F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems On the 10th boot, the system failed to start on the incorrect drive.

On the 10th boot, the system failed to start on the incorrect drive.

On the 10th boot, the system failed to start on the incorrect drive.

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Harckaon
Member
153
09-02-2016, 06:53 PM
#1
Hello, friends. I think I’m facing a strange issue (not in English). I want to give my old 120GB SSD to a friend, but I can’t delete the old Windows 10 files even though it’s not my OS drive—it was actually on my main PC. My main drive is a 500GB NVMe, but without the 120GB SSD, the BIOS doesn’t recognize any OS. When I turn off the NVMe in BIOS and boot from the SSD, the NVMe still appears as a boot driver. I need to completely remove the 120GB SSD, but it won’t boot without it. Someone might know how to combine the data or fix this? Thanks, House.
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Harckaon
09-02-2016, 06:53 PM #1

Hello, friends. I think I’m facing a strange issue (not in English). I want to give my old 120GB SSD to a friend, but I can’t delete the old Windows 10 files even though it’s not my OS drive—it was actually on my main PC. My main drive is a 500GB NVMe, but without the 120GB SSD, the BIOS doesn’t recognize any OS. When I turn off the NVMe in BIOS and boot from the SSD, the NVMe still appears as a boot driver. I need to completely remove the 120GB SSD, but it won’t boot without it. Someone might know how to combine the data or fix this? Thanks, House.

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Blockwalker02
Member
181
09-02-2016, 08:29 PM
#2
I've tested all possible setups: SSD with main boot, NVME with main boot, both together, and none of them.
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Blockwalker02
09-02-2016, 08:29 PM #2

I've tested all possible setups: SSD with main boot, NVME with main boot, both together, and none of them.

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themagnum310
Member
164
09-08-2016, 10:47 AM
#3
Windows has placed the bootloader/MBR on the SSD. You must set up a fresh one on your NVMe drive. Refer to the guidance in this article: https://www.tenforums.com/installation-u...post698505
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themagnum310
09-08-2016, 10:47 AM #3

Windows has placed the bootloader/MBR on the SSD. You must set up a fresh one on your NVMe drive. Refer to the guidance in this article: https://www.tenforums.com/installation-u...post698505

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EenJonathan
Member
56
09-09-2016, 12:32 AM
#4
Sure, I get it. You're trying to start the setup process by booting from the Windows installation media. Does that involve turning off the computer and then using the installer on a USB drive?
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EenJonathan
09-09-2016, 12:32 AM #4

Sure, I get it. You're trying to start the setup process by booting from the Windows installation media. Does that involve turning off the computer and then using the installer on a USB drive?

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rosie2435
Senior Member
475
09-09-2016, 02:37 AM
#5
Turn off your PC and plug in the USB with the Win10 installation disk. If needed, enter BIOS and configure the USB as the primary boot device. Once the installer displays "Install Now," press SHIFT+F10 to open the command prompt and follow the linked instructions.
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rosie2435
09-09-2016, 02:37 AM #5

Turn off your PC and plug in the USB with the Win10 installation disk. If needed, enter BIOS and configure the USB as the primary boot device. Once the installer displays "Install Now," press SHIFT+F10 to open the command prompt and follow the linked instructions.