July 20, 20223 yr ...in the BIOS? I'd like to be able to do this as a cleaner/safer dual-boot method. I have two identical 2TB NVMe m.2 sticks and like to clone to one but it's tricky and can be messy to try to do dual-boot thru the boot manager. For my next motherboard it would be nice to have m.2 slots that are controlled in the BIOS, but I don't know if they exist. Cheers Noel System: 9900X3D Noctua NH-D15 G2, MSI Pro 650-P WiFi, G.SKILL 64GB (2 x 32GB) 288-Pin PC RAM DDR5 6000, WD NVMe 2Tb x 1, Sabrent NVMe 2Tb x 1, RTX 4090 FE, Corsair RM1000W PSU, Win11 Home, LG Ultra Curved Gsync Ultimate 3440x1440, Phanteks Enthoo Pro Case, TCA Boeing Edition Yoke & TQ, Cessna Trim Wheel, RTSS Framerate Limiter w/ Front Edge Sync. Aircraft used in MSFS 2024: Fenix A320, Aerosoft CRJ, FBW, WT 787X, I-Fly 737 MAX 8, Citation Longitude.
July 25, 20223 yr You can select which hard drive you want to boot from in any BIOS. But then you would have to boot into the BIOS anytime you want to change your boot drive which is not ideal. The better way is to edit the boot menu, this is a difficult to do in DOS, But there is an easier way. I found a great program I have used before called "Easy BCD". This allows you to have multiple bootable hard drives in your computer and it simply asks you upon startup which drive to boot from, you can name them what you want. As an example a win10 or win11 installation on separate drives. Flight Simulator's - Prepar3d V5/MSFS | Operating System - WIN 11 | Main Board - GIGABYTE X870E Aorus Elite WIFI7 | CPU - AMD 9800X3D | RAM - CORSAIR 64GB 6600Mhz | Video Card - EVGA RTX3090 FTW3 Ultra | Monitor - DELL 38" Ultrawide | Case - CORSAIR 750D Full Tower | CPU Cooling - CORSAIR H170i Elite LCD 420mm Push/Pull | Power Supply - EVGA 1000 G+ | Sound System - Definitive Technology ProMonitor 600 w/subwoofer
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