Dead SSD. Adding new one, Compatible Crucial P3 Plus 4TB NVME for Predator Titon PT516-52s-73YD?

dcard
dcard Member Posts: 2 New User
edited September 9 in Predator Laptops

Predator Titon PT516-52s-73YD

Bios shows the Crucial drive with 4TB. But Windows 11 install from USB does not see any drives to load the OS.

Old Bios 1.03. Downloaded the latest 1.08 in hopes that Win11 install will recognize the 4TB drive.

But there is no option in current Bios to update the bios. And I have no OS to run windows and run the downloaded 1.08 from Acer. Help!

[Edited the thread to add model number to the title]

Answers

  • GAMING6698
    GAMING6698 ACE Posts: 7,960 Pathfinder
    edited September 9

    Create a bootable USB for UEFI systems using Rufus with GPT partitioning, follow these steps:

    1. Download Rufus: Visit rufus.ie and download the latest version. You can choose the portable version if you prefer not to install it.
    2. Prepare USB Drive: Insert a USB drive (at least 8GB) into your computer. Ensure to back up any important data, as this process will erase all existing content on the drive.
    3. Launch Rufus: Open Rufus with administrative privileges. Your USB drive should be automatically detected.
    4. Select ISO File: Click "SELECT" to choose the Windows ISO file you want to use. You can download this ISO from Microsoft's official website.
    5. Partition Scheme: In the "Partition Scheme" dropdown, select GPT for UEFI systems.
    6. File System: Choose NTFS as the file system, as it supports files larger than 4GB, which is often necessary for Windows installations.
    7. Volume Label: Optionally, set a name for your USB drive under "Volume Label".
    8. Start the Process: Click "START". A warning will appear about data loss; confirm to proceed.
    9. Completion: Wait for Rufus to finish creating the bootable USB. Once it says "READY", safely eject the USB drive from your computer.

    Now, try to install windows in your SSD.

    If you still face same issue then follow above steps again but this time set file system to FAT32 instead of NTFS and check.

    windows 10/11 optimization guide for gaming 
    Windows 10/11 optimization guide for gaming — Acer Community

    My AN515-43 laptop UserBenchmark-
    https://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/51514566
  • dcard
    dcard Member Posts: 2 New User

    Thanks for taking time on this, GAMING6698!!

    Great to learn about Rufus to create bootable USB drives.

    I did solve my problems before receiving this. Here is what I did:

    There are two problems embedded in my question:

    1. How do you update your Bios on a Predator laptop that cannot run Windows (like a new drive without OS, or, and old drive with crashed OS).

      It appears that Acer only has a utility that runs under windows to update your BIOS. Nothing in Bios to perform update, and no way to run their setup on boot up to command prompt.

      REALLY? So I took an old NVME drive with windows loaded from a different laptop, was able to get it to boot on the Predator, and run the Acer setup program to burn new BIOS.
    2. Of course, that Bios update did not fix the main problem with USB Win 11 Install:

      The install utility DOES NOT support any NVME drives (not just my new Crucial P3 Plus 4TB). I discovered that by putting a 4-year-old older working NVME drive into the Predator. Win 11 USB install still could not see the older-working NVME drive. WHAT?

      Spending more time searching online, I find lots of people complaining about their Win 11 USB Install NOT SEEING NVME DRIVES connected to system…. people with laptops from Dell, HP, HP.

      This is what I found:

      These laptops need the Intel IRST driver (Rapid Storage) installed to allow the installation to recognize any NVME drives. AND THE WIN 11 USB INSTALL IMAGE DOES NOT CONTAIN THAT DRIVER.

      I tried downloading the IRST driver from the Intel site, but was not successful get it worked-in during the USB Win 11 install as the raw drivers are not available. Only a SetupRST.exe from Intel.

      (at end of this post, I give some untested steps to extract raw drivers from that SetupRST.exe from Intel)

      ****************************************

      BUT THE IRST DRIVER ON THE ACER DOWNLOAD FOR MY SPECIFIC MODEL provides a zip download with raw drivers. WORKED LIKE A CHARM !!!!!

      Here are the steps for making this work.

      A- On another working computer, and with a USB flash drive available (you will lose all data on it), go to the Microsoft website for the download of Win 11 operating system:

      https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/software-download/windows11

      Use the "Create Windows 11 Installation Media" option with your USB drive plugged in.

      B- While that is downloading, go to the laptop mfgr downloads page for your model and find the IRST Rapid Storage driver. For my Acer Predator, this is the file:

      IRST_Intel_19.2.0.1003_W11x64_A.zip

      Again, the Intel site also this IRST version, but packed into a setup.exe. Need the raw drivers. See possible method to extract at end of this post.

      C- Extract that zip file with the folder of Intel IRST drivers/etc.

      D- When your Microsoft Win 11 USB media has finished its download, transfer that entire unzipped Intel IRST folder onto that USB Win 11 Install flash drive.

      E- Plug the USB Win 11 install disk into the computer you are trying to install Win 11 to a NVME drive.

      F- Boot into your USB WIn 11 install. If it doesn't boot into it automatically, you may need to change a setting in your Bios to allow the F12 Boot selection (for my Acer. YMMV).

      G- Once you are running the Win 11 install, it will progress to a point where you have to choose the disk -Volume to install Win 11. Of course, you will not see your NVME drive (that is why your are reading this).

      To get the install to see your NVME drive(s), do the following:

      Add Driver, Browse, and find the Intel IRST folder you loaded onto the USB stick in step (D). Click on that folder, and progress. It should now populate the screen with 4 or more drivers to select. I simply selected the top driver in the list, and Voila!, all of the NVME drives and partitions now populate that screen to progress with your install.

      ******
    3. If you want to use the generic Intel IRST driver from the Intel site, you may want to try the following to extract the drivers folder from the downloaded SetupRST.exe executable:

      Extract driver files from SetupRST.exe:
      - Open terminal in the directory with SetupRST.exe by right-clicking the directory
      and selecting "Open in Terminal" or "Open PowerShell here"
      - Enter the following command:
      ./SetupRST.exe -extractdrivers SetupRST_extracted


      ****************

      THX AGAIN!!