after change to SATA AHCI mode in BIOS the drive shows removable  

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  1. Posts : 18
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit
       #1

    after change to SATA AHCI mode in BIOS the drive shows removable


    So after I changed to SATA AHCI mode in the BIOS, the main boot internal hard drive shows as a removable device in system tray. So how do I fix this issue, and I did follow the instructions in the Microsoft Knowledge Base article 922976, http://support.microsoft.com/kb/922976
    to enable the sata driver first before I changed the BIOS setting. However in the Vista on the
    same hard drive in the same computer, with the same SATA AHCI fix done to enable the needed
    drivers, the internal hard drive does not show in the system tray as removable. So possibly if
    I install the Intel Matrix Storage Manager from their site for this ASUS P5QL Pro motherboard
    with a Intel P43 express chip set, known as ICH10, then after a re-boot it may no longer show
    as removable. This computer is a 2009 store built desktop that has only one 500 GB SATA hard
    drive installed. I had it set in the IDE compatible mode, so that I could mult-boot with XP, Vista, 7, and Ubuntu Linux.
    Last edited by jim4b; 10 Jan 2012 at 16:14. Reason: to fix
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  2. Posts : 5,795
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
       #2

    That's not an issue at all, and it's perfectly normal. AHCI offers, on some boards, hot swap capabilities. It's nothing to worry about.
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  3. Posts : 450
    Windows 7
       #3

    DeaconFrost said:
    That's not an issue at all, and it's perfectly normal. AHCI offers, on some boards, hot swap capabilities. It's nothing to worry about.
    If you right-clicked on that, would you be able to "eject" (logically) that hard drive right then and there?
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  4. Posts : 18
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit
    Thread Starter
       #4

    Yes that would be correct if that drive was not the one with 7 installed, and all my other operating systems also. So sata as removable is okay if the hard drive shown is either a second internal, or a external drive, but this is the main boot internal drive.
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  5. Posts : 6,349
    Windows7 Pro 64bit SP-1; Windows XP Pro 32bit
       #5

    When you switched to AHCI the Microsoft drivers were installed for your SATA ports most likely. The MS msahci driver has the ejectable feature.

    To remove this feature you will need to install the Intel iastor driver.
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  6. Posts : 18
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit
    Thread Starter
       #6

    Okay then and thanks for the help, I will install and run that Intel one the next time I boot up that computer. And after that will I be able to hot plug a external eSATA drive just like as USB ?
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  7. Posts : 6,349
    Windows7 Pro 64bit SP-1; Windows XP Pro 32bit
       #7

    If you have an eSata port on the motherboard as I do on the rear panel it is a different driver- different controller than the Sata ports.
    My Asus moboard uses Intel P55 Sata controller and a JMicron eSata for instance.

    Asus will have your eSata driver for your motherboard. Of course it is probably already installed. It should be???
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  8. Posts : 5,795
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
       #8

    I may be wrong, and would be happy to test on another computer, but I don't think you can eject your system drive anyway, so there's nothing really to be worried about.

    As for eSATA, yes, assuming you have the drivers loaded for the eSATA port, you'll be able to eject.
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  9. Posts : 1,653
    Windows 10 Pro. EFI boot partition, full EFI boot
       #9

    Here you go, how to disable hotswap for Microsoft AHCI drivers:

    My internal SATA device appears in Devices and Printers and in the - Microsoft Answers

    You don't need to install the Intel drivers (but you should ), just do this registry fix.
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  10. Posts : 475
    Windows 7 Pro x64 -- PCLinuxOS KDE4 FullMonty 2011
       #10

    Just used Gene0's link.

    I have four drives. Initially it got rid of two. For the other two I changed 'Channel0' to 'Channel2' & Channel3'. That got rid of the other two.

    If you have just one drive just the first one should do it.
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