Post beep takes time with external hard drive Orion 3000 PO3-620

BanSoda
BanSoda Member Posts: 15 Troubleshooter
edited October 2021 in Predator Desktops
Hi so I have a external hard drive connected to my pc and everytime I have it connected on boot it waits 10 seconds before doinbg the post beep and booting, but if I have it disconnected it takes like 2 seconds before the post beep. How can I fix this since I don't want to disconnect my hard drive everytime I boot.

I'm not too bothered it would just be nice to have it gone.

Thread was edited to add model name to the title


Answers

  • GotBanned
    GotBanned Member Posts: 654 Seasoned Specialist WiFi Icon
    edited October 2021
    Go into BIOS and check what your "Boot Order" says. I suppose that currently the first boot device is something like "BIOS/UEFI USB HDD" and your internal SSD where Windows is installed is second. Change your internal SSD as 1st boot device and save settings and exit BIOS.
  • Easwar
    Easwar Member Posts: 6,727 Guru
    Hi @BanSoda,

    May I know the full model name of your unit.

  • BanSoda
    BanSoda Member Posts: 15 Troubleshooter
    Easwar I have the Orion 3000 PO3-620
  • BanSoda
    BanSoda Member Posts: 15 Troubleshooter
    GotBanned
    Heres an Image


  • GotBanned
    GotBanned Member Posts: 654 Seasoned Specialist WiFi Icon
    edited October 2021
    To me it looks like your boot order is good as it is. I'm not sure this will help, but you could try "disabling" other boot devices than the first one. Doing this shouldn't make any difference, because the boot order is simply there for one reason: if can't boot from device X try device Y (and so on).

    I take your external HDD is a hard drive and not SSD? Maybe the extra time added to your boot time is caused by hard drive's spin up time... although it shouldn't matter because your actual boot drive is before it on the list. *sigh*

    Sorry, but I'm not being very helpful here. ^^
  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,672 Trailblazer
    Often the lag is due to the system wanting to verify the drive integrity during the initial mount of the filesystem. I assume the external drive is a HDD rather than a SSD? If so you might want to run some good defragging software on it...
    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.