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Is there an order of hard drives in the motherboard?
Hello.
Over the weekend, I decided to clean the computer processor myself (I did it for the first time), in general, I took it apart and assembled it all night from the video on YouTube. Now faced such problem. When you start Windows, it does not launch an SSD hard drive with the system, but a regular HDD with programs and files. Naturally, after that, a Windows error is displayed on the screen saying the system has crashed, install Windows or restore. I go into the BIOS, Hard Drive is there, and I specify the SSD drive as the main one. After that the computer works fine. But!!! After some time, the same error is displayed, and you have to flatter the BIOS every time it appears. I now think that the motherboard itself has some kind of priority SATA connector, and it is there that you need to connect an SSD hard drive. Am I right? Somebody knows? Motherboard model: foxconn 115xdbp
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The connectors are numbered, it is desirable to connect the boot hard drive to zero, since by default the boot priority is in the same order.
I wonder what you were going to clean the processor from?
1. You did not clean the processor, but the system unit. The processor is a small part of the system unit, which is hidden under the radiator. Remember this.
2. If, as you say, when you boot from the HDD, you have the inscription "install windows or restore", then this is kind of bad. This means that you also have an OS on your HDD. An extra OS that is no longer working. It needs to be removed. If it were not there, there would be no problems with loading either.
3. Most likely, you mess up because you don’t understand what you are doing. Most likely, you do not choose the boot order, but choose a specific boot option each time, instead of going into the BIOS and organizing the desired order. It installs differently on different BIOS versions. So, look for guides for your BIOS on setting the boot order.If the settings are reset, then check the CMOS (battery).
And to which port on the mother the disk is connected - it does not matter if you set the boot order in the BIOS.
It is not enough to think, you need to know something before you can think effectively.
Lost bios settings? this one is not ok!
The reason may be from problems with the disk controller, for example, the disk is not detected at one time and the BIOS resets the order to default, the one that is marked with numbers on the motherboard.
A logical solution might be to insert an ssd into the sata connector marked as 1.
ps enable uefi boot, each vendor implements it in its own way and it is quite possible that they will generally spit on the order of the disks, looking for the desired boot partition by its label.
Just swap the wires
Well, Bios flies them because the battery is dead on the motherboard, change it
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