It used to take about 30-40 seconds with full UEFI boot.
That is even before you had your problem with the new monitor is to slow for windows 10. I have a Z77 board with windows 7 that boots faster than that. How do you have the sata controller set?
My laptop with windows 8.1 and now 10 on it boots in 15 sec. I'm sorry but you might not have something not set right just saying. I have to ask when you install windows? Did you just put in the disk and install it.
Does the bios have a boot manager that it boots from in the first boot option?
Windows 10 has been installed about 3-4 months ago. It's been installed as an update to Windows 8.1.
The BIOS does have that option, but I installed it from a USB drive, and selecting F12 upon boot to run it. It might run faster with a clean install, rather than an upgrade. I don't know.
SATA controller is set to Auto.
Anyway, can we focus on the inability to boot, neither to BIOS or boot manager (F12) when CSM is set to Never, when it used to work perfectly with exactly the same settings, but a different monitor?
Cause that is the main issue I am trying to fix here.
I would just like to turn off CSM, just like it used to be before the monitor change, and use my computer in "full UEFI mode", since all the components of this "circle" are UEFI enabled (MB + video card + OS).
Do you have a higher res display, as well? I mean something above 1080p. Do you have a Gigabyte motherboard with CSM options? Do you have a UEFI graphics card? Can you successfully disable CSM and still be able to boot after that?
I know you're probably using a newer motherboard, a newer platform and overall a better computer, but keep in mind that I'm not a gamer, and an i5-4570 is quite good for what I need, which is mostly photo editing, browsing and stuff like that.
Also, maybe someone here can tell me what is the difference between a gaming motherboard and a non-gaming motherboard. Aside from the design and, in case of ROG motherboards, some LED controllers and bling-blings and all that stuff. Oh, and also, the price.
But no. Seriously, I'm really curious. I love the design of the gaming motherboards (especially the black ones with red accent colors), even though I'm not a gamer. I didn't buy one cause I didn't need one. It's as simple as that.
I'm just curious what do those have that is important for the better functionality of the computer overall.