(10-26-2015, 05:25 PM)BDMaster Wrote: Here You go :
http://rghost.net/7g59t8PB7
let me know
Regards
Donate to me for my work and time . . . look into my Signature
Thanks so much - I ended up taking another crack at it on my own this afternoon and had success! i would have posted sooner to save you the time of doing the work - but I was surprised to succeed!
Details if anyone is interested:
I had a problem using PhoenixTool and HxD. I followed the instructions and used Linux to search the dump before hitting "OK" (before it rebuilds the file). I found my old Hardware ID and changed it to the new one. It was giving me an error about "submodule to be inserted has invalid common header". I ended up using the "structure" button instead. I searched the PhoenixTool log to find the same module that I had found in the dump - LenovoWMIprofile -I think it was, and I exported and then 'replaced' it with the HxD edited file (all in the 'structure' dialogue box) This then reintegrated correctly. Flashed, and worked.
I ended up replacing a different Hardware ID than the one I had previously, so the old WLAN card would work in case I need to send it back for warranty support and I won't have to reflash it.
Also, the AW-CE123H has BT onboard as well - it's a USB module that connects through the PCIe bus. Turns out, THERE IS A WHITELIST FOR THIS TOO! This was a USB device that only had 8 characters (instead of the 16 for a pci device). I found another USB whitelisted device (centrino 6200) and replaced that with my BT's ID. Voila. A few other details:
- BIOS needs to have WWAN and WiMAX enabled to see the BT USB device
- Had to tape over Pin #51 to get the bluetooth module to be detected beyond the BIOS Whitelist failure; that is, even after fixing the whitelist, it didn't show in windows until I taped over Pin51.
- I also removed the built-in (lenovo stock) BT module (simple to do while you're in there, it's just a header and a fastener.) Saved that for if I have to warranty it later.
I'm going to write more about this, as there are more caveats - particularly x230 related - but suffice to say - everything is working. The motivation to make this card work was that it's half-size, does wireless AC, and works for a hackintosh build. And it's cheap.
Thanks again and sorry to not catch you in time to save your time - your work and research is appreciated.