Acer Aspire V15 Nitro (Black Edition) - Won't boot from bootable USB stick

Kyrill
Kyrill Member Posts: 1 New User
edited August 2023 in 2018 Archives
Hi guys,

stuck on this issue for 4 days, would appreciate any help!

So, I am trying to install Dual Boot of Win10 and Ubuntu18 on my Acer Aspire V15 (VN7-592G).
If I plug in the USB drive, it won't boot the Linux installation screen, always only to Windows.

I tried everything I could find online to fix it:

1. Deactivate Fast Start Up in Windows.
2. Deactivate Secure Boot in BIOS Settings.
3. Reduce Volume of C: by the half. The other half (D:) is a GPT.
4. Make Bootable Stick with RUFUS and the official Ubuntu18 ISO. I used GPT as partition scheme, the target system UEFI(without CSM), the type FAT32 and the size 8GB - as the RUFUS settings.
5. Activate F12 Menu in BIOS Settings.
6. Changing Boot Priority of USB HDD to First.
Now I tried both ways:
7a. Turning laptop on and pressing F12. Then selecting "Command Linpus Lite (Generic Flash Disk)" or "Linpus lite (Generic Flash Disk)"
7b. Turning laptop on without F12 (as I changed the boot priority already).

So the weird thing is, the laptop recognizes the Flash drive in the "F12 Menu", but won't boot from it, even though I select it. It will just start Windows and show my login screen.
Also, when I plug in a Win Installer on USB (Tried Win8), it is able to boot the installation menu without issues.
(I also tried a Ubuntu14 bootable USB stick, but this didn't work neither. Even though, here it at least shows the common screen "Try Ubuntu"/ "Install Ubuntu", but then the screen stays black - won't do anything.)

Some background info:
I have the laptop for 6 days (it was second hand from Amazon Warehouse). The moment I unpacked it, the originial Win10 was so slow (with all that extra programs that I don't need from Acer), so I spent two days trying to install Ubuntu. This finally worked by following these instructions:
 
"Detailed steps I used to successfully install:

Create a boot USB with the Ubuntu image file using Rufus as detailed here:https://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows

Insert USB in the forward left hand side USB connector (the USB connector on the right side of the computer will not work)

Reboot the computer and access the BIOS with F2:

  • Use arrow keys to navigate to BOOT screen
  • Select Secure Boot and change value to disable
  • On the Boot priority order move USB-HDD to the top
  • F10 to save and exit

Proceed with the installation type of choice.

After the installation has completed, and is prompting you to restart:

  • Remove the USB drive
  • (on reboot) Access the BIOS again with F2
  • On the BIOS page Select an UEFI file as trusted for executing
  • Navigate to: HDD0 > EFI > 'ubuntu' and select SHIMX64.EFI (Enter shimx64 as name)
  • Navigate to the BOOT tab:
  • Select Secure boot, change value to Enabled
  • F10 to save and exit

I followed these exact steps, installed without errors, and am using Ubuntu on my Acer V3 now."

 ------------ https://askubuntu.com/questions/886536/how-to-install-ubuntu-on-an-acer-with-preinstalled-windows-10-home (11.08.2018)

Though to the fact that I need Dual Boot, I needed to have Windows installed first, so I installed Win8 (what I usually prefer over Win10). 
Installing it worked easily, but I then had issues with the drivers as Acer only provides them for Win10, and I couldn't find ones for my network and sound card, so I installed Windows 10 using the official Win10 ISO from Microsoft.

It's not the first time I am working with BIOS, OS, etc. I am usually doing that without issues on SONYs, DELLs, etc. but this Acer is driving me crazy!!

Any idea what I could have missed?

I really don't want to give up on this one, as I - given the hardware specs - got this laptop really cheap from amazon's warehouse (it was second hand, though looks as new).

Thanks a lot!
Kyrill


PS: Laptop details:

Intel Core I7 6th Gen
16 GB RAM
1TB HDD
NVIDIA GEFORCE GTX 960 4 GB
4K (3840 x 2160) -> Maybe it's due to some resolution issues?

Answers