F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Windows 8.1 experiences unexpected stalls following an SSD upgrade.

Windows 8.1 experiences unexpected stalls following an SSD upgrade.

Windows 8.1 experiences unexpected stalls following an SSD upgrade.

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ML_Covannal_
Member
228
01-02-2017, 06:56 AM
#11
Have you configured your SATA controller and motherboard chipset drivers? Are there additional storage devices connected besides your SSD? Is your SATA controller operating in AHCI mode within the BIOS/UEFI settings?
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ML_Covannal_
01-02-2017, 06:56 AM #11

Have you configured your SATA controller and motherboard chipset drivers? Are there additional storage devices connected besides your SSD? Is your SATA controller operating in AHCI mode within the BIOS/UEFI settings?

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WitherDerp
Junior Member
39
01-02-2017, 12:54 PM
#12
In your BIOS, changing the SATA controller to IDE causes a blue screen error when switching to AHCI.
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WitherDerp
01-02-2017, 12:54 PM #12

In your BIOS, changing the SATA controller to IDE causes a blue screen error when switching to AHCI.

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djninja444
Member
173
01-02-2017, 02:41 PM
#13
You didn’t handle it correctly—please perform a fresh installation of Windows. The problem seems to be related to a driver.
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djninja444
01-02-2017, 02:41 PM #13

You didn’t handle it correctly—please perform a fresh installation of Windows. The problem seems to be related to a driver.

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Urban98
Member
66
01-10-2017, 11:20 AM
#14
This morning I performed another clean setup and the same issues persisted. Here are the recurring problems after a fresh install:
- Random freezes
- Bottom right displays a secure boot configuration error
- Boot screen shows motherboard logo instead of Windows logo

Since these issues repeat after two clean installations, it likely relates to my actions. The standard procedure is:
- Boot from a USB running Windows 8.1
- Go through the on-screen prompts until reaching the 'Install Windows' option
- Press Shift+F10 to launch the command prompt
- Enter 'diskpart', then 'select disk x' (replace 'x' with your SSD or HDD number)
- Continue the installation process until you reach the home screen

Following these steps consistently reproduces the problems. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
P.S. Sorry if it’s hard to read—I wrote this while on the bus.
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Urban98
01-10-2017, 11:20 AM #14

This morning I performed another clean setup and the same issues persisted. Here are the recurring problems after a fresh install:
- Random freezes
- Bottom right displays a secure boot configuration error
- Boot screen shows motherboard logo instead of Windows logo

Since these issues repeat after two clean installations, it likely relates to my actions. The standard procedure is:
- Boot from a USB running Windows 8.1
- Go through the on-screen prompts until reaching the 'Install Windows' option
- Press Shift+F10 to launch the command prompt
- Enter 'diskpart', then 'select disk x' (replace 'x' with your SSD or HDD number)
- Continue the installation process until you reach the home screen

Following these steps consistently reproduces the problems. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
P.S. Sorry if it’s hard to read—I wrote this while on the bus.

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BryanPlayzz
Member
146
01-15-2017, 10:39 PM
#15
Disconnect all external hard drives except the one you're installing Windows on, configure the SATA controller for AHCI before starting installation. Edited: Also make sure to boot into optimized defaults so your BIOS/UEFI can adjust to your setup. Then configure AHCI and any required memory settings (like XMP Profile). Avoid overclocking until you confirm stability without it.
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BryanPlayzz
01-15-2017, 10:39 PM #15

Disconnect all external hard drives except the one you're installing Windows on, configure the SATA controller for AHCI before starting installation. Edited: Also make sure to boot into optimized defaults so your BIOS/UEFI can adjust to your setup. Then configure AHCI and any required memory settings (like XMP Profile). Avoid overclocking until you confirm stability without it.

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Earney7
Member
57
01-16-2017, 06:00 PM
#16
If you lack the SATA chip in ACHI mode, you’ll face these problems. Gather your drivers, switch the chip to ACHI mode, reinstall Windows with the proper drivers, and you should be fine.
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Earney7
01-16-2017, 06:00 PM #16

If you lack the SATA chip in ACHI mode, you’ll face these problems. Gather your drivers, switch the chip to ACHI mode, reinstall Windows with the proper drivers, and you should be fine.

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MetabeeMHZ
Junior Member
3
01-20-2017, 02:48 PM
#17
You're applying the steps incorrectly. Check the official guide at
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MetabeeMHZ
01-20-2017, 02:48 PM #17

You're applying the steps incorrectly. Check the official guide at

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