“Reboot and Select proper Boot device or Insert Boot Media in selected Boot device and press a key” -...
Problem description:
My PC refuses to boot to my SSD with Windows. This is a new PC that I just built. It gives the error "Reboot and Select proper Boot device or Insert Boot Media in selected Boot device and press a key". I have to go into the BIOs and manually select the drive as a "boot override" option. I have to do this each time it's powered on.
When I installed Windows all three of my drives were connected.
Attempted fixes:
I've tried every possible drive boot combination. I've read the manually thoroughly. I've Googled to exhaustion. There are an ass-ton of results that claim to help with this issue, but they all seem to boil down to setting your boot options correctly, which I've done. I've also tried to boot without any USB devices plugged in aside from my keyboard and mouse
There are 2 sections in my BIOS related to boot order-
Boot Option Priorities (manual description)-
These items specify the boot device priority sequence from the available devices. The number of device items that appears on the screen depends on the number of devices installed in the system.
This section gives me two options- one of which is my SSD and the other is a platter drive I have in there. It only gives those two options. Thing is, I have 2 platters and one SSD in there as well as an optical so I can't understand why this section is only showing the two. Either way, my SSD is first on that list, and yet the PC still won't boot to Windows off of it.
Boot Override (manual description)-
These item displays the available devices. The number of device items that appear on the screen depends on the number of devices installed in the system. Click an item to start booting from the selected device.
This section lets me manually select a device to boot from. This is the only way I can get my system to boot to the correct drive. It shows all available boot options, even my USB ports if something is plugged in.
There's also sub-sections for HDD order and an optical "BBS", I believe. I'm not sure how these even come into play but I've also listed the correct order I want them to boot in those sections as well.
The boot section is 3.8 on page 3-51 if anyone is interested in looking at it-
http://dlcdnet.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/LGA2011/X99-DELUXE/e9504_x99-deluxe_series_ug_for_web_only.pdf
Recent changes:
I've just finished building this system. The only thing that concerns me is the fact that during the Windows installation for each of the two platter and the SSD they said "primary" next to them after I hit "format" on each one. Each of the three also have MBRs. I don't know if this has anything to do with it.
--
Operating system:
64-bit Windows 8.1 Home
System specs:
- Mobo- Asus X-99 Deluxe
- CPU- Intel Core i7-5930K
- Video card- EVGA GeForce GTX770
- RAM- 4x4 gig GSKILL F4-2400C15Q-16GRB
- PSU- CORSAIR CSM Series CS750M 750W
- SSD- Samsung 840 Pro, MZ-7PD256BW
- HDD- Western Digital 2 TB SATA III 7200 RPM 64 MB Cache OEM Desktop Hard Drive, Black, WD2003FZEX
- HDD- About a year and a half-old WD 1TB drive, not sure the model number.
boot ssd windows-8.1
add a comment |
Problem description:
My PC refuses to boot to my SSD with Windows. This is a new PC that I just built. It gives the error "Reboot and Select proper Boot device or Insert Boot Media in selected Boot device and press a key". I have to go into the BIOs and manually select the drive as a "boot override" option. I have to do this each time it's powered on.
When I installed Windows all three of my drives were connected.
Attempted fixes:
I've tried every possible drive boot combination. I've read the manually thoroughly. I've Googled to exhaustion. There are an ass-ton of results that claim to help with this issue, but they all seem to boil down to setting your boot options correctly, which I've done. I've also tried to boot without any USB devices plugged in aside from my keyboard and mouse
There are 2 sections in my BIOS related to boot order-
Boot Option Priorities (manual description)-
These items specify the boot device priority sequence from the available devices. The number of device items that appears on the screen depends on the number of devices installed in the system.
This section gives me two options- one of which is my SSD and the other is a platter drive I have in there. It only gives those two options. Thing is, I have 2 platters and one SSD in there as well as an optical so I can't understand why this section is only showing the two. Either way, my SSD is first on that list, and yet the PC still won't boot to Windows off of it.
Boot Override (manual description)-
These item displays the available devices. The number of device items that appear on the screen depends on the number of devices installed in the system. Click an item to start booting from the selected device.
This section lets me manually select a device to boot from. This is the only way I can get my system to boot to the correct drive. It shows all available boot options, even my USB ports if something is plugged in.
There's also sub-sections for HDD order and an optical "BBS", I believe. I'm not sure how these even come into play but I've also listed the correct order I want them to boot in those sections as well.
The boot section is 3.8 on page 3-51 if anyone is interested in looking at it-
http://dlcdnet.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/LGA2011/X99-DELUXE/e9504_x99-deluxe_series_ug_for_web_only.pdf
Recent changes:
I've just finished building this system. The only thing that concerns me is the fact that during the Windows installation for each of the two platter and the SSD they said "primary" next to them after I hit "format" on each one. Each of the three also have MBRs. I don't know if this has anything to do with it.
--
Operating system:
64-bit Windows 8.1 Home
System specs:
- Mobo- Asus X-99 Deluxe
- CPU- Intel Core i7-5930K
- Video card- EVGA GeForce GTX770
- RAM- 4x4 gig GSKILL F4-2400C15Q-16GRB
- PSU- CORSAIR CSM Series CS750M 750W
- SSD- Samsung 840 Pro, MZ-7PD256BW
- HDD- Western Digital 2 TB SATA III 7200 RPM 64 MB Cache OEM Desktop Hard Drive, Black, WD2003FZEX
- HDD- About a year and a half-old WD 1TB drive, not sure the model number.
boot ssd windows-8.1
Are you connecting the drives to the Intel chipset SATA ports (Section 1.2.9 in the manual). The ASMedia controller might require additional settings to be recognized early in the boot period.
– Vamsi
Sep 12 '14 at 18:36
@Vamsi Thank you for your response. Unfortunately I have all my drives hooked up to the normal SATA ports and not the ASMedia ports.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 19:00
I had a suggestion to unplug all drives except for my SSD, boot up, restore BIOS defaults, do a Windows repair to fix the MBRs, and see if it that fixes it. I'll try this solution when I get home and report back if it works.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 19:04
I would also suggest try disabling fast boot and checking if CSM is enabled. Since you are using MBR based boot drives, fast boot wont work and CSM is necessary.
– Vamsi
Sep 13 '14 at 8:51
add a comment |
Problem description:
My PC refuses to boot to my SSD with Windows. This is a new PC that I just built. It gives the error "Reboot and Select proper Boot device or Insert Boot Media in selected Boot device and press a key". I have to go into the BIOs and manually select the drive as a "boot override" option. I have to do this each time it's powered on.
When I installed Windows all three of my drives were connected.
Attempted fixes:
I've tried every possible drive boot combination. I've read the manually thoroughly. I've Googled to exhaustion. There are an ass-ton of results that claim to help with this issue, but they all seem to boil down to setting your boot options correctly, which I've done. I've also tried to boot without any USB devices plugged in aside from my keyboard and mouse
There are 2 sections in my BIOS related to boot order-
Boot Option Priorities (manual description)-
These items specify the boot device priority sequence from the available devices. The number of device items that appears on the screen depends on the number of devices installed in the system.
This section gives me two options- one of which is my SSD and the other is a platter drive I have in there. It only gives those two options. Thing is, I have 2 platters and one SSD in there as well as an optical so I can't understand why this section is only showing the two. Either way, my SSD is first on that list, and yet the PC still won't boot to Windows off of it.
Boot Override (manual description)-
These item displays the available devices. The number of device items that appear on the screen depends on the number of devices installed in the system. Click an item to start booting from the selected device.
This section lets me manually select a device to boot from. This is the only way I can get my system to boot to the correct drive. It shows all available boot options, even my USB ports if something is plugged in.
There's also sub-sections for HDD order and an optical "BBS", I believe. I'm not sure how these even come into play but I've also listed the correct order I want them to boot in those sections as well.
The boot section is 3.8 on page 3-51 if anyone is interested in looking at it-
http://dlcdnet.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/LGA2011/X99-DELUXE/e9504_x99-deluxe_series_ug_for_web_only.pdf
Recent changes:
I've just finished building this system. The only thing that concerns me is the fact that during the Windows installation for each of the two platter and the SSD they said "primary" next to them after I hit "format" on each one. Each of the three also have MBRs. I don't know if this has anything to do with it.
--
Operating system:
64-bit Windows 8.1 Home
System specs:
- Mobo- Asus X-99 Deluxe
- CPU- Intel Core i7-5930K
- Video card- EVGA GeForce GTX770
- RAM- 4x4 gig GSKILL F4-2400C15Q-16GRB
- PSU- CORSAIR CSM Series CS750M 750W
- SSD- Samsung 840 Pro, MZ-7PD256BW
- HDD- Western Digital 2 TB SATA III 7200 RPM 64 MB Cache OEM Desktop Hard Drive, Black, WD2003FZEX
- HDD- About a year and a half-old WD 1TB drive, not sure the model number.
boot ssd windows-8.1
Problem description:
My PC refuses to boot to my SSD with Windows. This is a new PC that I just built. It gives the error "Reboot and Select proper Boot device or Insert Boot Media in selected Boot device and press a key". I have to go into the BIOs and manually select the drive as a "boot override" option. I have to do this each time it's powered on.
When I installed Windows all three of my drives were connected.
Attempted fixes:
I've tried every possible drive boot combination. I've read the manually thoroughly. I've Googled to exhaustion. There are an ass-ton of results that claim to help with this issue, but they all seem to boil down to setting your boot options correctly, which I've done. I've also tried to boot without any USB devices plugged in aside from my keyboard and mouse
There are 2 sections in my BIOS related to boot order-
Boot Option Priorities (manual description)-
These items specify the boot device priority sequence from the available devices. The number of device items that appears on the screen depends on the number of devices installed in the system.
This section gives me two options- one of which is my SSD and the other is a platter drive I have in there. It only gives those two options. Thing is, I have 2 platters and one SSD in there as well as an optical so I can't understand why this section is only showing the two. Either way, my SSD is first on that list, and yet the PC still won't boot to Windows off of it.
Boot Override (manual description)-
These item displays the available devices. The number of device items that appear on the screen depends on the number of devices installed in the system. Click an item to start booting from the selected device.
This section lets me manually select a device to boot from. This is the only way I can get my system to boot to the correct drive. It shows all available boot options, even my USB ports if something is plugged in.
There's also sub-sections for HDD order and an optical "BBS", I believe. I'm not sure how these even come into play but I've also listed the correct order I want them to boot in those sections as well.
The boot section is 3.8 on page 3-51 if anyone is interested in looking at it-
http://dlcdnet.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/LGA2011/X99-DELUXE/e9504_x99-deluxe_series_ug_for_web_only.pdf
Recent changes:
I've just finished building this system. The only thing that concerns me is the fact that during the Windows installation for each of the two platter and the SSD they said "primary" next to them after I hit "format" on each one. Each of the three also have MBRs. I don't know if this has anything to do with it.
--
Operating system:
64-bit Windows 8.1 Home
System specs:
- Mobo- Asus X-99 Deluxe
- CPU- Intel Core i7-5930K
- Video card- EVGA GeForce GTX770
- RAM- 4x4 gig GSKILL F4-2400C15Q-16GRB
- PSU- CORSAIR CSM Series CS750M 750W
- SSD- Samsung 840 Pro, MZ-7PD256BW
- HDD- Western Digital 2 TB SATA III 7200 RPM 64 MB Cache OEM Desktop Hard Drive, Black, WD2003FZEX
- HDD- About a year and a half-old WD 1TB drive, not sure the model number.
boot ssd windows-8.1
boot ssd windows-8.1
edited Apr 25 '15 at 17:57
JakeGould
31.1k1093137
31.1k1093137
asked Sep 12 '14 at 17:38
BradyBrady
1116
1116
Are you connecting the drives to the Intel chipset SATA ports (Section 1.2.9 in the manual). The ASMedia controller might require additional settings to be recognized early in the boot period.
– Vamsi
Sep 12 '14 at 18:36
@Vamsi Thank you for your response. Unfortunately I have all my drives hooked up to the normal SATA ports and not the ASMedia ports.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 19:00
I had a suggestion to unplug all drives except for my SSD, boot up, restore BIOS defaults, do a Windows repair to fix the MBRs, and see if it that fixes it. I'll try this solution when I get home and report back if it works.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 19:04
I would also suggest try disabling fast boot and checking if CSM is enabled. Since you are using MBR based boot drives, fast boot wont work and CSM is necessary.
– Vamsi
Sep 13 '14 at 8:51
add a comment |
Are you connecting the drives to the Intel chipset SATA ports (Section 1.2.9 in the manual). The ASMedia controller might require additional settings to be recognized early in the boot period.
– Vamsi
Sep 12 '14 at 18:36
@Vamsi Thank you for your response. Unfortunately I have all my drives hooked up to the normal SATA ports and not the ASMedia ports.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 19:00
I had a suggestion to unplug all drives except for my SSD, boot up, restore BIOS defaults, do a Windows repair to fix the MBRs, and see if it that fixes it. I'll try this solution when I get home and report back if it works.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 19:04
I would also suggest try disabling fast boot and checking if CSM is enabled. Since you are using MBR based boot drives, fast boot wont work and CSM is necessary.
– Vamsi
Sep 13 '14 at 8:51
Are you connecting the drives to the Intel chipset SATA ports (Section 1.2.9 in the manual). The ASMedia controller might require additional settings to be recognized early in the boot period.
– Vamsi
Sep 12 '14 at 18:36
Are you connecting the drives to the Intel chipset SATA ports (Section 1.2.9 in the manual). The ASMedia controller might require additional settings to be recognized early in the boot period.
– Vamsi
Sep 12 '14 at 18:36
@Vamsi Thank you for your response. Unfortunately I have all my drives hooked up to the normal SATA ports and not the ASMedia ports.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 19:00
@Vamsi Thank you for your response. Unfortunately I have all my drives hooked up to the normal SATA ports and not the ASMedia ports.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 19:00
I had a suggestion to unplug all drives except for my SSD, boot up, restore BIOS defaults, do a Windows repair to fix the MBRs, and see if it that fixes it. I'll try this solution when I get home and report back if it works.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 19:04
I had a suggestion to unplug all drives except for my SSD, boot up, restore BIOS defaults, do a Windows repair to fix the MBRs, and see if it that fixes it. I'll try this solution when I get home and report back if it works.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 19:04
I would also suggest try disabling fast boot and checking if CSM is enabled. Since you are using MBR based boot drives, fast boot wont work and CSM is necessary.
– Vamsi
Sep 13 '14 at 8:51
I would also suggest try disabling fast boot and checking if CSM is enabled. Since you are using MBR based boot drives, fast boot wont work and CSM is necessary.
– Vamsi
Sep 13 '14 at 8:51
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
Some BIOSes arrange the boot devices into categories. So in the boot order, you can select hard drive, optical drive, USB drive, etc. But in each of those categories, you have to select WHICH hard drive, optical drive, or USB drive is the "master", which may not be on the same screen.
Thank you for your suggestion. This is how I have it configured currently however, with each section set to the correct master drive.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 18:57
add a comment |
For anyone who hasn't found a fix yet: I was having a similar problem. Installed a new SSD and BIOS recognized it from the boot menu and allowed me to start it from there manually, but would give me the "Reboot and Select proper Boot device or Insert Boot Media in selected Boot device and press a key" message when I tried to just turn on the computer. My fix was to switch the new SSD over into the P0 port that the old HDD was in. Now the computer starts properly using the new SSD and the old HDD is still usable as a backup storage device in a different port.
add a comment |
Here's what eventually solved my issue, as posted by someone on another forum-
Unplug the 2 platter Hdd's leaving only the SSD powered
Go into BIOS and reset to default settings, and see if she boots up.
If/when she boots up follow this to "repair" the MBR so it's on the SSD: Tech Spot
Once done plug the platter HDD in 1 at a time, ie plug in 1 then boot PC make sure it boots fine, if everything's sweet turn off, then plug in 2nd and so forth.
add a comment |
I have this problem with SSD + HDD. Sadly the laptop too has this config, as the PC and both use Win 10.
Every time, when I get this message I have to access my hard discs:
- unplug the SSD and unplug the HDD.
- plug only the SSD ( it will have the same message)
- enter in BIOS and select "Windows boot manager" Save and exit.
- start computer, stop
- pug the HDD.
I wish I know why I need to do it, both on Win 10 Personal and Professional 64 bit are this issues! - but this steps will solve it.
add a comment |
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4 Answers
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active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Some BIOSes arrange the boot devices into categories. So in the boot order, you can select hard drive, optical drive, USB drive, etc. But in each of those categories, you have to select WHICH hard drive, optical drive, or USB drive is the "master", which may not be on the same screen.
Thank you for your suggestion. This is how I have it configured currently however, with each section set to the correct master drive.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 18:57
add a comment |
Some BIOSes arrange the boot devices into categories. So in the boot order, you can select hard drive, optical drive, USB drive, etc. But in each of those categories, you have to select WHICH hard drive, optical drive, or USB drive is the "master", which may not be on the same screen.
Thank you for your suggestion. This is how I have it configured currently however, with each section set to the correct master drive.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 18:57
add a comment |
Some BIOSes arrange the boot devices into categories. So in the boot order, you can select hard drive, optical drive, USB drive, etc. But in each of those categories, you have to select WHICH hard drive, optical drive, or USB drive is the "master", which may not be on the same screen.
Some BIOSes arrange the boot devices into categories. So in the boot order, you can select hard drive, optical drive, USB drive, etc. But in each of those categories, you have to select WHICH hard drive, optical drive, or USB drive is the "master", which may not be on the same screen.
answered Sep 12 '14 at 18:06
Wes SayeedWes Sayeed
10.7k32758
10.7k32758
Thank you for your suggestion. This is how I have it configured currently however, with each section set to the correct master drive.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 18:57
add a comment |
Thank you for your suggestion. This is how I have it configured currently however, with each section set to the correct master drive.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 18:57
Thank you for your suggestion. This is how I have it configured currently however, with each section set to the correct master drive.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 18:57
Thank you for your suggestion. This is how I have it configured currently however, with each section set to the correct master drive.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 18:57
add a comment |
For anyone who hasn't found a fix yet: I was having a similar problem. Installed a new SSD and BIOS recognized it from the boot menu and allowed me to start it from there manually, but would give me the "Reboot and Select proper Boot device or Insert Boot Media in selected Boot device and press a key" message when I tried to just turn on the computer. My fix was to switch the new SSD over into the P0 port that the old HDD was in. Now the computer starts properly using the new SSD and the old HDD is still usable as a backup storage device in a different port.
add a comment |
For anyone who hasn't found a fix yet: I was having a similar problem. Installed a new SSD and BIOS recognized it from the boot menu and allowed me to start it from there manually, but would give me the "Reboot and Select proper Boot device or Insert Boot Media in selected Boot device and press a key" message when I tried to just turn on the computer. My fix was to switch the new SSD over into the P0 port that the old HDD was in. Now the computer starts properly using the new SSD and the old HDD is still usable as a backup storage device in a different port.
add a comment |
For anyone who hasn't found a fix yet: I was having a similar problem. Installed a new SSD and BIOS recognized it from the boot menu and allowed me to start it from there manually, but would give me the "Reboot and Select proper Boot device or Insert Boot Media in selected Boot device and press a key" message when I tried to just turn on the computer. My fix was to switch the new SSD over into the P0 port that the old HDD was in. Now the computer starts properly using the new SSD and the old HDD is still usable as a backup storage device in a different port.
For anyone who hasn't found a fix yet: I was having a similar problem. Installed a new SSD and BIOS recognized it from the boot menu and allowed me to start it from there manually, but would give me the "Reboot and Select proper Boot device or Insert Boot Media in selected Boot device and press a key" message when I tried to just turn on the computer. My fix was to switch the new SSD over into the P0 port that the old HDD was in. Now the computer starts properly using the new SSD and the old HDD is still usable as a backup storage device in a different port.
answered Apr 25 '15 at 17:57
EricEric
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
Here's what eventually solved my issue, as posted by someone on another forum-
Unplug the 2 platter Hdd's leaving only the SSD powered
Go into BIOS and reset to default settings, and see if she boots up.
If/when she boots up follow this to "repair" the MBR so it's on the SSD: Tech Spot
Once done plug the platter HDD in 1 at a time, ie plug in 1 then boot PC make sure it boots fine, if everything's sweet turn off, then plug in 2nd and so forth.
add a comment |
Here's what eventually solved my issue, as posted by someone on another forum-
Unplug the 2 platter Hdd's leaving only the SSD powered
Go into BIOS and reset to default settings, and see if she boots up.
If/when she boots up follow this to "repair" the MBR so it's on the SSD: Tech Spot
Once done plug the platter HDD in 1 at a time, ie plug in 1 then boot PC make sure it boots fine, if everything's sweet turn off, then plug in 2nd and so forth.
add a comment |
Here's what eventually solved my issue, as posted by someone on another forum-
Unplug the 2 platter Hdd's leaving only the SSD powered
Go into BIOS and reset to default settings, and see if she boots up.
If/when she boots up follow this to "repair" the MBR so it's on the SSD: Tech Spot
Once done plug the platter HDD in 1 at a time, ie plug in 1 then boot PC make sure it boots fine, if everything's sweet turn off, then plug in 2nd and so forth.
Here's what eventually solved my issue, as posted by someone on another forum-
Unplug the 2 platter Hdd's leaving only the SSD powered
Go into BIOS and reset to default settings, and see if she boots up.
If/when she boots up follow this to "repair" the MBR so it's on the SSD: Tech Spot
Once done plug the platter HDD in 1 at a time, ie plug in 1 then boot PC make sure it boots fine, if everything's sweet turn off, then plug in 2nd and so forth.
edited Apr 25 '15 at 17:57
JakeGould
31.1k1093137
31.1k1093137
answered Sep 19 '14 at 15:44
BradyBrady
1116
1116
add a comment |
add a comment |
I have this problem with SSD + HDD. Sadly the laptop too has this config, as the PC and both use Win 10.
Every time, when I get this message I have to access my hard discs:
- unplug the SSD and unplug the HDD.
- plug only the SSD ( it will have the same message)
- enter in BIOS and select "Windows boot manager" Save and exit.
- start computer, stop
- pug the HDD.
I wish I know why I need to do it, both on Win 10 Personal and Professional 64 bit are this issues! - but this steps will solve it.
add a comment |
I have this problem with SSD + HDD. Sadly the laptop too has this config, as the PC and both use Win 10.
Every time, when I get this message I have to access my hard discs:
- unplug the SSD and unplug the HDD.
- plug only the SSD ( it will have the same message)
- enter in BIOS and select "Windows boot manager" Save and exit.
- start computer, stop
- pug the HDD.
I wish I know why I need to do it, both on Win 10 Personal and Professional 64 bit are this issues! - but this steps will solve it.
add a comment |
I have this problem with SSD + HDD. Sadly the laptop too has this config, as the PC and both use Win 10.
Every time, when I get this message I have to access my hard discs:
- unplug the SSD and unplug the HDD.
- plug only the SSD ( it will have the same message)
- enter in BIOS and select "Windows boot manager" Save and exit.
- start computer, stop
- pug the HDD.
I wish I know why I need to do it, both on Win 10 Personal and Professional 64 bit are this issues! - but this steps will solve it.
I have this problem with SSD + HDD. Sadly the laptop too has this config, as the PC and both use Win 10.
Every time, when I get this message I have to access my hard discs:
- unplug the SSD and unplug the HDD.
- plug only the SSD ( it will have the same message)
- enter in BIOS and select "Windows boot manager" Save and exit.
- start computer, stop
- pug the HDD.
I wish I know why I need to do it, both on Win 10 Personal and Professional 64 bit are this issues! - but this steps will solve it.
answered Dec 30 '18 at 23:32
matheszabimatheszabi
1086
1086
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Are you connecting the drives to the Intel chipset SATA ports (Section 1.2.9 in the manual). The ASMedia controller might require additional settings to be recognized early in the boot period.
– Vamsi
Sep 12 '14 at 18:36
@Vamsi Thank you for your response. Unfortunately I have all my drives hooked up to the normal SATA ports and not the ASMedia ports.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 19:00
I had a suggestion to unplug all drives except for my SSD, boot up, restore BIOS defaults, do a Windows repair to fix the MBRs, and see if it that fixes it. I'll try this solution when I get home and report back if it works.
– Brady
Sep 12 '14 at 19:04
I would also suggest try disabling fast boot and checking if CSM is enabled. Since you are using MBR based boot drives, fast boot wont work and CSM is necessary.
– Vamsi
Sep 13 '14 at 8:51