F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Please note... Only this particular SSD starts up.

Please note... Only this particular SSD starts up.

Please note... Only this particular SSD starts up.

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CoolGuy_99_
Junior Member
25
02-01-2016, 07:12 PM
#1
Alrighty you smarty bunch, here's a test for ya I've been building computers since I was a young kid, 20 years later I'm building budget systems as a low profit hobby and find myself stuck. I've built roughly 8 rigs in the past 4ish months but this 1st gen Core i7 super budget setup is racking my brain like no other. Based on an old Veriton M490G mainboard, I slapped an 860 and some ram into 'er and planned to find a low cost GPU to pair with it for a super entry level e-sports/ kids gaming machine (since picked up an RX560 4gb from a bulk buy, score Big Grin) THE PROBLEM: My testing SSD is my og Samsung 860 EVO 500GB and it boots no issues, runs cinebench and all perfectly fine... I have tried this F- gosh darn thing with 3 other SSD's (including 2 250gb 860 Evo's) and 3 or 4 HDD's, some with fresh Windows 10 installs, some not fresh, one with Vista... NOTHING. Will not find bootable media AT ALL, unless it's my trusty test 860. I've tried updating the bios, it was .10 off being the latest already, this helped squat. Anyone got any quick tips before I do the thing I'm really trying to avoid and throw out otherwise perfectly functioning hardware? Cheers in advance, James
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CoolGuy_99_
02-01-2016, 07:12 PM #1

Alrighty you smarty bunch, here's a test for ya I've been building computers since I was a young kid, 20 years later I'm building budget systems as a low profit hobby and find myself stuck. I've built roughly 8 rigs in the past 4ish months but this 1st gen Core i7 super budget setup is racking my brain like no other. Based on an old Veriton M490G mainboard, I slapped an 860 and some ram into 'er and planned to find a low cost GPU to pair with it for a super entry level e-sports/ kids gaming machine (since picked up an RX560 4gb from a bulk buy, score Big Grin) THE PROBLEM: My testing SSD is my og Samsung 860 EVO 500GB and it boots no issues, runs cinebench and all perfectly fine... I have tried this F- gosh darn thing with 3 other SSD's (including 2 250gb 860 Evo's) and 3 or 4 HDD's, some with fresh Windows 10 installs, some not fresh, one with Vista... NOTHING. Will not find bootable media AT ALL, unless it's my trusty test 860. I've tried updating the bios, it was .10 off being the latest already, this helped squat. Anyone got any quick tips before I do the thing I'm really trying to avoid and throw out otherwise perfectly functioning hardware? Cheers in advance, James

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f1rst228
Junior Member
15
02-06-2016, 05:51 PM
#2
Not all SSDs use the identical MBR partitioning method; some support MBR while others rely on GPT.
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f1rst228
02-06-2016, 05:51 PM #2

Not all SSDs use the identical MBR partitioning method; some support MBR while others rely on GPT.

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_TophPot_
Junior Member
47
02-06-2016, 07:45 PM
#3
Some M.2 connectors only support SATA SSDs (AHCI), not NVME M.2 drives. Also maybe you have to go in BIOS and in boot order, to ADD your new SSD to the boot order. It may be hardcoded to only boot from your original SSD, then fall back to network or optical drives / usb sticks. First diagnostic step is to go in bios and double check that the new SSD is detected. If it's detected, make sure it's in the boot order. Then it may still not work if the SSD doesn't have a bootable partition. Make sure there's a bootable partition on the SSD and an operating system there. If it doesn't boot from replacement SSD, try to boot from a USB stick with Windows and see if the Windows install detects the SSD.
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_TophPot_
02-06-2016, 07:45 PM #3

Some M.2 connectors only support SATA SSDs (AHCI), not NVME M.2 drives. Also maybe you have to go in BIOS and in boot order, to ADD your new SSD to the boot order. It may be hardcoded to only boot from your original SSD, then fall back to network or optical drives / usb sticks. First diagnostic step is to go in bios and double check that the new SSD is detected. If it's detected, make sure it's in the boot order. Then it may still not work if the SSD doesn't have a bootable partition. Make sure there's a bootable partition on the SSD and an operating system there. If it doesn't boot from replacement SSD, try to boot from a USB stick with Windows and see if the Windows install detects the SSD.

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xXRattataXx
Member
175
02-09-2016, 05:34 PM
#4
I'll need to verify if they're being selected in the boot menu options. From what I recall, they aren't. I've used a USB with the media tool but it still doesn't appear in the BIOS (shows DEL on POST screen), though it does show up in boot order (pressing F12 during POST). None of the drives are M.2 or NVMe, and the board lacks M.2 slots. Thank you for the quick reply!
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xXRattataXx
02-09-2016, 05:34 PM #4

I'll need to verify if they're being selected in the boot menu options. From what I recall, they aren't. I've used a USB with the media tool but it still doesn't appear in the BIOS (shows DEL on POST screen), though it does show up in boot order (pressing F12 during POST). None of the drives are M.2 or NVMe, and the board lacks M.2 slots. Thank you for the quick reply!

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Rounyx
Posting Freak
838
02-09-2016, 06:09 PM
#5
Absolutely, I'm honored to be recognized as a legend. Making the switch to MBR was quite the challenge, but it ultimately succeeded. Thank you!
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Rounyx
02-09-2016, 06:09 PM #5

Absolutely, I'm honored to be recognized as a legend. Making the switch to MBR was quite the challenge, but it ultimately succeeded. Thank you!