I had two brand new ADATA SSDs that were bad. They would be only intermittently detected by both BIOS and Windows. Sometimes yes, sometimes not. I finally went with Samsung. While it is much less...
Type: Posts; User: NavyLCDR
I had two brand new ADATA SSDs that were bad. They would be only intermittently detected by both BIOS and Windows. Sometimes yes, sometimes not. I finally went with Samsung. While it is much less...
Still going down the same rabbit hole. The problem is not whether or not the SSD is bootable. The problem is that it does not show up in the list of drives to install to in Windows setup.
Just so you know - none of the above is going to have any affect at all of Windows detecting the M.2 drive during setup. You can mess with UEFI v. CSM booting all you want to. Once you are booted...