To ensure system stability and performance.
To ensure system stability and performance.
2 NVMe units compatibility - one stays in motherboard slot, install Windows 10/11 and label it as GAMING drive. Take it out if needed, move second drive to another slot, set either W10/11 for identical outcomes and label that as HOME drive. Power down and reinsert drive 1. Use F12 to access boot menu and choose the drive, everything works fine. For a brief moment the system checks the disks—either it tries to start one of them or reports issues. If you let the check continue, you may encounter a non-functional drive. Some suggest that having two independent boot sectors might be the issue. Back in XP times, with dual drives you’d press GO, see the boot screen and pick the desired drive. I’m stuck and can’t find a solution; reading countless discussions but no clear guidance. I’ve been repeatedly doing image backups and it’s frustrating. I just need two reliable drives that will start consistently. Thanks for any suggestions or advice, Nobby from NZ.
To prevent a slow start-up on both operating systems after dual booting, disable it in each OS's settings.