
- #STANDARD SATA AHCI CONTROLLER DRIVER WINDOWS 10 ASUS P5Q E 64 BIT#
- #STANDARD SATA AHCI CONTROLLER DRIVER WINDOWS 10 ASUS P5Q E UPDATE#
Point 2: Microsoft may be recommending the wrong driver to its customers. The driver's only issue, it is just the only one I know about at this point. Microsoft needs to stop recommending and allowing its customers to download this driver especially if they are using external e-Sata drives. Own Windows 7 System Repair tool flags the driver as "bad". Microsoft is spreading malware - presumably this is unintentional, but the fact remains it is being downloaded from the Microsoft site as a "recommended" update.

Point 1: Whether Microsoft wrote the driver is not the issue. As such I have no business relationship with Marvell but Microsoft does and should have the necessary technical contacts to make things Since Microsoft has business connections with Marvell and receives theĭrivers from Marvell, then Microsoft should be able to relay the information to them in a positive proactive manner.Īs an individual I am not a customer of Marvell, they supply parts to Asus and other motherboard manufacturers. As an individual I cannot register on their site. They only allow a person to register using a corporate e-mail domain. I just checked the Marvell Support web site. Intel RAID and Marvell 61xx RAIDĪs well as WiFi and 2 Marvell Yukon Network controllers all controllers built into motherboard.
#STANDARD SATA AHCI CONTROLLER DRIVER WINDOWS 10 ASUS P5Q E 64 BIT#
Machine is a home built with Win 7 64 bit SP1:Īsus P5Q3 Deluxe WiFi motherboard, Intel Core 2 Quad 9550S, 8GB RAM, Internal 10K RPM WD Velociraptor RAID - 300GB + External e-SATA RAID with 2 WD 1 TByte 7200 RPM SATA drives, nVidia GeForce GTX 460 video card. As I had a critical need for the external storage, disconnecting it was not an option. If I unplugged the e-Sata external RAID array, I could boot. The Windows 7 Repair Utility diagnosed a "bad driver" with External Media. Including SP1 and wasn't sure initially what had caused the problem. It took a while for me to diagnose this problem.
#STANDARD SATA AHCI CONTROLLER DRIVER WINDOWS 10 ASUS P5Q E UPDATE#
Microsoft needs to remove this driver from the Windows Update until a fix is provided.

Rolling back to the older 1.2.0.69 driver from fixed the issue. The problem was with the driver being used on an external e-Sata RAID array. 2010 downloaded as an optional update this morning caused my machine to become unbootable in Win 7 SP1 64-bit.
