Hsb J Mv6 94v0 E89382 Bios Top -
Since this is an OEM board, the BIOS situation is different from retail boards like ASUS or MSI. You generally cannot simply download a BIOS from Foxconn's website because they do not support OEM boards directly.
Instead of hsb j mv6..., a real BIOS chip marking might look like:
25Q128FVSQ
1.8V BIOS
E89382 (PCB maker)
REV 3.0 (board revision)
And the motherboard model might be: HP 6050A2565701-MB-A02 hsb j mv6 94v0 e89382 bios top
Then you search for:
"HP 6050A2565701-MB-A02 BIOS bin"
No. It is a PCB silkscreen. BIOS versions look like F.13 Rev A, 1.2.8, or P79V000. Since this is an OEM board, the BIOS
You are likely reading this because the laptop turns on (fan spins, lights flash) but the screen stays black. That classic "dead but breathing" symptom is often caused by a corrupted BIOS.
If your board has "E89382" printed next to the BIOS chip, you must download the firmware specifically for E89382.
Flip the device over. Look for:
Once you have the true model number, go to the manufacturer's support site to download the BIOS.
Final tip: Ignore the 94V-0 E89382 text completely – it's just a safety mark. Your real search starts with DA0 or LA prefix numbers hiding under a barcode sticker near the memory slot.
Found this helpful? Share it with someone struggling with an "HSB J" board. 25Q128FVSQ 1
| Code | Meaning | Why it matters | |------|---------|----------------| | HSB J | Internal PCB revision / customer code (likely Quanta or Compal for HP) | Used for factory assembly | | MV6 | Project codename for the motherboard design | Useful for finding board-view files | | 94V-0 | UL flammability rating (standard for PCBs) | Ignore – not a model | | E89382 | UL file number for the PCB manufacturer | Ignore – not a model |
Conclusion: You cannot search "HSB J MV6" to get a BIOS. You need the real motherboard part number.