Acer Aspire 3 Installing Win 11 on a new 500GB NVMe - no signed device drivers.

Chris506
Chris506 Member Posts: 5 New User
edited September 2023 in Aspire Laptops

Acer Aspire 3 Mod N220C5, S/N NXAT0EK00AXXXX, built 18 May 2023

This belongs to a friend who asked me to (1) install a larger drive and (2) set it up for him. I downloaded the Win 11 ISO from MS and used Rufus to create a bootable USB on my Win 10 desktop. Every time I try to run the USB I get 'No signed device drivers'. It was running perfectly well with the as-built 128GB drive and the new drive is a brand new Crucial P5+ .

How do I solve this problem or am I having an attack of the stupids ?

Chris506

[Edited the thread to add model name to the title and to hide sensitive information]

Best Answer

  • Chris506
    Chris506 Member Posts: 5 New User
    Answer ✓

    Cloning is something I am well used to doing, it has saved my own bacon twice - once following a drive failure, the other time after I did something incredibly stupid to my own computer, I'm embarrassed to say what ! I now have the caddy and and the Aomei installer from Crucial so I may have this running tomorrow with a bit of luck. Then re-size the partitions on the 500GB drive and I should be good to go. And just for the fun of it, this is patch Tuesday.

    Chris

Answers

  • Puraw
    Puraw ACE, Member Posts: 13,009 Trailblazer

    Check these answers by MS: https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/all/try-to-install-windows-11-home-and-get-no-signed/0ce80456-24a4-4c01-8b41-744c2033bb79

    This is what I read on this forum about your topic:
    Disable the VMD controller:(Intel® Volume Management Device).
    On clean installs, with VMD enabled you have to have the IRST driver available before Windows setup will see the drives installed.
    Download IRST driver, extract it and save it on the Desktop, during the installation process, when it asks "Where do you want to install Windows?", you click Load driver (most probably in the lower left) and browse to the Desktop where you have saved the extracted folder, after the installation your system will recognize the SSD.

  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,027 Trailblazer
    edited September 2023

    When you change an OEM M.2 SSD boot drive like on the new Aspire A315-58s laptops to a larger capacity drives, the easiest and only way is to CLONE the existing boot drive onto the new larger 500GB NVMe M.2 SSD drive, use the new SSDs drive suggested cloning software, as every M.2 SSD or 2.5" HDD/SSD manufacturer has their own cloning software or they use a 3rd party cloning software that is made for their drives. For example Samsung M.2 drives and their 2.5" SSDs use their own cloning software called Data Migration or Western Digital use their own Acronis True Image for Western Digital cloning software and other manufacturers do the same, as that is what you should be using,

    With the Aspire A315-58 laptop, it uses an 1x M.2 SSD type PCIe3x4 boot drive and also has a 1x 2.5 SATA III drive space, the easiest way to clone the boot drive is to use a USB-C cord/plug external case for your new M.2 SSD PCIe3x4 type drive to clone the new drive. After you have cloned the existing boot drive then you take the older smaller capacity boot drive out and put the new larger cloned drive only into the laptop so that it boots with that drive. That is how you change and upgrade to a larger or faster M.2 SSD drive.

  • Chris506
    Chris506 Member Posts: 5 New User

    Thanks. Only one problem - as of this moment I have only one NVMe connection available to me, the one inside this laptop. As this is obviously a problem I am going to run into more often in the future I have just ordered an NVMe caddy so I can go this route or at least get the drive initialised. I have been driving, building and repairing computers since the mid 90's and it is the first time I have run into an NVMe drive. My inexperience is showing ! Immediately, all I want to do is get the damned OS installed, I have all his data and most of the software he wants is readily available.

    Chris

  • The M.2 PCIe3x4 USB-C corded caddy is the way to go to clone the existing drive onto a new and larger M.2 SSD PCIe3x4 drive on this laptop. Its a simple task but be aware that its a slow process and you will have to be patient as it takes a while and its not as quick as doing it with 2x M.2 SSD drives internally.

  • Chris506
    Chris506 Member Posts: 5 New User
    Answer ✓

    Cloning is something I am well used to doing, it has saved my own bacon twice - once following a drive failure, the other time after I did something incredibly stupid to my own computer, I'm embarrassed to say what ! I now have the caddy and and the Aomei installer from Crucial so I may have this running tomorrow with a bit of luck. Then re-size the partitions on the 500GB drive and I should be good to go. And just for the fun of it, this is patch Tuesday.

    Chris

  • Chris506
    Chris506 Member Posts: 5 New User

    @ Puraw.

    I followed your MS link but it didn't take me to two zipped files but to two .exe files of identical size, 14.4 MB, but neither of them worked for me. As you will see I am about o go the cloning route.

    Chris

  • Chris506
    Chris506 Member Posts: 5 New User

    I am happy to say that I have this computer wrapped up and it can go back to its anxious owner tomorrow. The key to the solution was acquiring an NVME caddy as I would not automatically have thought of cloning the original drive and I have to say I was impressed with Crucial's cloning software as it resized the C:\ partition to take advantage of the larger drive size without any input from me. A big time saving. All his data is in place and I have installed the software he uses so he had better be a happy camper . . . or else !

    Thanks for all the help and advice.

    Chris