Acer Swift 3 SF314-55G showing No Bootable Device

vinayprabhakar
vinayprabhakar Member Posts: 3 New User
edited July 2023 in Swift and Spin Series

I started laptop showing that "No Bootable Device", then i think that windows got crashed. I go to reinstall windows, in option where you want to windows doesn't recognise the storage driver .

Then i go to BIOS information sanction then where showing hdd "none" then i try to install ssd driver but driver doesn't recognise.

Please help me 🙏 to resolve this problem

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Answers

  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,700 Trailblazer
    edited July 2023

    Your M.2 SSD boot drive is damaged and that is why its not being recognized when you attampt to reinstall Win-10 and at "Where do you want to install Windows" screen even when you want to install the "IRST (Intel® Rapid Storage Technology) Driver Version: 16.5.1.1030" as you are showing above.

    That is why you get the "No Bootable Device". You need to buy a new M.2 SSD drive like listed below; that are a guide of the spec of the M.2 SSD drive suitable for your Swift 3 SF314-55G laptop, buy one of these drives and then reinstall Win-10 again onto this laptop as doing all that will make your laptop work 100%. Also and when you get your laptop working 100% without any crashes or BSODs install the last bios Version: 1.07 to fix your laptops " Updates RAID driver version and optimizes Intel SSD configuration" problems.

    Storage specs, your laptop works with PCIe 3 x4 type M.2 SSD drive.

    These are the suitable M.2 SSD drives and what Acer fitted to your laptop.

  • Puraw
    Puraw ACE, Member Posts: 14,505 Trailblazer

    The M.2 SSD not detected BIOS is the most common issue. It mainly occurs with NVMe SSDs like the 125GB Kingston in your laptop?
    Open the laptop and check if the M.2 SSD is making proper contact in the M.2 slot which is one of the major issues faced on the installation side. So, make sure that the M.2 SSD is installed correctly in the M.2 slot and secured tightly with a screw.
    You can also try resetting BIOS to default settings (F9) and save settings on exit. Removing the CMOS battery will also reset BIOS.
    If none of these fixed it, you may have a SSD hardware issue but for a 2-year-old drive that is not very likely.

  • vinayprabhakar
    vinayprabhakar Member Posts: 3 New User

    I opened my laptop and reconnect ssd even then not recognised ssd

  • vinayprabhakar
    vinayprabhakar Member Posts: 3 New User
  • Puraw
    Puraw ACE, Member Posts: 14,505 Trailblazer

    Try first to reset the BIOS, put the WD SSD back in the slot and locate the small round CMOS capsule at the right side of the main battery, open that capsule and remove the battery and put it back with the + sign up. Boot to BIOS with F2 and press F9 (resets BIOS) then save BIOS settings on exit and reboot to BIOS again with F2 to see if the SSD is detected now.

    You can buy any of the SSDs that Steven mentioned in the above comment. I would not go above 512GB in SSD capacity, the benchmark review I read for your model tested the Kingston 128GB SSD but that maybe too small for you, the Kingston 256GB would be better.

  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,932 Trailblazer

    My suggestion is a bigger drive than that. The prices are such that a 1TB drive is very affordable, and you won't have to worry about running out of room. Your SF314-55G supports NVMe x4 drives with a PCIe gen 3 interface, so go with any of them. Stick with a brand name and it will be more likely to last a long time.

    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.