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Ubuntu on SSD stopped working and my SSD become invisible

br flag

I have a laptop with preinstalled windows 10 and a 1 TB HDD, it was quite slow, so I bought a new SSD of 120 GB for my laptop and installed Ubuntu on it.

Actually I created a dual boot system with windows on HDD and Ubuntu on SSD.

My laptop was working fine for 2 weeks but suddenly when I was working on Ubuntu it froze and I was not able to switch off my computer and it started showing some errors in a black screen.

After some time I got frustrated and removed my battery to switch off my laptop, which is not good.

Next day when I tried to start my laptop I found that Ubuntu is not working and my SSD is not visible in BIOS. So I opened windows because my HDD is working fine and found that my SSD was also not visible in disk management.

I am unable to identify what happened.

Please help me if you are familiar with my problem.

Everyone's help will be appreciated.

Thanks

mchid avatar
bo flag
First, make sure the disk is properly plugged in.
Tushar Singh Bisht avatar
br flag
Yes I have checked that
oldfred avatar
cn flag
If UEFI/BIOS cannot see drive in UEFI settings (not boot menu), then no operating system will see it. Did a Windows update change UEFI settings from AHCI back to RAID or Intel RST. Double check UEFI settings. Drives do fail. It should be still under warrantee. And then with new drive you can restore from your backups.
Tushar Singh Bisht avatar
br flag
I think my ssd is failed. What to do now ? I don't want to recover data, just want a working laptop
mchid avatar
bo flag
@TusharSinghBisht If it is failed and you don't want to recover the data, you could opt to buy a new SSD (probably a different brand, I've had pretty good luck with western digital). Alternatively, you could install to the same HDD as windows but be careful, backup your windows and have a windows installation media handy beforehand in case something goes wrong. Also, the performance isn't nearly as good on an HDD so I personally would go with a new SSD but that's just my opinion.
mchid avatar
bo flag
@TusharSinghBisht That is strange that the drive would die like that. Maybe it was some type of electrostatic discharge that damaged the drive? You could test the drive by connecting it to a different computer like a desktop — laptop drives are typically compatible with standard sata cables.
vanadium avatar
cn flag
Did you effectively check your bios settings, as oldfred indicated? If bios was reset to RAID, the SSD, which operates in UEFI, will not be recognized.
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