No. Clearing the bios only reverts it to its fail-safe mode but doesn't
revert to a previous bios version.
If you had a failed bios flash you probably wouldn't have a compute that
would boot.
Check the bios version that shows when you first turn on the computer. Is
it the one you expect? If not you can try the bios flash again, but if you
are not having problems, initially, why flash the bios.
It is always dangerous to do this procedure on a computer since if anything
goes wrong, the bios is junk. I only flash a bios if the update will fix a
known problem or give a feature that wasn't available on the old bios. A
proper way to flash the bios is to first plug in the computer to a properly
operating uninterruptible power supply (test it by pulling its plug from the
outlet, don't rely on its test button), back up all files that you can't
afford to lose and then prepare the flash floppy or other flash media. Boot
to the flash media, save the old bios if it is available and then flash the
new bios following instructions exactly. Reboot the computer after removing
the flash media and hope that the OS works without having to do a repair
install (normally not necessary.)
"Dudley Henriques" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:%(E-Mail Removed)...
> Thanks Brett. I have developed an issue coming out of standby lately and
> think it might have been caused by a flash I tried from Asus on the BIOS.
> If push comes to shove, if I go into the BIOS and hit reset to defaults
> then F10 and exit, will this take out the flash I did and restore the bios
> to the condition it was in initially?
> Dudley
> "Brett I. Holcomb" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:%(E-Mail Removed)...
>> If there is nothing in the floppy drive it will move to the next in the
>> list. I normally do floppy, CD, then hard disk. That way on the rare
>> occasions (and there are some) that I need the floppy to boot I simply
>> put
>> it in and the system boots off it without me having to set the BIOS.
>>
>>
>>
>> Dudley Henriques wrote:
>>
>>> Am I correct that if using XP on a system that has a CDRW on it, the
>>> boot
>>> sequence in the BIOS should be
>>> 1> the CDRW
>>> 2> the HDD
>>> 3> the floppy disk?
>>>
>>> Reason I ask is that I just noticed that in my BIOS the #1 was the
>>> floppy.
>>> If I need to reinstall XP and have to boot to the XP CD, am I right to
>>> change this BIOS setting to reflect the CDRW as #1 and the HDD as #2 and
>>> the Floppy as the last in the sequence?
>>> Many thanks
>>> Dudley Henriques
>>
>> --
>> Brett I. Holcomb
>> (E-Mail Removed)
>> Remove R777 to email
>
>