You can view the files on Drive 1 by connecting it to your device and opening the appropriate file manager or explorer.
You can view the files on Drive 1 by connecting it to your device and opening the appropriate file manager or explorer.
Clarify your request. Are you asking about how to handle multiple drives listed in Disk Management, or something else?
I discovered a reason for the display issue. There are three slots on the motherboard where you can connect a drive, all labeled with PCIe/SATA except one that only shows PCIe and uses SATA. When I tried the drive there, it worked, so it makes sense it didn’t before. After swapping it out, I accidentally booted from it, which is fine. This confirms it should work now. However, when I returned to normal Windows, it wasn’t detected.
Attempting to launch from the device once more to verify drive availability.
It seems the issue appears in Windows 10 Home for some users but not others. You didn’t need to change a drive letter or transfer files easily. Now that you’re back on your Windows version, everything looks fine—no reboot required. Your files should display correctly now. Thanks for reaching out!