New
#501
Do you have AHCI enabled?
AHCI : Enable in Windows 7 / Vista
A Guy
COMPUTIAC, Download AS SSD and open iy, select your SSD at the top and give us a screenshot. You don't need to tun the test unledd you want to.
AHCI was already enabled, but went thru the motions to double check.
GPU scores went up a bit, no change for SSD.
Last edited by COMPUTIAC; 17 Dec 2013 at 15:07.
I suspect he fell asleep at the keyboard after that lol.
@Bob, I was going to suggest trying the SSD in a different port, but it appears your motherboard has 6 Sata ports and they are all on the same controller.
It certainly looks to be running slow in certain areas, I really don't know a lot about AMD, on my Intel board AS SSD test shows it as being in AHCI mode, yours does not.
When I set-up this new machine I ended up doing a clean install, with only the SSD connected.
Would this not have enabled AHCI ?
Is there a way to check this without going into the BIOS ?
Also, there was a choice to use RAID, should I use this to enable AHCI ?
Did you follow the guide that A-Guy posted for setting AHCI mode in Windows Bob? And also if you did, I would reboot the computer after doing so, and go into the Bios to check that it is set to AHCI mode too.
But be sure to do what is said in the Guide before changing the setting in the Bios otherwise the PC will not boot Windows.
And no, don't choose RAID, that is nothing to do with it.
Paul.
Yes, I followed the guide.
In step 3 the value was already 0. After reboot, Windows did not install any drivers.
The drives were already set to AHCI.
Would it make any sense to go thru the process again to be sure I did not miss anything as it was 2am when I did this ?
If it was me personally I would follow the guide again just to check it is still set to 0, then check in the bios to confirm it's set to AHCI and if that's all correct I would maybe try a different Sata port and a different Sata cable.
If that doesn't sort it then I would have to think again and ask some others for their thoughts.
Paul.