Restarted the Windows installation and faced issues saving to the backup drive, even though it was recognized.
Restarted the Windows installation and faced issues saving to the backup drive, even though it was recognized.
is causing issues. Both drives are Seagate FireCuda 530 NVME SSDs—E: is 1TB and C: is 2TB. The D drive appears in Disk Management, File Explorer, and Windows Settings under Storage. When I try to save .exe files to E: in File Explorer, they show up there, but in Windows Settings Storage it says C: was used. It doesn't appear in the BIOS Boot Order, though it shows up in Storage there. I'm unsure what I'm doing wrong with formatting or partitioning, and it's frustrating. It feels like Schrödinger's cat—both present and absent. Help would be greatly appreciated. TIA! Things I've tried: changed save location in Windows settings to D drive, restarted after using Disk Prompt and Diskpart, cleaned D drive with Cmd prompt, assigned a new letter to the drive in Diskpart, formatted using Windows Disk Management post-cleanup, ensured full updates, removed bloatware, reinstalled multiple times, verified with Seagate SeaTools. All health tests confirm everything is okay.
I restored Windows 10 because games slowed down when I pressed the Windows key to launch browsers or other apps. I've never faced problems before reinstalling Windows on both drives, but this time the secondary drive (E
is causing issues. Both drives are Seagate FireCuda 530 NVME SSDs—E: is 1TB and C: is 2TB. The D drive appears in Disk Management, File Explorer, and Windows Settings under Storage. When I try to save .exe files to E: in File Explorer, they show up there, but in Windows Settings Storage it says C: was used. It doesn't appear in the BIOS Boot Order, though it shows up in Storage there. I'm unsure what I'm doing wrong with formatting or partitioning, and it's frustrating. It feels like Schrödinger's cat—both present and absent. Help would be greatly appreciated. TIA! Things I've tried: changed save location in Windows settings to D drive, restarted after using Disk Prompt and Diskpart, cleaned D drive with Cmd prompt, assigned a new letter to the drive in Diskpart, formatted using Windows Disk Management post-cleanup, ensured full updates, removed bloatware, reinstalled multiple times, verified with Seagate SeaTools. All health tests confirm everything is okay.