STEP
22 : Configure The BIOS
Now, your new PC should
be up and running and you should be staring at the BIOS setup screen.
Your next step is to
make sure your BIOS is using the proper settings. While some users like to use
the BIOS to tweak the system into running like greased soap, during an initial
build, it is best to keep settings conservative, which usually means leaving
them at their defaults. In this case, not a whole lot really needs to be done
in the BIOS for sake of completing this process. I will, though, go through
some of the common settings and point out what needs to be done and some common
settings for them, at least to serve out purposes here. Please bear in mind
that this serves as an outline. Your actual settings and names may vary for
different BIOS versions.
When you first enter the BIOS, and where you probably are at this point
in the tutorial, you will see the main menu. It will list two columns (usually)
of sections of your BIOS which have different settings in them, an example of
which is to the right.
Standard CMOS Setup
This section just controls
some of the basic stuff. Make sure the time and date is correct. Make sure your
floppy drive setup is correct (usually 1.44M, 3.5 in.). Video will stay set at
VGA/EGA. The HALT ON settings controls what the PC will stop booting on, and it
does not usually need to be changed. Some BIOS versions contain the IDE
auto-detection in this section, and it is important for you to do this before
you move on. If this section does not have it, then it will be its own menu
item in the BIOS. Regardless, go ahead and perform your auto-detection now. An
auto-detection will scan all four IDE drive positions whether there is a drive
there or not. If there is a drive there and that drive is properly connected,
the BIOS will offer you three choices to choose from. Usually the one offered
by the BIOS is correct, but you can choose one of the other two. As the BIOS
tries to detect non-existent drives, you can just wait for it or pressing
Advanced BIOS Features
This section controls
some of basic operating settings of your PC. For example, you will
enable/disable things such as on-board cache, determine the boot device, etc.
Here are some of the common settings:
Advanced Chipset
Features
This area of the BIOS
allows you to control certain aspects of your motherboard which are specific to
the chipset on your board. This would include bus speeds and memory issues.
Most of the time, you don’t need to worry about anything in here for the sake
of this tutorial. But, a general outline:
Power Management
This section should be
fairly straight-forward to even the novice user, and you should be able to use
your manual to best describe the settings. I typically disable almost
everything in this section, and you should for now, too. You’re just trying to
get the PC working at this point, not fine-tuning every little aspect of the
BIOS.
Integrated Peripherals
In this section, the
important part for now will be to enable or disable the various ports you may
be using. Make sure the IDE ports are enabled if you are using both. For the
IDE devices, your BIOS may offer various speed options such as setting the PIO
mode of the hard drives of enabling IDE pre-fetch or UDMA-100. Set these
options to AUTO where possible. You can enable pre-fetch on IDE only if your
IDE interface supports it, which if you have the option, it likely does. It
will speed up data access some. If your board has integrated hardware such as
video, sound or networking hardware, you will enable or disable here if it is
not controlled by a jumper. Enable if you wish. If you’re using expansion card
hardware and your board has these options, disable them to allow usage of the
cards. You can also enable/disable things such as your USB port,
serial/parallel ports. You’ll probably want them enabled. Set the parallel port
mode to ECP or EPP or both. If you have an IDE HDD Block Mode settings, enable
this if your hard drive supports it (most newer drives do). For the other
settings, just leave them at their default values.
PnP/PCI Configuration
This section controls
some of the various aspects of plug and play and the PCI bus. Much of it will
not need to be touched at this point, but a couple item bear mentioning:
PC Health
This might be caused by
a bunch of different names, but it is the section of the BIOS (if it has it)
that monitors things like fan speed, CPU temperature, voltage levels, etc. You
may also be able to set a shut down temperature, so if the CPU gets way too
hot, the system would shut itself down for safety.
SoftMenu /
Frequency-Voltage Control
If you are using a “jumperless”
motherboard, you will have a section of this nature which allows you to control
the CPU settings and maybe a few other things. It will allow you to set the
minute voltages to the processor, select the CPU multiplier, voltages to your
DDR memory (if you are using it) and the system bus speed. Most of these
options have an AUTO or default value, and this is fine for most people. The
settings may already be set fine. But, you can use this to overclock the system
if you choose (not recommended right now).
Defaults
Many BIOS versions have
pre-set sets of default values which you can pre-load. Some have “fail-safe”
defaults and “optimized” defaults. If you don’t wish to mess with any of the
above, you can use these options to set the BIOS info up to certain sets of
settings in one or two button clicks.
Passwords
Most BIOS versions have
security options to allow for user or supervisor passwords. Most people do not
use them. But, if you do, just make sure you record the password. If you lose
it, you’ll have to reset your whole BIOS to get your system back.
Save and Exit the BIOS
setup program. This will reboot the machine. Make sure your system disk is
still in Drive A:
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