Using the 2020 version of the DUET/REFIND package (I assume your reference to DUET/RUFUS was a typo), I launched USBSetup.exe and 'successfully' followed all of the steps to an apparently successful conclusion. if you get this your good to go if you get a screen showing a text listing of the usb ports, select each one in descending order till the screen blinks off/on this indicates you have matched the DUET/RUFUS USB key with the port number the usb key is in If you have the Bios set correctly for USB Key booting and DUET/RUFUS USB key correctly configured, upon power on it will boot from the usb key and display the DUET/RUFUS Boot Screen which is a picture of 4 blue squares very much like the win 10 screen. You need to set the xw8600 to boot from usb, to do this insert the DUET/REFIND key into a usb port reboot and enter the bios now in the drive options set the USB device to be the topmost listing, and save the bios settings The directions i posted PLAINLY STATE that unless you have a z800 system use the DUET/RUFUS 2020 release You must use a USB 2.0 port, as add in cards like your usb 3 card get initialized/activated after the DUET/REFIND bootloader runs PM = Personal (Private) Message, in other words send me a private email using the HP site Does this have anything to do with the RAID+AHCI and SATA settings for the two drives current installed in two of the xw8600 drive bays? What should I do next? However, the cloned drive did not show up as a boot option in fact it did not appear to show up at all. I figured the next step was to go into F10 (setup) and change the boot order. That seemed to go well, so I thought I was almost done.
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Then I assigned a drive letter to the NVMe drive (F:).įollowing that, I used Acronis True Image to clone the original boot drive (a "regular" SATA Samsung SSD) to the new NVMe M.2 SSD. From there, I then created a Simple Volume and formatted the drive. This procedure went pretty well the device was then recognized in Disk Manager.
UNABLE TO INSTALL SAMSUNG NVME DRIVER FOR EVO 970 HOW TO
I searched and found the driver easily enough and followed their directions on how to install it. (This was not mentioned in any of the documentation that came with the device!). After several dead endsattempts to figure out what to do next, I found that I needed to install Samsung's NVM Express Driver v.3.3. Samsung offers almost no straightforward information on how to install the Evo 970 NVMe M.2 device.