![]() ![]() However, W-10 does recognize it as a data disk and gave speeds of up to 100 Mb/s. ![]() So, I removed the WIFI miniPCIe card and installed a NVMe PCIe M2 SSD using an adapter to mPCIe. I installed a SATA SSD and curiously either it did not recognize it (kingston A400), it recognized it and could not work with it (if it was a TB) or after recognizing it and installing W-10 it worked even slower than the SATA HDD or the IDE HDD. I improve but almost negligibly (Speeds between 7 and 12 Kb/s). Regarding the Acer Aspire 5630 BL50 laptop: To try to speed it up I tried to put a 500 Gb SATA HDD through an IDE port adapter. Is there a possibility to modify the BIOS on either of these two motherboards? Do you use OpRomCfg in MS2 environment or in windows? to me in windows 10 a window opens and closes in tenths of a second. If you have any suggestions, material or help, I would greatly appreciate it. However, with a SATA III 6 Gb/s Kingston A400 SSD they seem to work with decent speed, and for now I think I’m going to settle, not give up. On the other hand, W-10 installed on another drive detects it and is able to work with it as a data drive which is not an advantage. ![]() However, although the windows 10 installation USB detects it, it is unable to install the operating system. I have created a bootable USB with BDU, installing Clover EFI bootloader, as you explain in the forum, but clover does not detect the disk. On both motherboards I have tried to install a NVMe M2 SSD using a PCIe adapter. Let me explain: I have a GA-890GPA-UD3H motherboard Another Asus M4A88TD-V EVO/USB3 and an Acer Aspire 5630 BL50 laptop I have a Museum of the Paleozoic of Hardware. ![]()
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