Acer Aspire 5253 Bios 1.18 Update failed

124

Answers

  • Fergdaddy
    Fergdaddy Member Posts: 50 Enthusiast WiFi Icon
    Oops, I entered command wrong on D drive. Redoing. 
  • Fergdaddy
    Fergdaddy Member Posts: 50 Enthusiast WiFi Icon
    OK. Here is chkdsk run on D drive:


  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 44,907 Trailblazer
    OK. Looks like chkdisk at least corrected the 0GB free issue in the MBR table. Now let's see if diskpart 'list disk' recognizes more than 0GB free for the 700GB drive. Jack E/NJ
     

    Jack E/NJ

  • Fergdaddy
    Fergdaddy Member Posts: 50 Enthusiast WiFi Icon
    Wow. 
  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 44,907 Trailblazer
    The whole HDD seems to have been locked down in read only mode. Assuming no encryption software was ever installed on this drive and HDD password is clear in the BIOS menu, let's take one last shot at diskpart attributes. If we can't control its attributes, we might want to take it out see if it can be unlocked from another machine through a USB HDD adapter.  Jack E/NJ

    DISKPART> list disk
    DISKPART> select disk 0
    DISKPART> attributes disk clear hidden
    DISKPART> attributes disk clear readonly


    Jack E/NJ

  • Fergdaddy
    Fergdaddy Member Posts: 50 Enthusiast WiFi Icon
    Jack & Deejay,

    Here’s shots of my Bios screens. Note under security it shows HDD password is frozen??

    could this have something to do with it??
  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 44,907 Trailblazer
    Did you originally set an HDD password? Jack E/NJ

    Jack E/NJ

  • Fergdaddy
    Fergdaddy Member Posts: 50 Enthusiast WiFi Icon
    Never set any kind of password in the Bios. Never had any type of encryption. Vanilla system. 
  • Fergdaddy
    Fergdaddy Member Posts: 50 Enthusiast WiFi Icon
    OK Jack!
    lookie here!


  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 44,907 Trailblazer
    edited September 2019
    Well, that's encouraging. Now let's see if diskpart still throws attributes errors. Be interesting to see if OGB free now changes. Jack E/NJ

    DISKPART> list disk
    DISKPART> select disk 0
    DISKPART> attributes disk clear hidden
    DISKPART> attributes disk clear readonly

    Jack E/NJ

  • Fergdaddy
    Fergdaddy Member Posts: 50 Enthusiast WiFi Icon
    Here’s the result:

  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 44,907 Trailblazer
    Can you check that the BIOS HDD password is still clear? If it is, do you have access to another PC? I still think the HDD is OK but not the BIOS firmware. Jack E/NJ

    Jack E/NJ

  • Fergdaddy
    Fergdaddy Member Posts: 50 Enthusiast WiFi Icon
    Bios HDD password still clear. 

    I do have a Windows 10 desktop machine
  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 44,907 Trailblazer
    Good! Do you also have the USB2HDD SATA3 adapter like in the link below? If nothing else we can try to get personal stuff off the Toshiba and confirm the BIOS firmware is the likely culprit. Jack E/NJ


    Jack E/NJ

  • Fergdaddy
    Fergdaddy Member Posts: 50 Enthusiast WiFi Icon
    Jack,
    I don’t have that cable. But, I don’t really have anything on the laptop either. It was a fresh install of Windows 7. I had even lost my Microsoft Office applications when I couldn’t restore from my corrupted pre-crash disc image. So no personal data on there, not even email. 
  • Fergdaddy
    Fergdaddy Member Posts: 50 Enthusiast WiFi Icon
    Also, I should have a good backup image from before the Bios update. I think I was not able to restore fro up because of the bad Bios update. 
  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 44,907 Trailblazer
    OK. The only reason I'd still want to try to get the Toshiba under control on another PC is to confirm that the BIOS firmware is corrupted. Unfortunately, trying to fix corrupted firmware is usually unsuccessful --- meaning a bricked mainboard. ACER usually charges about $100 to try to unbrick a machine out of warranty.  Back onto my soapbox. This is why in my opinion BIOS updates should never be applied unless they are stated to specifically fix a major disabling issue that hasn't responded to any other device driver or Windows update. Jack E/NJ

    Jack E/NJ

  • Deejay_tech
    Deejay_tech Member Posts: 356 Seasoned Practitioner WiFi Icon
    if bios was corrupted, it will not pass the checksum test and give error at the beginning.
    The user should use the clean command of diskpart to reinitiliase the disk.(hdd) , then install the os of his choice.

    My personal Acer m/c's
    1) Gaming: Acer Predator Helios 300 PH315-51
    Config:Core i5 8300H, 16GB, 250GB SSD, 1TB HDD, 1050ti GPU

    2) Daily Use: Acer Aspire A315-53  59GR
    Config: Core i5 8250u, 8GB, 256 SSD, 1TB HDD, IPS FHD 

    3) Linux Learning: Acer Aspire A315-53 P4MY
    Config: Pentium Gold 4417U, 8 GB, 256 SSD, 500GB HDD.
  • Fergdaddy
    Fergdaddy Member Posts: 50 Enthusiast WiFi Icon
    Jack & Deejay,
    Thanks for hanging with me!

    Jack, I can go ahead and order that cable. If the machine is bricked, I’ll at least have a nice add on drive for my desktop machine. 

    Based on Deejays comment, I was wondering something along the same lines. I don’t really have any personal files or data on the laptop yet. I was curious what you thought of booting to my Windows install thumb drive, letting Windows format and repartition hard drive. And see if it could fresh install. If it did that, maybe I could then restore from my precrash disc image and get all my drivers back. Not familiar with Clean command. Would that be something to do prior to trying a fresh install?

    Also, Deejay, How would I know it was getting a checksum error?  Would that appear in boot sequence or in Bios setup?

    Thanks folks!

    Keith