OK, so I had to switch from Windows 7 to Windows 10... long story.
Back in Windows 7 I had a RAID 0 array made of 2 500GB SSD's. It was set up from the motherboard BIOS (I have an "old" Maximus Hero VI) It was great. Loading times were amazing, and Windows booted super fast. Some heavy games loaded in like... 5 seconds.
Now in Windows 10, well... not nearly as good. At first I set up the RAID 0 from the BIOS and loading times were awful. I fiddled with some fast boot options., it got a little better, but nowhere near Windows 7. Then I changed the BIOS setting to AHCI, and it improved, but not much (not even near the boot times and game loading times I had with the RAID 0 setup in Windows 7). I've read somewhere that a similar RAID 0 setup can be set from within' Windows 10 (creating a "no resiliency" storage pool), but it seems kind of a long shot. And I'd probably have to format the drive again...
I'm not sure on how to proceed. I just wanted to have the same loading times I had back in Windows 7. Any suggestions?
Back in Windows 7 I had a RAID 0 array made of 2 500GB SSD's. It was set up from the motherboard BIOS (I have an "old" Maximus Hero VI) It was great. Loading times were amazing, and Windows booted super fast. Some heavy games loaded in like... 5 seconds.
Now in Windows 10, well... not nearly as good. At first I set up the RAID 0 from the BIOS and loading times were awful. I fiddled with some fast boot options., it got a little better, but nowhere near Windows 7. Then I changed the BIOS setting to AHCI, and it improved, but not much (not even near the boot times and game loading times I had with the RAID 0 setup in Windows 7). I've read somewhere that a similar RAID 0 setup can be set from within' Windows 10 (creating a "no resiliency" storage pool), but it seems kind of a long shot. And I'd probably have to format the drive again...
I'm not sure on how to proceed. I just wanted to have the same loading times I had back in Windows 7. Any suggestions?