Corsair Force MP500 seen by BIOS but not from any software

Dec 11, 2017
2
0
510
Good morning,
i have a sligthly complicated issue with an m2 ssd.
The Force MP500 128 GB from corsair cannot be see anymore by any kind of software (diskpart/gparted/bootable usb/windows installation..)
The fact is that from the BIOS i can see it but i'm no more able to interact with it, it doens't get recognized by any type of programm.

This start to happen when i (probably) bad formatted it using diskpart:
-i issued the "clean" command
and then i was not able to interact with it anymore

I already tried a lot of bootable software, but anyone of them doesn't see it.

Is there a way to bring it back to life?
Many thanks in advance.

System Information
Machine name: LEGIONY520
Operating System: Windows 10 Pro 64-bit (10.0, Build 16299) (16299.rs3_release.170928-1534)
Language: Italian (Regional Setting: Italian)
System Manufacturer: LENOVO
System Model: 80WK
BIOS: 4KCN30WW
Processor: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-7300HQ CPU @ 2.50GHz (4 CPUs), ~2.5GHz
Memory: 8192MB RAM
Available OS Memory: 8068MB RAM
Page File: 2869MB used, 7117MB available
Windows Dir: C:\Windows
DirectX Version: DirectX 12
Microsoft Graphics Hybrid: Supported
Video Card name: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti
Manufacturer: NVIDIA
Chip type: GeForce GTX 1050 Ti
Dedicated Memory: 4031 MB
 
Solution
If Windows isn't even seeing the physical SSD, it is either an issue with your system board or the SSD iteself. You can try to troubleshoot which by connecting your SSD into another system and see if it detects there or by connecting another SSD into your system and see if your system sees that one. It is quite probable that the SSD just failed. When they work, they work great, but unfortunately, they can fail fast, without warning.
Dec 11, 2017
2
0
510


Unfortunately, not at all, it only display a 1TB hard drive
Only in the BIOS it appears (Not in the available boot, only in a sort of HD list)

Device manager --> http://imageshack.com/a/img923/884/orBTyj.png
Disk management --> http://imageshack.com/a/img922/8363/6z7BUF.png

 

DR_Luke

Honorable
Dec 1, 2016
363
0
11,160
If Windows isn't even seeing the physical SSD, it is either an issue with your system board or the SSD iteself. You can try to troubleshoot which by connecting your SSD into another system and see if it detects there or by connecting another SSD into your system and see if your system sees that one. It is quite probable that the SSD just failed. When they work, they work great, but unfortunately, they can fail fast, without warning.
 
Solution