F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop No problema, je ne peux plus accéder à mon NVMe.

No problema, je ne peux plus accéder à mon NVMe.

No problema, je ne peux plus accéder à mon NVMe.

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Donnyhui01
Junior Member
10
09-17-2016, 05:22 PM
#1
Hi, I have a PC with two drives that come with Windows. The NVMe drive has been my primary boot device for about eight months now. I also have Windows installed on an older SATA SSD, which I just reformatted recently. One morning my PC crashed and when I tried to restart it, it booted into Windows on the SATA SSD. After disconnecting all drives except the NVMe, it starts up directly into BIOS and isn’t listed in the boot priority. I think the NVMe is functional, as it appears in both BIOS and Windows, but I’m having trouble getting into it. People suggest creating a new EFI partition, but I keep getting an error saying the media is write-protected. I really want to avoid losing data from this drive, so any advice would be greatly appreciated!
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Donnyhui01
09-17-2016, 05:22 PM #1

Hi, I have a PC with two drives that come with Windows. The NVMe drive has been my primary boot device for about eight months now. I also have Windows installed on an older SATA SSD, which I just reformatted recently. One morning my PC crashed and when I tried to restart it, it booted into Windows on the SATA SSD. After disconnecting all drives except the NVMe, it starts up directly into BIOS and isn’t listed in the boot priority. I think the NVMe is functional, as it appears in both BIOS and Windows, but I’m having trouble getting into it. People suggest creating a new EFI partition, but I keep getting an error saying the media is write-protected. I really want to avoid losing data from this drive, so any advice would be greatly appreciated!

J
JayBatMe
Member
63
09-17-2016, 06:29 PM
#2
Back up your data on another operating system or a live OS first. Then determine what has changed—check for updates, verify the clock accuracy in BIOS, and confirm if your BIOS settings match those left after installation.
J
JayBatMe
09-17-2016, 06:29 PM #2

Back up your data on another operating system or a live OS first. Then determine what has changed—check for updates, verify the clock accuracy in BIOS, and confirm if your BIOS settings match those left after installation.

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NooLele
Posting Freak
847
10-09-2016, 08:59 AM
#3
Boot is available for UEFI and also supports legacy configurations.
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NooLele
10-09-2016, 08:59 AM #3

Boot is available for UEFI and also supports legacy configurations.