Rapid Storage Technology
Intel® RST, RAID
2116 Discussions

Win 10 Install doesn't detect drive

VladCindea
Beginner
918 Views

Hello, first time PC builder here. I just built my first pc and tried installing windows but it doesn't seem to detect any drives. I tried lots of things to fix it and after some hours of research I believe it has something to do with Intel RST for which I can not find a version for the 14th gen CPUs. When installing windows, after not finding any drives to install it on, it tells me that I need a driver for my drive but I can't seem to find one anywhere I looked.

 

CPU: i7-14700F

motherboard: B760I Aorus Pro

SSD: Crucial P3 NVME

 

Any help/suggestion/insight would be greatly appreciated

0 Kudos
6 Replies
LeonWaksman
Super User
901 Views

The NVMe drive are compatible with UEFI boot mode only. Check if the CSM support is disabled in BIOS Boot tab.

 

Leon

 

0 Kudos
VladCindea
Beginner
893 Views

CSM support is disabled. In bios menu, in the boot sequence category, the usb drive is stated as UEFI (UEFI: MyMedia MyUSB Drive 8.07) so I am guessing it is in UEFI boot mode, if this doesn't mean UEFI boot mode how can I switch it?

 

0 Kudos
LeonWaksman
Super User
883 Views

I'm not familiar with this motherboard. If I understand correctly the User Manual, I can see that there are two M.2 slots: M2A_CPU and the other one M2P_SB. If there are indeed two slots, try to move your SSD into the other slot.

 

Leon

 

0 Kudos
VladCindea
Beginner
880 Views

I think the full sized motherboard has the 2 SSD slots, I have the ITX version which only has one slot for the ssd

 

0 Kudos
LeonWaksman
Super User
840 Views

Try to reset the SSD in its socket. Sometime bad contact can be the reason.

 

Leon

 

0 Kudos
n_scott_pearson
Super User
812 Views

Have you enabled Intel RST in the BIOS? Unless you (eventually) want to use RAID, you shouldn't enable it. It will cause this missing device problem and require you to jump through hoops to get around it. If you don't plan to use RAID, Intel RST offers you nothing (well, except complications).

If you do want to (eventually) use RAID, this will require the inclusion of the RST drivers -- which are very difficult to get ahold of as they do not make them available separately. In general, you should be going to the downloads page for your motherboard in the motherboard vendor's web site and getting the appropriate Intel RST installation package from there. I believe that you can open this executable in a ZIP tool (7-ZIP, for example) and extract the driver folders to insert into the Windows installer boot process. [Aside: I have to admit that I haven't tried this myself; I've just read about it in discussions here in the Community forums.]

Hope this helps,

...S

0 Kudos
Reply