BlessedSquirrel
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How did you create the USB, talk us through each step? It’s almost as if you’ve created a live windows USB rather than a windows installer
I downloaded MediaCreationTool_Win11_23H2.exe, agreed to the terms, used the recomended options for this PC (Language: English UK, Edition: Windows 11), and in "choose which media to use": USB flash drive, and I selected the Kingston USB.How did you create the USB, talk us through each step? It’s almost as if you’ve created a live windows USB rather than a windows installer
Okay so in my other laptop, I plugged this 4TB drive and the Windows USB and I was able to install Windows, and it works fine even after rebooting.
To confirm I then plugged the drive back into my computer and still BSOD.
Also checked with different RAM sticks and still no boot.
I used a NVMe USB adapter to see if it would also Bluescreen, but no.
I can see the drive without a problem.
Checked and there is no dump, or minidumps that I could extract to analyse.
I'm aware of that, I tried to follow all the normal procedures, but they don't work, when I installed Windows on the Lenovo device, was just to see if there was a problem in the USB or the SSD, and that installation was successful.And no, installing Windows on another PC will not work. Windows configures itself at install time for thr hardware it's being installed on. So your Windows is now configured for the wrong hardware. That typically leads to BSODs further down the line.
I'm going yo be blunt here and say that you sound a bit cavalier in the way you're approaching this. You MUST follow the standard installation procedure using media created by the Windows Mefia Creation Tool.
Stop trying to be clever and/or short-circuiting the install process and fo things properly.
No.And have you reset BIOS settings at any point?
I remember a few years ago that used to be the case (like around Windows 8), but I'm pretty sure I always see the brand logo when trying to install OS now, and not just for Windows, Ubuntu as well I'm pretty sure.The fact you’re getting the PCS logo on booting the USB
The first thing that I tried to do when I got the 4TB drive was to have them both connected at the same time (the old 1TB drive with Windows 11 on, and the new 4TB), and instantly I got a bluescreen while trying to boot to my Windows 11.The windows installer has no BSOD, it’s running on a basic windows PE platform which has no BSOD functionality. It also runs independently of any OS
nevermind I went to search again, and I found something that seems like would be for my laptop: https://my.hidrive.com/share/yze8mg...EVO/P_Series/PCxx_Series/PCxxDxx/PCxxDCDDDFDNA friend of mine suggested that I try to look for a BIOS update, but I don't think I can find any available for my system (PC50DD2 from Clevo)
Ok, so yes, it does show the boot logo booting into the USB, my bad.I downloaded MediaCreationTool_Win11_23H2.exe, agreed to the terms, used the recomended options for this PC (Language: English UK, Edition: Windows 11), and in "choose which media to use": USB flash drive, and I selected the Kingston USB.
When I tested it on my laptop I got the same problem, and then I tried to use the same USB to install on the 4tb SSD on a different device (the Lenovo one) and I was able to install Windows without a problem. When I tried to bring up the SSD back to the PCS laptop (with Windows already installed) I got the exact same problem.
That's not a legitimate source, I would STRONGLY recommend not flashing thatnevermind I went to search again, and I found something that seems like would be for my laptop: https://my.hidrive.com/share/yze8mg-wf8#$/BIOS and EC Firmware/CLEVO/P_Series/PCxx_Series/PCxxDxx/PCxxDCDDDFDN
There's the version 1.07.10 available, and my laptop is running 1.07.05.
Is https://clevo-computer.com/en/support-drivers not legit then?That's not a legitimate source, I would STRONGLY recommend not flashing that
CLEVO Computer / Our Server | To the downloads / Server to download drivers, bios etc. |
It’s a clevo reseller but doesn’t mean the BIOS is compatible with yours. You’d need PCS confirmation if it is or for them to give you one.Is https://clevo-computer.com/en/support-drivers not legit then?
I got that link by pressing the
And then going to BIOS and EC Firmware/CLEVO/P_Series/PCxx_Series/PCxxDxx/PCxxDCDDDFDN
CLEVO Computer / Our Server To the downloads / Server
to download drivers, bios etc.
I also though that was weird, but both disks show up as PCIe 1, so I'm not sure what to make it.But the fact it’s reading it as PCIe 1 is odd.
Pretty much the same thing on Windows 10, but only without the BSOD (the computer just restarts after some time):I wonder if this is another Intel chip issue to be honest, I found this thread here, it appears installing windows 10 may work, would be a good thing to test.
Contact PCS then.I also though that was weird, but both disks show up as PCIe 1, so I'm not sure what to make it.
Pretty much the same thing on Windows 10, but only without the BSOD (the computer just restarts after some time):
And for this case I did the same thing, downloaded Windows 10 Media Creation Tool, selected the USB drive, in BIOS selected the USB to boot and waited to see the loading screen.
Yep, works fine with the old drive plugged in and Windows 10 installation.Try it with your original drive in and the new one removed, if the windows installer shows, you know it’s the new drive
I actually want a clean install of Windows, not really looking for a clone from the old drive to a new one.If you have a USB NVMe enclosure, another option would be to use Macrium Reflect to migrate/clone your Windows Installation from the old drive to the new drive.
You can get it here: https://www.macrium.com/reflectfree
It might be worth doing as a test to see if it works at least. There might be a compatibility issue with that new drive and your laptop. That should not happen but you never know till you try.I actually want a clean install of Windows, not really looking for a clone from the old drive to a new one.
And I tried to install Windows on that new drive (on a different computer) and it still fails to boot (it boots correctly on the other computer)
So I don't think its a problem in the OS or the Drive, must be something in the computer.
I understood the idea, but the drive works fine if I boot into Hiren's Boot (or another OS) or plugged in with USB.It might be worth doing as a test to see if it works at least. There might be a compatibility issue with that new drive and your laptop. That should not happen but you never know till you try.
I can see the Windows Installer with my current NVMe, and on that NVMe I also have Windows which is working at the moment.Also - have you tried with a different NVMe drive to see if that fails too?
I remember seeing that option in the BIOS, and I never changed it, so I gave it a try.Change SATA mode to AHCI where the default is RAID or Intel RST (Windows may need AHCI driver)