How do I recreate the RAID0 volume on my Aspire S7-391-73514G12aws?

Orange
Orange Member Posts: 2 New User
edited November 2023 in 2020 Archives
I have found myself in a dilemma.
After some of the the latest Windows updates I couldn't boot Windows anymore.
I was playing around both in the BIOS setup and in the Intel Rapid Storage Technology setup trying out some different configurations.

After not being able to boot Windows anyway I decied to to reinstall a new Windows 10 Pro.
After succeefull reinstall I only could find 59GB in the disk.

So it turned out I did some changes in the Intel Rapid Storage Technology configuration.
Unfortunately I cant recreate the RAID0 setup anymore.



I can neither delete the entire RAID volume nor reset the disks to non-RAID.
When I try to perform those operations I don't get any error messages but the meny will still show the same options.
Option 1. Create RAID Volume is still greyed.

So how do I successfully remove my existing RAID0 in order to recreate it again?
Maybe the SSD with serial# ....3157 is malfunctioning?
Is there any utility to check that both SSDs are working properly?
Is there a new version of the Intel Rapid Storage Technology.
My version is 11.5.0.1502.

Best Regards

Answers

  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 35,298 Trailblazer
    edited July 2020
    What does 4. Recovery Volume Options give you? It look like you just need to reattach physical disk 1 back to the striped volume to get the RAID0 back. It is possible that ID 1 has failed, but I don't see an indication of that there. The mSATA drives used on your model were kind of unique, they had two physical SSDs on the one card, the striped them in RAID0 as one volume, which increased the overall speed by a bunch.
    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.
  • Orange
    Orange Member Posts: 2 New User
    Thx for that suggestion. I will give it a try next week and reply here then. 
  • aphanic
    aphanic Member Posts: 959 Seasoned Specialist WiFi Icon
    It may be worthy to check what their utility tells you under Windows as well, in case there's something useful in there: