F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Bios information for Asus motherboards

Bios information for Asus motherboards

Bios information for Asus motherboards

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Kathimaster
Member
127
05-28-2022, 11:55 PM
#1
I'm trying to set up an OS on my Asus P5VDC-X board, but the CD drive won't boot. It just jumps straight to the old hard drive. It seems like the CD boot is skipped entirely. Everything looks correct—boot sequence is fine, and I've followed the setup steps. I'm not familiar with BIOS settings, especially on this model. I only tried turning off Quick Boot and haven't found a better solution. Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
K
Kathimaster
05-28-2022, 11:55 PM #1

I'm trying to set up an OS on my Asus P5VDC-X board, but the CD drive won't boot. It just jumps straight to the old hard drive. It seems like the CD boot is skipped entirely. Everything looks correct—boot sequence is fine, and I've followed the setup steps. I'm not familiar with BIOS settings, especially on this model. I only tried turning off Quick Boot and haven't found a better solution. Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.

L
luca_kotti
Member
51
05-29-2022, 01:08 AM
#2
Use a USB flash drive to start the system
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luca_kotti
05-29-2022, 01:08 AM #2

Use a USB flash drive to start the system

O
101
05-31-2022, 03:02 AM
#3
which linux version are you attempting to start? when you access the BIOS, is there a way to boot from there? i mean not just changing the boot sequence or selecting a different drive, but having a boot menu available. additionally, on my laptop, I have to restart multiple times before a USB external drive appears in the BIOS menu because it requires power and time to spin up the disk. after roughly three restarts, the disk spins properly and the BIOS has enough time to identify the operating system.
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ohbabyitsnicki
05-31-2022, 03:02 AM #3

which linux version are you attempting to start? when you access the BIOS, is there a way to boot from there? i mean not just changing the boot sequence or selecting a different drive, but having a boot menu available. additionally, on my laptop, I have to restart multiple times before a USB external drive appears in the BIOS menu because it requires power and time to spin up the disk. after roughly three restarts, the disk spins properly and the BIOS has enough time to identify the operating system.