Good day to all.
This is my first message in this forum, although I have been an avid user of Gigabyte components for a very long time.
About two year ago, I built a new PC from scratch. Its basic configuration is the following:
- Computer Case:
Corsair Carbide Series 400R Mid-Tower- PSU:
Etasis ET-750 Gaming, 750W- Motherboard:
Gigabyte GA-Z87-D3HP, rev. 1.0 (as posted - S/N: 133200026796)
- CPU:
Intel Haswell i3-4330 @ 3.50 GHz (not overclocked)
- CPU Cooler:
Cooler Master Blizzard T2- RAM: DDR3 G.Skill Aegis, PC3-12800, 1600 MHz,
2 x 8GB +
2 x 4GB, total 24 GB
- Graphics Card:
Sapphire-AMD Radeon R7 260X (1GB)- System Disc:
SanDisk Ultra Plus SSD, SATA 3-256 GB, SDSSDHP-256G-G25- Other Storage HDDs:
2 x Toshiba DT01ACA200, SATA 3-2TB
1 x WD Caviar Black SATA 3-1TB
3 x Seagate Barracuda, SATA 2-500GB
- Optical Drives:
(a) LG GGW-H20L (G) BD-R/RW/HD-DVD/DVD-R/RW (Sata Interface)
(b) Lite On iHAS124-4-WU DVD-R/RW/ROM/CD Black (H) (Sata Interface)
- Expansion Cards:
(1)
DIGITUS PCI, 4-channel, SATA Controller, installed in PCI 1 slot, driving the 3 Seagate Storage HDDs. Its 4th channel remains free and serves as an External SATA (e-SATA) connection.
(2)
SUNIX UFC PCI-E, 2-channel 1394a/b + 2-channel USB 2.0 Controller, installed in PCI-E x 4 slot
(3)
AverMedia Aver3D CaptureHD H727 hybrid TV Card, PCI-E, installed in PCI-E x1_2 slot
The PC uses Windows 10 Pro 64-bit OS, upgraded from Windows 8.1 Pro. Other software is also installed and working normally.
When it was initially built, its BIOS was properly set and after that, the Windows 8.1 OS was installed. From the first moment, it shows an enormous delay until it boots (
when the startup screen of Windows appears on my screen). As soon as I push the start button, I get the DIGITUS card BIOS screen, showing the connected HDDs on it and after that, the startup screen of the motherboard appears, the well known one that displays the "Gigabyte insist on Ultra Durable" message in the middle and shows the various user selections at the bottom (DEL, F9, F12 and END). The condition is the same even after I upgraded to Windows 10 Pro.
This screen stays on my display for more than 3 minutes (about 3 and a half) and then it disappears. It takes another two more minutes to see the well known Windows flag with the rotating circle of the dots underneath, indicating that the OS is loading.
After that, at about one more minute, I get the Windows startup screen on my display, which allows me to enter the PC operations.
At the very beginning, when I initially saw it, something rung a bell in me. Initially, I thought that I did something wrong with the installation. But when I checked and found that everything was in order, I tried again and I waited patiently, until I saw it booting.
After that, I just got used to it and I let be. However, it still annoys me, every time I want to use it. By searching recently in the Net, I found somewhere a topic saying that the plethora of the HDDs might be the cause of the problem. Yesterday, I opened the case, I removed the SATA cables of all the storage HDDs and I tried again.
The trial revealed, first of all, that the BIOS startup screen remained on my display for only a few seconds. Then, I saw the Windows flag with the rotating dots and within a minute or so, the PC booted normally. But when I tried it again, it took more than 3,5 minutes to boot completely. Surely, the BIOS startup screen disappeared again within seconds, but from that moment until I see the Windows flag and the rotating dots, I had to wait for more than 2,5 minutes. All in all, this second trial took me about 3 minutes and 45 seconds, until I get the Windows startup screen.
Then I let it to do some other jobs I had to, and I came back after about two hours. Before starting it again, I reconnected only the two Toshiba storage HDDS, connected on the SATA "1" and "2" of the motherboard, and I pushed the start button. This time, it took less than 1,5 minute (!!) to boot completely
. It seems that this PC wants to drive me crazy, but I do not intend to give in.
Some friends advised me that I may resolve the problem, by manually providing more PC lanes to the HDDs, via the BIOS setup. I am not sure if this will remedy the situation (or, at least, if it makes it more acceptable) and of course I don't know how I can do it.
If anyone knows it and can show me the way, I will very much appreciate it.
Generally, I will appreciate any advice, that may resolve the problem. I must also state that I am not using this PC for gaming. It serves as a general use PC and as a HPTC.
Thanks in advance.