I had two 970 Samsung Evos in one of my computers. Occasionally one wasn't seen. This was fixed by disabling Fast Boot in the BIOS.
Very slow tranfer rates with NVMe copying with IFL 4.05
Re: Very slow tranfer rates with NVMe copying with IFL 4.05
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Re: Very slow tranfer rates with NVMe copying with IFL 4.05
fast start is windows "feature". See https://www.terabyteunlimited.com/ucf/v ... .php?t=427
Re: Very slow tranfer rates with NVMe copying with IFL 4.05
When I had my issue, Fast Start was already disabled. You told me to disable Fast Boot and it worked.
Edit... I checked my email from 2018. The M.2 drive wasn't seen in BIU after a restart, but it was still seen in Windows . BIU saw the M.2 drive after a Save and Exit in the BIOS. But only once.
Edit... I checked my email from 2018. The M.2 drive wasn't seen in BIU after a restart, but it was still seen in Windows . BIU saw the M.2 drive after a Save and Exit in the BIOS. But only once.
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Re: Very slow tranfer rates with NVMe copying with IFL 4.05
Running IFW with CPU priority (/priority:n) option in "background mode" can really slow things down as well.
See page 156 if the IFW User's Manual.
See page 156 if the IFW User's Manual.
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Re: Very slow tranfer rates with NVMe copying with IFL 4.05
I was talking about the potential issues of why it wouldn't boot.Brian K wrote: Mon Jul 14, 2025 12:34 am When I had my issue, Fast Start was already disabled. You told me to disable Fast Boot and it worked.
But yes, for hardware not seen, you can disable that to ensure full post by BIOS.