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GTX 1070ti eeprom Flahsing

Razia

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Hey there,

I'm attempting to fix a 1070Ti that was flashed with 1080 firmware. I suspect this was done using NVFLASH as the damages (more bellow) to the card seem like that was the only route taken.

This post is more to serve as a reference for people that might encounter the same issues as I did as well as a place to give some feedback on the steps I've taken or might not have taken.

The card I have is the MSI GTX 1070Ti Titanium Edition.
A nice and semi-detailed breakdown can be found here:
MSI GeForce GTX 1070 Ti Titanium 8G Review

Now on to the background and what I've tried so far.

So I recently bought a "broken" 1070ti that still boots into windows but only if it's used as a secondary.

In device manager it shows as a 1080 and as we all know they are not cross compatible firmware due to the memory differences.

I've tried all flags for NVFLASH as well as older and newer versions but no matter what override or flag or switch I use, the software flashing result remains the same.
(Will post error codes later. But it's essentially subsystem ID mismatch)

I began researching a way that the bios could be forced to a read mode.
Some of the suggestions went as far as baking the card others reffered to shorting the 0 and 4 pin on the bios chip (Windbond 25Q40EWNIG)

Both of which appears to have been done to this card as the board and components look way older (browner) than my 1070. The bios chip also has some solder on it on the pins mentioned above. Luckily it doesnt make contact with the other pins so he might of had some soldering experience.

I've tried all of the above so far except the baking as i know that won't be an issue.

The next thing I'm going to try is a hard flash with an eeprom programmer. I'm just waiting for my shipment which should arrive by mid July. It contains an eeprom programmer and a clamp for the SPI25 chips.
I'll provide more info if needed.


On to the questions:
Would the GDDR5 memory get damaged by booting up with a lower voltage (1.3v) compared to the 1.5v that the 1070Ti's memory runs at?
Would the incorrect bios have damaged anything that I should know of? According to me the bios wouldn't have recognised the memory and simply seen it as non functioning?
Would baking the card have damaged the technically working components?
Anyone have experience with flashing Pascal architecture?
 
Would the GDDR5 memory get damaged by booting up with a lower voltage (1.3v) compared to the 1.5v that the 1070Ti's memory runs at?
Probably not
Would the incorrect bios have damaged anything that I should know of?

No but you may have just bricked the device by deleting the old BIOS and not giving it something to boot off upon the failure.
According to me the bios wouldn't have recognised the memory and simply seen it as non functioning?
Depends.
Would baking the card have damaged the technically working components?
Heat to plastics is bad. Capacitors can also be damaged if overheated.
Anyone have experience with flashing Pascal architecture?
No because when I was doing my BIOS modding research, Pascal flashing was seen as pointless.

Judging by the questions you posted, you didn't do your homework. Bad idea mate. You may be able to return the device under warranty but I doubt it. It's in violation of the usage policy set down by Nvidia.

I'd suggest using a card with twin BIOS next time as that way, you can always rescue the card if you brick it. Otherwise, do your research and find out how to flash your BIOS using a low level command prompt - you may be able to force a BIOS across to the card in Windows or Linux.
 
Probably not

No but you may have just bricked the device by deleting the old BIOS and not giving it something to boot off upon the failure.
Depends.

Heat to plastics is bad. Capacitors can also be damaged if overheated.

No because when I was doing my BIOS modding research, Pascal flashing was seen as pointless.

Judging by the questions you posted, you didn't do your homework. Bad idea mate. You may be able to return the device under warranty but I doubt it. It's in violation of the usage policy set down by Nvidia.

I'd suggest using a card with twin BIOS next time as that way, you can always rescue the card if you brick it. Otherwise, do your research and find out how to flash your BIOS using a low level command prompt - you may be able to force a BIOS across to the card in Windows or Linux.


Thanks for the response. Just to clarify things. I did not manage to get anything to flash. The card as it is now is still in the same state that I got it from the previous owner. I merely attempted to flash the correct bios back since it has the 1080 bios on it. I looked at hardware methods but the signs point to it having been applied already.
 
Thanks for the response. Just to clarify things. I did not manage to get anything to flash. The card as it is now is still in the same state that I got it from the previous owner. I merely attempted to flash the correct bios back since it has the 1080 bios on it. I looked at hardware methods but the signs point to it having been applied already.

I see. I’d Return it to stock if I was you to keep your warranty if there’s a problem with the card.

Maybe ask a fellow Carbie for a stock BIOS extract and use that tool mentioned above.

Here's where I got my AMD 580 BIOS mods from TechPowerUp
 
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