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Activate UEFI boot for Latitude E6430 device

Activate UEFI boot for Latitude E6430 device

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Sigma_Saxon
Junior Member
18
03-23-2016, 05:14 AM
#1
Purchased a new laptop and overlooked turning off the UEFI BIOS prior to installing Windows 10 Pro X64. During startup, the machine displays "Invalid partition table!" message. When accessing the one-time boot menu and choosing UEFI: Windows Boot Manager, it boots normally. It seems the device defaults to legacy boot from the hard drive instead of UEFI. I've adjusted UEFI: Windows Boot Manager to prioritize it over any legacy settings in the BIOS, yet the error persists. Should I disable legacy boot completely? Would a full reinstall in Legacy mode be preferable? Thanks!
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Sigma_Saxon
03-23-2016, 05:14 AM #1

Purchased a new laptop and overlooked turning off the UEFI BIOS prior to installing Windows 10 Pro X64. During startup, the machine displays "Invalid partition table!" message. When accessing the one-time boot menu and choosing UEFI: Windows Boot Manager, it boots normally. It seems the device defaults to legacy boot from the hard drive instead of UEFI. I've adjusted UEFI: Windows Boot Manager to prioritize it over any legacy settings in the BIOS, yet the error persists. Should I disable legacy boot completely? Would a full reinstall in Legacy mode be preferable? Thanks!

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RafikiBoy
Member
103
03-28-2016, 01:17 AM
#2
It's been quite a warm period since I experimented with a Latitude from that era, but I believe that's likely the simplest answer. Why? UEFI performed well during the Sandy/Ivy Bridge timeframe.
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RafikiBoy
03-28-2016, 01:17 AM #2

It's been quite a warm period since I experimented with a Latitude from that era, but I believe that's likely the simplest answer. Why? UEFI performed well during the Sandy/Ivy Bridge timeframe.

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alerabbit
Posting Freak
840
03-29-2016, 06:33 PM
#3
I need to keep supporting my ability to start from older systems. Usually I turn off the UEFI BIOS right away, but I missed doing that earlier.
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alerabbit
03-29-2016, 06:33 PM #3

I need to keep supporting my ability to start from older systems. Usually I turn off the UEFI BIOS right away, but I missed doing that earlier.

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dat_random_kid
Junior Member
29
03-30-2016, 12:43 AM
#4
Have you checked the source? It might have been a typo. Renaming the EFI folder inside the data partition could work if it exists. This sometimes resolved my boot issues, but likely not for a fresh installation.
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dat_random_kid
03-30-2016, 12:43 AM #4

Have you checked the source? It might have been a typo. Renaming the EFI folder inside the data partition could work if it exists. This sometimes resolved my boot issues, but likely not for a fresh installation.