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- Notebook Boot and Lockup
- BIOS: Legacy boot problem with M.2 SSD

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06-01-2017 08:15 PM - edited 06-02-2017 01:06 PM
Hi everyone. I'm having problems selecting the M.2 SSD drive I installed as the primary boot drive in legacy mode in BIOS: When I enter the hard drive boot order list in the legacy boot order window it either:
a) Presents me one drive ("Notebook Hard Drive - ST1000LM014...") and <null string> or <gibberish>, or
b) Goes berzerk for a while, presenting me a rolling screen in two shades of blue, followed by random psychedelic floating symbols, before it returns to a faulty version of the BIOS setup screen (missing items, labels, screen parts etc.)
In the former case I can move the SATA drive down the list with F5 in the list, making the M.2 drive appear in its place, but the setting doesn't persist or register - as soon as I re-enter the boot order list the SATA drive reappears at the top (usually with <null string> below it). Moving the SATA drive down into the lower of the two positions is the only way to even make the M.2 drive appear in the list.
There is no problem booting from the drive with a UEFI OS installed: The drive appears correctly and consistenly in the UEFI boot order list under OS boot manager, and boots as expected.
The M.2 SSD I installed is a Crucial CT275MX300SSD4. The laptop's BIOS and SSD firmware are up to date. If anyone has a suggestion as to how to make this the primary legacy boot drive, I'm listening.
Cheers.
Edit: The psychedelic symbols turned out to be Chinese characters 😉
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Accepted Solutions
06-02-2017 07:01 PM - edited 06-02-2017 07:46 PM
Spoken too soon: It seems F10 has to pressed to save the boot priority list. I was pressing Esc to get out of the list, which apparently discarded the change I made every time. I wish the BIOS help screen would actually point this out. I discovered the procedure after some experimentation.
Cheers 🙂
Edit: I should point out that keeping the notebook disk selection highlighted for a couple of secs in the legacy boot order section before entering the priority list seems to prevent the BIOS from going berzerk. Seems it takes a couple of seconds for it to read the disk info properly first.
06-02-2017 01:11 PM
After some consideration it seems to me there's really not much to be done about this at the user-level. HP will need to review this BIOS (F.83) and see if they can resolve the issue. I wonder whether or not opening a case about this will help toward this goal.
06-02-2017 07:01 PM - edited 06-02-2017 07:46 PM
Spoken too soon: It seems F10 has to pressed to save the boot priority list. I was pressing Esc to get out of the list, which apparently discarded the change I made every time. I wish the BIOS help screen would actually point this out. I discovered the procedure after some experimentation.
Cheers 🙂
Edit: I should point out that keeping the notebook disk selection highlighted for a couple of secs in the legacy boot order section before entering the priority list seems to prevent the BIOS from going berzerk. Seems it takes a couple of seconds for it to read the disk info properly first.