SSD shown in Safetly Remove Hardware and Eject Media

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  1. Posts : 13
    Windows 10
       #31

    If you go into Device manager and the Properties of the Storage Controller, is that setting there unchecked?
    SSD shown in Safetly Remove Hardware and Eject Media-hot-swap-controller.png
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 20
    10 Pro
    Thread Starter
       #32

    TV2 said:
    Do you have Intel Rapid Storage Technology Driver installed now? (One of the versions posted on your motherboard's website)

    Have you ever installed IRST?
    I have installed IRST before and it seemed to do basically nothing so I uninstalled it. I currently have Intel Control Center and Intel Driver Update Utility installed, I'll likely get rid of both soon since I'm sure these were failed attempts to solve the problem.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 20
    10 Pro
    Thread Starter
       #33

    Storage Controllers


    I don't use Marvell Storage controllers so my menu tabs are a little different. The controller properties doesn't have a polices tab, but the individual disks in Disk Drives does. This is what it looks like as of right now:

    SSD shown in Safetly Remove Hardware and Eject Media-untitled.png

    This is the properties for one of the culprit drives.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 260
    Win 10 Pro X64
       #34

    There's a workaround you can try Here which worked for me in Win 7 and should work in Win 10 and also you might find a better matching driver Here and ultimately it is a driver related issue and when you find the right driver the entries should disappear
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 20
    10 Pro
    Thread Starter
       #35

    My registry doesn't have a msahci key. Also I went to that website you linked for the drivers before to fix this problem, either the driver wouldn't install or it didn't have any change.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 260
    Win 10 Pro X64
       #36

    Redwolf said:
    My registry doesn't have a msahci key. Also I went to that website you linked for the drivers before to fix this problem, either the driver wouldn't install or it didn't have any change.
    Try to do the same in the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\iaStor which in my case at least (Win 10 Pro X64) is the entry for the Intel AHCI driver (For lack of better name as it's really just an inf file). Did you install it manually from within the Device Manager as Fernando recommends. Of course back up your registry or take a system image before adding the reg entries
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  7. Posts : 20
    10 Pro
    Thread Starter
       #37

    I have a iaStorA, iaStorAV, iaStorDataMgrSvc and a iaStorV in my registry under the path HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\

    Which one should I add the key to?

    And I take it you mean for me to add the TreatAsInternalPort key that someone linked a page ago?
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 260
    Win 10 Pro X64
       #38

    Go to Device Manager expand your IDE ATA/ATAPI Controllers entry double click on the SATA AHCI entry go to the Details tab and in the drop down menu under Property choose Service which will show you if it 's iaStoreA or others you mentioned then create the reg entries as suggested in that Article I posted above. Create the Controller0 key by right clicking the iaStoreA or whichever entry was listed in the Service entry as above choose New then Key name it Controllers0 then right click that and repeat to create the Channel0 key then add the Dword in the right pane and restart. If it works then create the other keys to block other drives
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 20
    10 Pro
    Thread Starter
       #39

    Under Service it said storahci, so I did as that link said and there's no change.
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 1
    Windows 10 Pro
       #40

    TV2 said:
    What I've run into a couple times now on the forums is that some people are using the secondary SATA controller on the motherboard to take advantage of the extra 6GB ports. What happens is that the secondary controller and those ports are using a proprietary driver, not the standard SATA AHCI driver the main 6 ports on the chipset are using. Therefore you get this problem.

    I can't tell you why the secondary controller driver does not handle AHCI and hot swapping capability as it should. It could be just because it is a secondary controller and there is some functional conflict with the main chipset.

    If this is the problem in your case you can test this simply by connecting one of the problem SSDs to one of the 6 main ports on the Intel controller. If it shows up as a fixed drive there then that would pretty much clinch it.
    I just fixed this ejectable SSD issue and this was the cause for me. This motherboard (Crosshair V Forumla-Z) has 6 "normal" SATA ports (AMD) and 2 other SATA (Asmedia). The Asmedia ones are indistinguishable on the motherboard itself making using them by accident very easy to do, all 8 ports are together in two rows, same color and all that jazz. When I swapped the 840 Pro over to the AMD SATA port, problem solved.

    This is my old secondary system I have set up for my wife, I didn't want her ejecting it by accident, kind of curious what would happen though.
      My Computer


 

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