There's already a thread that addresses this question, specifically this post. I want to do exactly what's described in that post: have two partitions on a single ssd and dual-boot from XP (32-bit) and windows 7 (64-bit) under AHCI mode, putting the drives on the Intel controller and enabling AHCI for that controller in the BIOS (UEFI) prior to installing the OSes.
But that thread was for an AMD system and I have an Intel. And unfortunately, in the section on using F6 for RAID drivers while installing Windows, my Extreme4 manual explicitly says, "AHCI mode is not supported under windows XP" (Quick-start guide, p. 43). Yet the guy here in post 444087 was able to do this. So maybe AMD-based ASRock mobos support AHCI, while intel-based boards do not? Or have new BIOS updates added support for AHCI in XP?
I guess I could try the other method mentioned elsewhere in that thread--installing XP as an IDE drive and then changing Windows settings so it'll still boot after resetting UEFI Storage Options to AHCI--but it would obviously be better to just install it as AHCI in the first place, like the post said. What I'm really hoping is that someone will come along and say, "The Extreme4 manual is actually wrong, go ahead and do your AHCI install..." Lacking that, just for my own satisfaction I'd like to know why this can be done on AMD systems and not Intels--thanks to anyone who can provide an explanation.
My drive is partitioned with an MBR, not GPT, if that makes any difference.
But that thread was for an AMD system and I have an Intel. And unfortunately, in the section on using F6 for RAID drivers while installing Windows, my Extreme4 manual explicitly says, "AHCI mode is not supported under windows XP" (Quick-start guide, p. 43). Yet the guy here in post 444087 was able to do this. So maybe AMD-based ASRock mobos support AHCI, while intel-based boards do not? Or have new BIOS updates added support for AHCI in XP?
I guess I could try the other method mentioned elsewhere in that thread--installing XP as an IDE drive and then changing Windows settings so it'll still boot after resetting UEFI Storage Options to AHCI--but it would obviously be better to just install it as AHCI in the first place, like the post said. What I'm really hoping is that someone will come along and say, "The Extreme4 manual is actually wrong, go ahead and do your AHCI install..." Lacking that, just for my own satisfaction I'd like to know why this can be done on AMD systems and not Intels--thanks to anyone who can provide an explanation.
My drive is partitioned with an MBR, not GPT, if that makes any difference.
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