Samsung B75s1 Motherboard Patched ((hot))
The B75 chipset is from the Ivy Bridge era and does not natively support booting from NVMe M.2 drives (via PCIe adapters). A BIOS patch injects the NVMe Express Microcode Updates:
If you are for free or selling the pre-patched board . Any specific CPU or SSD you used to test the patch.
The firmware backup is opened inside the AMI BCP editor. In the setup structure tree, the "Advanced" menu settings are changed to visible.
Find the right to unlock hidden advanced settings samsung b75s1 motherboard patched
Disconnect all system power cords and remove the CR2032 motherboard CMOS battery.
: Changes made via shell tools like modGRUBShell are often lost if the CMOS battery is removed or BIOS is reset to defaults.
Has anyone else tried different modules or found a way to unlock more advanced power settings on this specific OEM board? Let’s discuss below! The B75 chipset is from the Ivy Bridge
, as patched NVMe support does not work in "Legacy/CSM" mode. Summary Table Patched B75S1 Boot Drive SATA HDD/SSD Only Boot Drive NVMe M.2 (via Adapter) CPU Support Standard Core i3/i5/i7 CPU Support Expanded (including Xeons) Factory Defaults Updated Microcode NVMe driver into your BIOS file?
As user needs change—such as wanting to use faster RAM, better NVMe drives, or simply seeking stability on newer operating systems—the demand for a for this motherboard has increased.
The primary reason to patch this motherboard is to insert the NVMeExpressDXE module into the AMI Aptio BIOS. Without this, a PCIe-to-NVMe adapter card will only act as extra storage, not a bootable Windows drive. A patched BIOS allows the system to recognize and boot directly from a high-speed NVMe SSD. 2. Unlocked Hidden "Advanced" BIOS Settings The firmware backup is opened inside the AMI BCP editor
For those looking to go beyond just the BIOS, community resources are available:
The is a popular, highly durable OEM LGA 1155 motherboard based on the Intel B75 chipset . Primarily salvaged from Korean enterprise desktops, it is a budget favorite for building retro gaming rigs or low-cost home servers supporting Intel 2nd and 3rd Generation (Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge) processors.
The patched motherboard now powers on reliably, passes memory self-test (POST), and boots to OS. The jumper wire was secured with UV solder mask to prevent future flex damage.


