F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop PC not starting up on Windows after adding the PICe card and making a copy of the OS

PC not starting up on Windows after adding the PICe card and making a copy of the OS

PC not starting up on Windows after adding the PICe card and making a copy of the OS

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Cherry_Bell
Member
161
04-19-2016, 04:13 AM
#1
Hello everyone, I’m seeking guidance on whether my recent upgrade will function properly. I replaced my PCIe to NVMe SSD with a new drive and installed it on my PC. Since the original drive doesn’t have an onboard NVMe slot, I cloned it onto the new one. After finishing the installation, I powered off the computer, removed the old drive, and restarted it. Now it’s stuck on the BIOS screen. The SSD I’m using is a fairly old model—Gigabyte GA-EG31M-S2 V2 with a Core 2 Quad and a couple of DDR2 sticks (2GB and 1GB). I’ve gathered some from my old PCs. I’m hoping you can advise if this configuration will work as expected.
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Cherry_Bell
04-19-2016, 04:13 AM #1

Hello everyone, I’m seeking guidance on whether my recent upgrade will function properly. I replaced my PCIe to NVMe SSD with a new drive and installed it on my PC. Since the original drive doesn’t have an onboard NVMe slot, I cloned it onto the new one. After finishing the installation, I powered off the computer, removed the old drive, and restarted it. Now it’s stuck on the BIOS screen. The SSD I’m using is a fairly old model—Gigabyte GA-EG31M-S2 V2 with a Core 2 Quad and a couple of DDR2 sticks (2GB and 1GB). I’ve gathered some from my old PCs. I’m hoping you can advise if this configuration will work as expected.

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Zikblackniggg
Member
145
04-19-2016, 05:18 AM
#2
It's quite a bit older than supporting NVMe startup. This feature first appeared in Intel's 4xxx models and gained popularity in the 6xxx lineup.
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Zikblackniggg
04-19-2016, 05:18 AM #2

It's quite a bit older than supporting NVMe startup. This feature first appeared in Intel's 4xxx models and gained popularity in the 6xxx lineup.

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ERKKIN
Member
218
04-19-2016, 02:06 PM
#3
You could succeed if you skip the prior drive, add the NVMe card with an expansion module, and perform a fresh Windows setup so the boot manager is set up correctly. Otherwise, you might be outdated. I faced problems cloning my SSD to an NVMe on an x99 platform (5000-series Intel).
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ERKKIN
04-19-2016, 02:06 PM #3

You could succeed if you skip the prior drive, add the NVMe card with an expansion module, and perform a fresh Windows setup so the boot manager is set up correctly. Otherwise, you might be outdated. I faced problems cloning my SSD to an NVMe on an x99 platform (5000-series Intel).

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BlackNinja0
Junior Member
6
05-05-2016, 12:15 AM
#4
Checking if it can be arranged as a cash drive within Windows.
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BlackNinja0
05-05-2016, 12:15 AM #4

Checking if it can be arranged as a cash drive within Windows.

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BatBerry
Member
61
05-05-2016, 08:31 AM
#5
There are methods available, though if you're connecting via gigabit Ethernet for your server, it shouldn't affect performance. Also, the term "cache" is relevant here.
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BatBerry
05-05-2016, 08:31 AM #5

There are methods available, though if you're connecting via gigabit Ethernet for your server, it shouldn't affect performance. Also, the term "cache" is relevant here.