BIOS recognizes boot drive but windows does not boot

btgangsta

Commendable
Jul 11, 2016
2
0
1,510
Hello everyone.

Today I have a very annoying situation on my hands.

I bought a new 750GB SSD a few weeks ago and was super stoked to put it in my rig, however, the new SATA data cable that I ordered to go with the new SSD was in fact too short to reach where I had mounted the SSD.

But I realized that the SATA cable that was plugged into my operating system drive (120GB SSD) was long enough to reach where my new SSD was mounted, so I detached the old SATA cable from my boot drive, plugged that one into my new SSD and used the new, but shorter SATA cable and plugged that into my motherboard/boot drive.

When I then booted windows by pressing the power button on the PC case, the BIOS screen showed that it detected three SATA devices, being my boot drive, the new SSD and my optical DVD drive. However, when it then showed the windows logo, my computer shut down instantly, even without showing the spinning group of dots (Windows 10). As the windows logo was not accompanied with the group of dots I was convinced my new SATA cable was faulty, so I got it refunded and ordered a new one (from a different supplier).

It's been 4 (or 5? I don't even remember now) different SATA cables from different suppliers, all refunded by *me* because they apparently all "didn't work", have I now realized that something must be up. Either I'm SUPER UNLUCKY with SATA cables or something else is happening and I'm just assuming it's the SATA cables problem.

Any additional information required to help me with this problem I will be happy to provide.

PLEASE HELP!

Computer Specs:
I5-2400 CPU
GTX 770 GPU
Corsair HX650 PSU
Asus P8H61 MOBO
 
Solution
Hey there, btgangsta.

With the SSD disconnected and the old SATA cable connected to your old HDD, everything is working normally as before? If this is the case and you always have an issue once you connect the SSD, or when you use the new cables, it could be either a drive problem or an issue with the SATA port you're using.
So give it a try with a different SATA port and also if you're able to try the new SSD as a secondary storage drive with a different computer, that would be great. If you manage to boot to Windows, I'd recommend that you download an SSD/HDD diagnostic tool and test the drive for errors, to see if anything alarming pops-up.

Hope that helps. Please let me know how everything goes.
Boogieman_WD
Hey there, btgangsta.

With the SSD disconnected and the old SATA cable connected to your old HDD, everything is working normally as before? If this is the case and you always have an issue once you connect the SSD, or when you use the new cables, it could be either a drive problem or an issue with the SATA port you're using.
So give it a try with a different SATA port and also if you're able to try the new SSD as a secondary storage drive with a different computer, that would be great. If you manage to boot to Windows, I'd recommend that you download an SSD/HDD diagnostic tool and test the drive for errors, to see if anything alarming pops-up.

Hope that helps. Please let me know how everything goes.
Boogieman_WD
 
Solution