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Need Help: Corsair neutron GTX 128GB


askha

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Been having problem with the SSD, it will crash if i leave my computer to idle or sleep and been having drive check when i have no choice but to force restart.

 

I have downgrade from windows 8 to window 7 as i thought window 8 was the problem also and for both i have installed on the SSD

 

Current situation that i know is:

My SSD can be "Eject Corsair neutron GTX SSCI Disk device"?

 

BIOS is not recognized under the SATA configuration? (The place where can disable hot swap) but it can be seen under other bios setting.

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I have problems undertanding your english.

 

What kind of question is "BIOS is not recognized under the SATA-Configuration?"

And what does "been having drive check when i have no choice but to force restart" means.

 

Detailed scandisk takes some time... you have to wait not force restart.

 

Current situation that i know is:

My SSD can be "Eject Corsair neutron GTX SSCI Disk device"?

Where do you see that note at all?

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I have problems undertanding your english.

 

What kind of question is "BIOS is not recognized under the SATA-Configuration?"

And what does "been having drive check when i have no choice but to force restart" means.

 

Detailed scandisk takes some time... you have to wait not force restart.

 

 

Where do you see that note at all?

 

I saw something similar to this on an old machine (gateway NV44 when Intel changed their RST driver tree from 11.2 to 11.5. For some reason the system decides that the system disk isnt really the system disk and allows it to be ejectable from the system tray just as a USB stick would be.

I suppose this could happen with any HDD controller that the system treats as a SCSI device. I would think the solution would be to reboot to safe mode and uninstall and reinstall the SATA/ACHI driver and remove the disk so the system reinitializes the Hard Disk and SATA controller drivers. I usually reboot to safe mode, uninstall the driver, and reboot to safe mode again just to be sure before actually letting the system boot on its own. This is a terribly risky procedure historically though as things don't always go correctly and the system may decide theres no disk after a reboot (which is why I reboot to safemode twice). It MUST be done from safe mode or I can guarantee uninstalling the SATA driver is going to cause a failed boot upon reboot (at least it does on Intel systems. I wouldn't think AMD would be any different). Windows should be smart enough to reinstall the MSACHI driver but apparently it isn't without a little encouragement.

 

If it's a machine you have a recent backup of, or has nothing critical on it, just be prepared to format it if you attempt the above and it doesn't work.

 

I found that annoying myself when it happened on the old machine because you can accidentally crash windows with a single click, when you really meant to just eject a USB device.

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