It's done and it works great. Great job!
The truth is, I flashed the new BIOS about 5 hours ago and have been fiddling with the new options and testing for stability and performance until now.
But the hard part was finding out which was the .WPH file to flash.
Since you told me that I was the one to know that, I decided to get my hands dirty and start working on it. Here's how I did it:
I started by wondering how the flash utility program, in the original SoftPaq, managed to find the BIOS.WPH to flash, since there wasn't one to begin with. The original SoftPaq does not contain a BIOS.WPH, but the utility does ask for one, when executed. Then I remembered that all SoftPaqs extract themselves to a folder in C:\ before installing anything. And there it was, the folder of my previous BIOS flash (to version F.32). I inspected the logs and read that the program searches for a BIOS file located in the same folder where it resides (usually C:\SwSetup\"SoftPaq filename"\SWinFlash\). And there was a BIOS.WPH file there. But how did it get there? It didn't come with the executable after downloading it. That BIOS.WPH file is created once the SoftPaq is executed and it's files are extracted to the specified directory (defualt C:\SwSetup). Still, it had to be one of the two .WPH files that comes with the SoftPaq, in the directory above. So, I just compared file size, file size in disk and the modified date. For the F.32 update, the BIOS.WPH file matched the 30CFF32B.WPH file. With this in mind, I executed the SoftPaq for the F.34 BIOS (sp52477.exe) and stopped when the flash utility program menu appeared. Then I followed the same procedure as before. I opened C:\SwSetup\SP52477\SWinFlash\ and there was the BIOS.WPH file. Then I compared it to the two .WPH files of the folder in the directory above and the winner was the 30CFF34B.WPH file. Then I went to the folder where I kept your modded BIOS files and took the 30CFF34B.WPH, renamed it to BIOS.WPH, moved it to the SWinFlash folder (replacing the BIOS.WPH file that was there) and completed the flash. Done. New BIOS loaded, every option is there.
i went trough all this trouble because I don't like to fool around with BIOS flashing. And I don't like to play guess with something as sensitive as a BIOS flash.
I hope this little tutorial can help other to flash their BIOS as well and avoid some headaches (not to mention some expensive paperweights).