

I'm not interested in Windows built-in mirroring or the new Storage Spaces thing.

#Change ahci to raid windows 10 registry serial#
inf file and the contents of that file are nothing like the. The Advanced Host Controller Interface (AHCI) is a technical standard defined by Intel that specifies the register-level interface of Serial ATA (SATA) host. The only "solution" I have found so far is the following question on where the guy asking the same question I am manages to solve it himself via some clever file hacking but his answer is almost a decade old, is likely for a different version of Windows, and both the name of his. Is there an entry in the above key that enables AMD RAID, seeing as there are entries that do the same for Intel RAID? I find it a bit weird that you would be able to enable or disable a myriad of different boot configurations here but not one that enables AMD RAID. Go to HKEYLOCALMACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetServicesiaStorV and set the value named Start to 0 : Expand StartOverride and then double-click the 0 DWORD. And I've also tried that method in conjunction with making changes in the registry before performing the steps described above. If you want to switch to AHCI after installing Windows 7, youll need to modify your registry and boot settings. HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services the method for Windows 8 which was to simply remove the AHCI drivers and then set the PC to boot into Safe Mode and changing the setting in BIOS to RAID before it boots back up in Safe Mode. So, how do you switch from AHCI to RAID if you have an AMD chipset, namely the X370?
#Change ahci to raid windows 10 registry install#
I have found dozens of articles that state that you either need to boot into safe boot and let Windows install the driver or you enable the driver by altering a few registry entries from a '3' to a '0' (iaStor, iaStorSVC, ahciStor, etc), some articles state that you need to do a combination of both these things, but I came to the conclusion that these articles are only relevant if you have an Intel chipset (though not one of the articles mentions as such).
