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Windows setup isn't recognizing the MacBook Pro SSD.

Windows setup isn't recognizing the MacBook Pro SSD.

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Darkeos
Senior Member
538
06-23-2016, 04:17 AM
#1
Hello, I'm attempting to set up Windows 10 on my MacBook using an insider build, but the SSD isn't showing up. When I use Boot Camp, the installation fails. I've downloaded the drivers and saved them to a folder on the USB drive, but after installing them in Setup they don't work—every driver is for 8-gen processors, even though my Mac has a 7-gen chip. The drive is a 512GB PCIe SSD from 2016.
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Darkeos
06-23-2016, 04:17 AM #1

Hello, I'm attempting to set up Windows 10 on my MacBook using an insider build, but the SSD isn't showing up. When I use Boot Camp, the installation fails. I've downloaded the drivers and saved them to a folder on the USB drive, but after installing them in Setup they don't work—every driver is for 8-gen processors, even though my Mac has a 7-gen chip. The drive is a 512GB PCIe SSD from 2016.

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MarzilloPlays
Junior Member
7
06-24-2016, 07:33 PM
#2
Your SSD relies on a Mac-based partitioning method (APFS or Mac OS Extended) that Windows isn't familiar with. This is why boot camp becomes necessary. For a newer Mac equipped with a T2 chip, the SSD will also be secured through encryption.
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MarzilloPlays
06-24-2016, 07:33 PM #2

Your SSD relies on a Mac-based partitioning method (APFS or Mac OS Extended) that Windows isn't familiar with. This is why boot camp becomes necessary. For a newer Mac equipped with a T2 chip, the SSD will also be secured through encryption.

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S4NP3I
Member
194
06-24-2016, 09:45 PM
#3
You're confused about the setup. You have separate partitions for Windows (fat32) and Mac, but it's not displaying anything in DiskPart. Also, you mentioned missing the T2 chip. Let me help clarify.
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S4NP3I
06-24-2016, 09:45 PM #3

You're confused about the setup. You have separate partitions for Windows (fat32) and Mac, but it's not displaying anything in DiskPart. Also, you mentioned missing the T2 chip. Let me help clarify.

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Dralock
Member
81
06-24-2016, 10:30 PM
#4
It's not possible to set up Windows 10 on a FAT32 drive.
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Dralock
06-24-2016, 10:30 PM #4

It's not possible to set up Windows 10 on a FAT32 drive.

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Fufuit
Member
174
06-25-2016, 03:02 AM
#5
You weren't told how to identify the issue because of the NTFS requirement and the disk not appearing. It seems Windows might be missing certain chipset drivers.
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Fufuit
06-25-2016, 03:02 AM #5

You weren't told how to identify the issue because of the NTFS requirement and the disk not appearing. It seems Windows might be missing certain chipset drivers.

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BigHaza
Member
211
06-30-2016, 07:46 AM
#6
Create an NTFS partition using Bootcamp, which will install the necessary drivers. If Bootcamp fails, reinstall macOS and attempt again. You can recover without data loss; avoid formatting the drive.
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BigHaza
06-30-2016, 07:46 AM #6

Create an NTFS partition using Bootcamp, which will install the necessary drivers. If Bootcamp fails, reinstall macOS and attempt again. You can recover without data loss; avoid formatting the drive.