Bios boot options problem xc885

Paddywack56
Paddywack56 Member Posts: 7

Tinkerer

edited March 1 in 2020 Archives
Hi, I have a xc885 and I have installed  a ssd and cloned my hhd but when I try to change the boot order there is no option in the bios
Can anyone tell me is there a way to solve this please.

Best Answer

  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,174 Trailblazer
    Answer ✓
    Hi, I have a xc885 and I have installed  a ssd and cloned my hhd but when I try to change the boot order there is no option in the bios
    Can anyone tell me is there a way to solve this please.

    Do as ttttt is saying as after cloning your old OEM HDD and its OS do not boot your system with both connected, only boot with the new cloned SSD, then and if you want your old HDD as a slave get a USB to SATA connector (if you don’t have one) and format the old HDD as you can keep and/or make the old HDD as an external/internal drive for backups. That is what I’ve been doing for ages now and it works 100%. That is the reason why you can’t “change the boot order there is no option in the bios” as your system always boots from your old HDD OP and its not recognised in bios.

     


Answers

  • ttttt
    ttttt Member Posts: 1,947 Community Aficionado WiFi Icon
    @Paddywack56
    How did you clone your HDD?
    You can try:
    Remove the original HDD.
    Reset BIOS to factory default, then make sure Secure Boot is off

    If your BIOS has the RST or ACHI setting under SATA devices of the Integrated Peripheral section , try set it to RST


  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,174 Trailblazer
    Answer ✓
    Hi, I have a xc885 and I have installed  a ssd and cloned my hhd but when I try to change the boot order there is no option in the bios
    Can anyone tell me is there a way to solve this please.

    Do as ttttt is saying as after cloning your old OEM HDD and its OS do not boot your system with both connected, only boot with the new cloned SSD, then and if you want your old HDD as a slave get a USB to SATA connector (if you don’t have one) and format the old HDD as you can keep and/or make the old HDD as an external/internal drive for backups. That is what I’ve been doing for ages now and it works 100%. That is the reason why you can’t “change the boot order there is no option in the bios” as your system always boots from your old HDD OP and its not recognised in bios.

     


  • Paddywack56
    Paddywack56 Member Posts: 7

    Tinkerer

    Thank you both so much for your prompt response the cloning s/w I used was AOMEI backupper 6 and it worked fine, Steven I did as you suggested and it booted no problem but as I don't have a USB to SATA connector is there another way to format the HDD?
    Again thanks so much for your help
  • ttttt
    ttttt Member Posts: 1,947 Community Aficionado WiFi Icon
    @Paddywack56,
    Good to hear that your SSD becomes bootable. 
    TRY THIS:
    1) Temporary swap the old HDD with the SSD (to avoid accidently erasing the SSD, make sure SSD not in the PC).
    2) When bootup , hit ALT+F10 ( I assume you have such option with your PC. If not, bootup from the Windows 10 repair disc).
        You will be given different options. Go to "Command Prompt",  do a "Format C:" , assuming C:  is the right drive letter for this     old HDD.  Wait for formatting. Shutdown.
    3) Then put back in the SSD as boot drive
    4) Put the old HDD back as additional data drive later.
  • Paddywack56
    Paddywack56 Member Posts: 7

    Tinkerer

    ALT+F10 didn't work so I made a repair disk on USB it won't boot from usb I disabled secure boot and was able to set first boot sequence to removable device but still won't boot
    Any ideas?
  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,246 Trailblazer
    Just put both drives back in, since you are booting from the SSD now it'll default to that. Once you have Windows back up use Disk Management to remove the partitions from the HDD, verifying before any delete that you really are looking at the HDD. :) Once the drive is clean create one big data partition and you should be good to go.
    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.
  • Paddywack56
    Paddywack56 Member Posts: 7

    Tinkerer

    Unfortunately no matter what I try if both drives are connected it always boots from the hhd
  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,174 Trailblazer
    Unfortunately no matter what I try if both drives are connected it always boots from the hhd

    Get the USB to SATA connector and cable, its simpler and you wont have any problems, plus, its cheap.


  • ttttt
    ttttt Member Posts: 1,947 Community Aficionado WiFi Icon
    @Paddywack56

    I suppose you have a DVD drive and knowing how to get to Boot Menu, is it right? How about using "Create a Repair Disc" from Windows 10 and boot up from this repair disc  instead of from USB device.

    Theoretically speaking, if you can have both drives connected and boot from the SSD, it should be easy to format the old HDD as a data drive .
      In reality, there may be problems when two boot drives are connected, the two Windows Boot Managers may cause some confusion.
    For my case, one of my PC had both 32-bit and 64-bit Windows 10 in two separate SSD but both connected to the PC at the same time. It did cause some confusion, the 32-bit Windows 10 will consider the 64-bit Windows 10 SSD is one having errors and tried to repair the other SSD. Ever since then  I use a SSD dock and insert Windows SSD in one at a time via the dock. That's the reason I suggest you to use the repair disc or ALT+F10(hold down ALT and press F10 three times a second during bootup) to format the old HDD instead of putting HDD and SSD in the PC at the same time (but you can try, if that one time you can get pass without problem, you will be O.K.)
    If you don't know how to boot from DVD, do this. 
    While boot up, press the F12  three times a second until you see "Loading Boot Menu". In the boot menu, you can select the DVD ROM to boot from (same for booting up from SSD).
  • Paddywack56
    Paddywack56 Member Posts: 7

    Tinkerer

    Due to covid 19 lockdown I can't travel to get a USB to SATA connector but a friend has loaned me a HDD enclosure and I am using that to format the HDD.
    So again thanks so much for all your help with this problem