November 21, 2008
This file contains the image for the BOOT 132 method -that is, contains some drivers that allows OsX to start on the Asus P5Q machine. Ensure that the flash drive is active (in Disk Management, select the key, right click, and select Active). Are you looking for ASUS P5Q Deluxe Server Motherboard drivers? Just view this page, you can through the table list download ASUS P5Q Deluxe Server Motherboard drivers for Windows 10, 8, 7, Vista and XP you want. Here you can update ASUS drivers and other drivers. Official ASUS P5Q Free Driver Download for Windows Vista, XP - ICH10R_AHCIRAID_XPVista.zip (1793554). World's most popular driver download site.
![Driver Driver](/uploads/1/2/6/8/126887913/522637282.jpg)
How to build a Hackintosh on an ASUS P5Q Motherboard Download these files. Restore the Snow Leopard Retail Install DVD 10.6.3 to USB Flash drive using Disk Utility on a MAC. Setup BIOS as follows Restore BIOS to Setup Defaults Set to boot from CD first Set power management to S3 Set ACPI mode 2 Set ALL hard drives to AHCI mode Insert iBoot. ASUS P5Q Free Driver Download (Official) ASUS Drivers Hard Disk Controller Drivers. Search All ASUS P5Q Drivers. Uploader Notes. ICH10R AHCI/RAID Driver. Uploaded By Sathishkumar (DG Staff Member) on 2011-02-08 07:34:48 Supported Devices. Intel(R) ESB2 SATA AHCI Controller.
Marvell88SE6111_SATA_V12060_XPVista.zip
754 KB
Asus P5q Pro Motherboard
4,942
Storage Devices
Windows XP/Vista
Download the latest Asus P5Q Marvell 88SE6111 SATA Controller Driver v 1.2.0.60 with WHQL certification
Supported OS:
Windows XP
Windows XP 64-bit
Windows Vista
Windows Vista 64-bit
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Asus P5q Ahci Driver For Mac
▸ Browse all Asus drivers
![Ahci Ahci](https://www.pcper.com/files/imagecache/article_max_width/review/2015-08-06/x4%20switch.png)
Asus P5q Pro Drivers
Hi everyone:
Okay, in spite of getting some earlier schooling here at Ars on this subject, I forgot some of what was said.
Last couple of days, my main driver, an Asus P5Q-E went wacko on me. At first and second glance, I believed I had a faulty Samsung EVO 850 SSD. I believed that because the drive would only intermittently appear during drive enumeration.
Now, it looks like that may not have been the case. Instead, I believe a weird combination I've never seen of wrong bios settings and a corrupted boot record made for a lot of..er...fun. After testing most of the hardware, I tried resetting BIOS settings to default and that seemed to allow the drive to enumerate consistently.
I then discovered the boot record was corrupted. I couldn't repair it at first, cause the bootable utilities I had to so wouldn't finish booting. The above resetting to BIOS defaults allowed them to boot. When that happened, I finally managed to repair the boot record, and that made the SSD to boot Windows 10 Pro again, but only in IDE mode.
However it crashes if I try to switch it to AHCI mode. This board is old, so instead of Asus website, I went to Intel's and ran their chipset driver installer. It craps out with 'unknown error'.
There are several suggestions on the Web, but I'm looking for the wisdom I usually get around here, as opposed to risky stuff which might backfire. Just in case, I backed up CMOS settings and imaged the drive in question to my backup drive. And tested it.
This drive ran things quite a bit faster when it was in AHCI mode. Any idea how to get those AHCI chipset drivers to installed successfully?
Okay, in spite of getting some earlier schooling here at Ars on this subject, I forgot some of what was said.
Last couple of days, my main driver, an Asus P5Q-E went wacko on me. At first and second glance, I believed I had a faulty Samsung EVO 850 SSD. I believed that because the drive would only intermittently appear during drive enumeration.
Now, it looks like that may not have been the case. Instead, I believe a weird combination I've never seen of wrong bios settings and a corrupted boot record made for a lot of..er...fun. After testing most of the hardware, I tried resetting BIOS settings to default and that seemed to allow the drive to enumerate consistently.
I then discovered the boot record was corrupted. I couldn't repair it at first, cause the bootable utilities I had to so wouldn't finish booting. The above resetting to BIOS defaults allowed them to boot. When that happened, I finally managed to repair the boot record, and that made the SSD to boot Windows 10 Pro again, but only in IDE mode.
However it crashes if I try to switch it to AHCI mode. This board is old, so instead of Asus website, I went to Intel's and ran their chipset driver installer. It craps out with 'unknown error'.
There are several suggestions on the Web, but I'm looking for the wisdom I usually get around here, as opposed to risky stuff which might backfire. Just in case, I backed up CMOS settings and imaged the drive in question to my backup drive. And tested it.
This drive ran things quite a bit faster when it was in AHCI mode. Any idea how to get those AHCI chipset drivers to installed successfully?