Romchik9007
New Member
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2018
- Messages
- 23
Both the SSD and the HDD were connected together.If your SSD is a new model, it might be (not sure) that the driver for it is not included in the Windows version used for installation. If so, you will have to download the driver and insert it into the ISO file used for installation (make a custom ISO for installation).
You can run a Linux live-CD/DVD and check the SSD for defects.
was only the SSD connected to the motherboard when you tried to install Windows? or were both the SSD and the HDD connected?
Just tried it. No luck. The Windows Installer just can't seem to allocate any memory onto the drive.Have you tried removing the HDD and just have the SSD attached?
If not I'd try that.
Okay, I hear ya. I've already installed Win10 on the HDD. Everything works as expected.I would do the following:
1. Install win10 on your hdd
2. After installation, I would prepare the ssd by using its dedicated setup program, test that everything is ok with it.
3. Finally, I would clone the hdd to the ssd by using its dedicated management program.
This way, the ssd's management program will also download all the drivers needed and put them where they should be.
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Thanks for being so helpful mate. That's a lot of detail.After cloning the hdd, try to boot from your ssd and if everything works fine, then and only then, wipe your hdd and use it to store your data files. In order to have your ssd in a good shape for a long time, set an Overprovisioning area in the SSD Manager, before cloning the hdd, and after everything looks fine and the hdd erased, move your data files from the cloned ssd to the old hdd.
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AHCI mode is enabled.I can't see anything on the picture you sent, it is too low resolution.
Did you enable AHCI Mode?
What the SSD Manager shows? It doesn't see also the ssd?
Please read all my posts and give me more details. Where did you buy the ssd?
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Cheers for the suggestion Mike. I'll think into it when I've literally tried every other method. You never know what might come up.Hi
From what I've seen unlocking a locked SSD if very difficult, and getting around it is next to impossible.
I did find this...
"To disable SSD code/lock
USE HD erase version 3.3
unplug power from the SSD but keep the data plugged in
start PC and when you get to the
A:/ prompt plug the SSD power back in
and proceed as normal
you should no longer see the security freeze"
I think only HDE 3.3 works with SSDs for some reason
A Full Review of HDDErase, a Free Data Destruction Software Tool
There is a link to HD Erase 3.3 in the first post here...
Ultimate Boot CD • View topic - HDD Erase 3.3 [Feature request]
I'm not pushing this, but it's the only way that I've seen to fix the locked drive problem, I've never tried this myself but it all else fails?
Mike