This is not cookie cutter you must extract the drivers and point to them on a USB storage device unzipped. The Advanced Drive Format hard drive will be recognized and Setup will continue as expected. In windows 7 you "load drivers" from usb flash drive.
I too am a user. It is nice to see that you got Windows 10 installed and working. It fails miserably for me, and I have made numerous attempts to get it working. Now Windows 10 October updates are failing for me the similar to how the update fails. I cannot disable RAID; otherwise my system will not boot at all.
I do not have IDE hard drives at all. This is very frustrating. My T has plenty of power to handle the latest Windows I just cannot get it to install. If you see the solution to my post here then that says from the start to make sure drives are not configured in a RAID array.
Then you could restore the contents. It wouldn't be using disks in a RAID array but at least you'd have a working system and probably a very good one. Just an idea. I will wait for Microsoft to fix this, or switch to Linux. It worked for me. When it's done, you just have to select your device in the device manager and install the driver by choosing manually the extracted folder. Windows 10 automatically detects the driver and it works. If you absolutely want to get Windows 10 installed on the raid controller you have to put the extracted folder into a readable drive and select it at the beginning of Windows installation.
Were you able to install the October version 20H2 update in the same fashion? Your solution here sounds simple enough, but as I am only semi-technical with hardware and OS issues, I am wondering what effect disabling the controller in device manager would have on my RAID-1 array.
For those interested: an extensive spec sheet of the H can be found here. I for one chose the H over the M as the former has its mini-SAS ports placed vertically, not horizontally like the M does. This might seem like a minor detail, but I really do prefer having them placed vertically, especially when you have to run 2 forward breakout cables through your possibly very compact server case. Having the ports placed at the very end of the PCIe card is another perk in my opinion, as it brings you closer to the backplane of your case and it leaves you some room for cable management.
Hop on over to this link to download Rufus, which is a great tool to create bootable USB drives. Run the. Transfer the contents of this. This is actually the BIOS loading screen which goes through the initial setup of the card. The next thing you should do is to boot up into your DOS partition.
This displays a list of all the identified controllers, identified by a certain number MR Card x. If you only have one card installed, it should display MR Card 0.
This will display all of the parameters of the specified card. You can download the same from below link. View solution in original post. I will let you know how it goes, currently doing the same. Thanks for quick reply.
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