Have you been following the topic recently ?
Dell would rather get cash from you for replacing your motherboard after voiding your warranty for no apparent reason then give you a recovery method. Not to mention they sell you extended warranty for ridiculous amounts of money.
I have been talking to their suppor for like a week to determine what was causing my DW1702 bluetooth to fail at pairing with anything .. when this was finally sorted out ir turned out that a Dell mouse that has cost me 30$ was dropping connection after every login, also it was required to re-pair after every reboot. We spent another good 3 days going with debates about me needing to reinstall my OS and blindly ignoring the links to the dell community forum posts that I have provided when lots of people reported the same behaviour. After all that it turned out that Dell service provider failed to uninstall Intel's wi-fi driver after swapping out the card for an Atheros one ...and now I'm unable to do this since tells you to make sure the intel card is installed properly (why on earth would I need the card in place to do this???) which in hand created this series of frustration. This is your 'next day on site' warranty for you ...
With a probability of 90% I can say that the recovery file should be named BIOS.cap and probably should be the entire capsule.
Both SystemCdExpressPei.efi (31E147A6-D39A-4147-9DA3-BEFD4D523243_x_xxxx) and SystemFatLitePei.efi (5B60CCFD-1011-4BCF-B7D1-BB99CA96A603_x_xxxx.ROM) use this name ..
and
I just learned that Phoenix Tool determines the name for Insyde by looking at this string in PeiFat module .. but since our module is called differently it's unable to tell what is the proper name for the recovery image.
Here is an example for an Acer laptop ..
So basically pre EFI initialization will seek for this name and so will CdExpress then the drivers will kick in.
The actual bios flashed on the chip appears to be only 2.5 Mb in size. I just dumped it using Universal BIOS Backup Toolkit 2.0.