Change disk number in Disk Management for PCIe SSD and SATA HDD











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It's not a big issue but I find it quite annoying.



My SSD has OS and is PCI NVMe, while 2nd disk is SATA HDD. For some reason, Window detect them in reverse order with 0 = HDD, 1 = SSD. Is it possible to fix this order in Disk Management as well as Task Manager.










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  • AFAIK No, this depends on the intermal enumeration of busses and devices evtentually also IRQs and how the mainboard uses them.
    – LotPings
    Nov 17 at 20:27















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












It's not a big issue but I find it quite annoying.



My SSD has OS and is PCI NVMe, while 2nd disk is SATA HDD. For some reason, Window detect them in reverse order with 0 = HDD, 1 = SSD. Is it possible to fix this order in Disk Management as well as Task Manager.










share|improve this question
























  • AFAIK No, this depends on the intermal enumeration of busses and devices evtentually also IRQs and how the mainboard uses them.
    – LotPings
    Nov 17 at 20:27













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











It's not a big issue but I find it quite annoying.



My SSD has OS and is PCI NVMe, while 2nd disk is SATA HDD. For some reason, Window detect them in reverse order with 0 = HDD, 1 = SSD. Is it possible to fix this order in Disk Management as well as Task Manager.










share|improve this question















It's not a big issue but I find it quite annoying.



My SSD has OS and is PCI NVMe, while 2nd disk is SATA HDD. For some reason, Window detect them in reverse order with 0 = HDD, 1 = SSD. Is it possible to fix this order in Disk Management as well as Task Manager.







windows windows-10 pci-express






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edited Nov 17 at 20:20

























asked Nov 17 at 20:11









VarunAgw

3121315




3121315












  • AFAIK No, this depends on the intermal enumeration of busses and devices evtentually also IRQs and how the mainboard uses them.
    – LotPings
    Nov 17 at 20:27


















  • AFAIK No, this depends on the intermal enumeration of busses and devices evtentually also IRQs and how the mainboard uses them.
    – LotPings
    Nov 17 at 20:27
















AFAIK No, this depends on the intermal enumeration of busses and devices evtentually also IRQs and how the mainboard uses them.
– LotPings
Nov 17 at 20:27




AFAIK No, this depends on the intermal enumeration of busses and devices evtentually also IRQs and how the mainboard uses them.
– LotPings
Nov 17 at 20:27










1 Answer
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This is only possible by :




  • Switching disk connectors, but unfortunately NVMe & SATA are not compatible.

  • As an option in the BIOS/UEFI if it exists.


Updating the BIOS/UEFI might possibly help (very remote possibility),
although this is a dangerous operation.
Any problem during the update could cause the computer to brick,
so is not worth it for only an annoyance.
Especially since this order might be built-into the motherboard.






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    up vote
    0
    down vote













    This is only possible by :




    • Switching disk connectors, but unfortunately NVMe & SATA are not compatible.

    • As an option in the BIOS/UEFI if it exists.


    Updating the BIOS/UEFI might possibly help (very remote possibility),
    although this is a dangerous operation.
    Any problem during the update could cause the computer to brick,
    so is not worth it for only an annoyance.
    Especially since this order might be built-into the motherboard.






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      This is only possible by :




      • Switching disk connectors, but unfortunately NVMe & SATA are not compatible.

      • As an option in the BIOS/UEFI if it exists.


      Updating the BIOS/UEFI might possibly help (very remote possibility),
      although this is a dangerous operation.
      Any problem during the update could cause the computer to brick,
      so is not worth it for only an annoyance.
      Especially since this order might be built-into the motherboard.






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        0
        down vote










        up vote
        0
        down vote









        This is only possible by :




        • Switching disk connectors, but unfortunately NVMe & SATA are not compatible.

        • As an option in the BIOS/UEFI if it exists.


        Updating the BIOS/UEFI might possibly help (very remote possibility),
        although this is a dangerous operation.
        Any problem during the update could cause the computer to brick,
        so is not worth it for only an annoyance.
        Especially since this order might be built-into the motherboard.






        share|improve this answer












        This is only possible by :




        • Switching disk connectors, but unfortunately NVMe & SATA are not compatible.

        • As an option in the BIOS/UEFI if it exists.


        Updating the BIOS/UEFI might possibly help (very remote possibility),
        although this is a dangerous operation.
        Any problem during the update could cause the computer to brick,
        so is not worth it for only an annoyance.
        Especially since this order might be built-into the motherboard.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 17 at 21:02









        harrymc

        248k10257549




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