In reply to A. User's post on January 15, Thanks for your reply, however it is completely irrelevant. There is no USB involved. So, for my case Method 1 did not yield any results, and Method 2 is irrelevant. In reply to Gpower2's post on January 15, We appreciate your time and effort to getting back to us. Let us know the status of the issue. We will assist you further. User's post on January 16, Thanks for your quick reply.
I've made numerous restarts and replugs of the devices, but the problem insists. I can provide you with any data you'd find helpful to pinpoint the exact problem. Thanks again. In reply to Gpower2's post on January 16, Also, install all the required pending updates.
For high CPU usage follow the method and check. Method: Run System Maintenance troubleshooter and check if it helps. Click on Troubleshooting. Click on View all option on the left side of the Windows. Click on System Maintenance option. Click on Next and follow the onscreen instructions to troubleshoot the issue. Thanks for your suggestion. Thanks for your continuous support.
In reply to Gpower2's post on January 17, Hi, I just wanted to check if you read my previous reply with the WPT file. In reply to Gpower2's post on January 20, Hello, Thank you for replying with the status of the issue. We will assist you. Hi Gpower2, I realise this question has been quite some time underway, but I wanted to know if you ever came across a solution? When I did this, selected a custom install, and selected some available space, the install worked, and would boot just fine.
So disconnecting any drive that appears in the BIOS as a hard disk, so that just the ones you may want to install on was the solution. Loading the Areca driver when it wanted and selecting the space worked just fine. Problem 2, However, once the Windows 7 was installed and booting just fine, my Vista 64 partition would not boot. The Vista partition still existed, but the Windows 7 boot had taken over.
No boot selection screen was shown, and looking at the possible OS boot possibilities on the Advanced Tab, Startup options did not show Vista as a choice, only the Windows 7. Considering how close 7 is to Vista, I figured it would work and it did. Also get back the Install screen you can select the Close X icon in the repair section. Most people will think the only way back to the initial screen is to reboot The load drivers disk drivers for the Repair operation didn't like my driver disk, although the load drivers from the Custom Install did, so I ended up loading the drivers via the Custom Install screen, then moving back to the repair screen, works just fine that way.
I just thought I would share this for people who may be having issues like this. There is almost nothing to google on CanBeSystemVolume so this entry might help. Many thanks for your comprehensive post detailng how you have managed to solve your problems. I have read your comments with interest as I have similar hardware that I bought a couple of years ago and am considering installing Window 7 RC1 on my Raid 0 drive.
I currently have Vista 32bit installed on a standalone gb Sata drive. Join the discussion. Was this information helpful? Yes No. Thank you! Any more feedback? The more you tell us the more we can help. Can you help us improve? Resolved my issue. Clear instructions. Easy to follow. No jargon. Pictures helped. Didn't match my screen. Incorrect instructions. Too technical.
Not enough information. Not enough pictures.
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