when you flash to a different BIOS version. If fast boot is enabled, Windows will treat your card as the same GPU unless there's an obvious change, such as you change from a GeForce RTX 3080 to a GeForce RTX 3090, for example. You never know if someone updates their spreadsheet info after their purchase, which, depending on where they were on the list, would severely change your expected date to a sooner time.Once again, turn off Fast Boot in your motherboard BIOS while you're playing around with flashing your BIOS. Best advice I could give would be to stay vigilant, and always remember to check the spreadsheet and your e-mail. For instance, I signed up a few minutes after 7:00 PST on the release day for the 3070 (October 29th), and I have seen my expected purchase e-mail date jump from the middle of February 2021 to Januand then back the other way to January 29 2021, all in a matter of a few days. It can, and most definitely will, change from time to time because of more people adding their info to the list and people updating their info to show that they have purchased their card. Since we, as customers, don't know how many total people signed up to use as a comparison to the number who signed up on the lists, the estimated date that you will receive your purchase e-mail should not be heavily relied upon. ***Remember, the list is only as accurate as more people that used auto-notify actually put their info in for this spreadsheet. Scroll down to the time that you entered for when you officially queued up. Back on the spreadsheet, find the tab at the top for the card you are in queue for. The rest of the form is for when you get the actual e-mail that lets you purchase the card, when it notifies you that it has shipped, etc. Put this time in as Pacific Standard Time (PST), just as it should be displayed in the EVGA e-mail. ***An Important Note*** Go to the e-mail that EVGA sent you right after you queued for the auto-notify and use the time it says. You will also put in the time that you queued up for the card. You will choose what version you queued for, i.e. It is a way to, I guess, differentiate you from any other customer that may have queued at the exact same minute, on the day you did. That link will take you to a form to fill out. Follow the link on the first tab that pertains to the version you queued for: One of two links, either 3080/3090 or 3070. ![]()
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