Start the system up and keep tapping the F12 key to access the Boot Menu. If the HDD is available to boot from, it will be listed there (usually as SATA0)
If it's listed, use the down arrow key to select Diagnostics and press enter. It should then indicate if there are any faults with the drive.
If it's not listed in the Boot Menu, restart the system and this time tap the F2 key to take you into the BIOS/setup. If the HDD is present it should be listed against Drives (again, usually as SATA0) If it's not that would suggest a faulty HDD. The only other thing to try would be to plug the cable into a different SATA port on the motherboard.
DELL-Alasdair R
4 Operator
•
754 Posts
0
June 15th, 2018 02:00
Hi TwistedKrispie,
Start the system up and keep tapping the F12 key to access the Boot Menu. If the HDD is available to boot from, it will be listed there (usually as SATA0)
If it's listed, use the down arrow key to select Diagnostics and press enter. It should then indicate if there are any faults with the drive.
If it's not listed in the Boot Menu, restart the system and this time tap the F2 key to take you into the BIOS/setup. If the HDD is present it should be listed against Drives (again, usually as SATA0) If it's not that would suggest a faulty HDD. The only other thing to try would be to plug the cable into a different SATA port on the motherboard.
Let us know how you get on.
speedstep
9 Legend
•
47K Posts
0
June 15th, 2018 10:00
All of these models will NOT Boot if the CMOS battery is bad.