Dell Latitude E6410 BSOD Switch to AHCI

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The BSOD happens because Windows doesn't have the proper driver installed; or is trying to use the wrong driver to read the file system. The difference between your issue and the articles is that in the article, nothing was enabled. Not AHCI, nor RAID. The only way I know around this is to re-install everything, but I am sure there are a few hacks around it.

However, RAID usually gets you the same benefits as AHCI performance wise; so for performance reasons you don't need to switch. (See http://www.differencebetween.net/technology/difference-between-ahci-and-raid/)

Specifically:

RAID mode in SATA also exposes the same functionality that AHCI does.

And one more source:

Assuming you've got an Intel ICH, there's really no good reason to run in AHCI mode if your system supports RAID mode. Your performance will be identical in RAID vs. AHCI

http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/244645-32-ahci-raid

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Updated on September 17, 2022

Comments

  • Chris Doggett
    Chris Doggett over 1 year

    Just received a brand new laptop. Wiped the installed Win 7 64 bit and put on a fresh copy on a new SSD. After the fact I realized I should have AHCI mode for performance. So I followed this guide

    After rebooting I changed the BIOS from RAID to AHCI mode. Then on boot the system BSODs everytime. I had to switch it back to RAID in order to boot.

    Why is it BSOD even after tweaking that registry setting? Is it possible I don't have a chipset driver installed? This is a link to the drivers Dell recommends, but I didn't want to go install a bunch of chipset drivers that I didn't really need. Any advice on what I would need to do in order to properly get ACHI enabled on my machine?

  • Shiv
    Shiv about 7 years
    Samsung Magician and various other utilities seem to handle AHCI differently in the UI at least.