Now, the SATA AHCI driver should be successfully installed, and the notebook should boot into Windows with the SATA Device Mode set to AHCI. Go back to your device configurations sub menu and change the SATA Device Mode back to AHCI, save settings there (F10) and upon exit, save changes and reboot. During restart, press the F10 key and enter the BIOS setup utility. You can find the updated controller in the device manager.ġ9. The driver will install, and completing the Hardware update Wizard appears. From this list, select the Intel(R) 5 Series 6 Port SATA AHCI Controller. This will list several SATA AHCI Controllers. Select location: c:\folder you saved AHCI drivers to.ġ5. Select Don't search I will choose the driver to install.
#Hp t5135 install windows xp install#
Select Install from a list or specific location (Advanced). In Welcome to the Hardware Update Wizard, select No, not this time.
#Hp t5135 install windows xp serial#
Right-click on the Intel(R) 5 Series/3400 Series Chipset Family 4 port Serial ATA Storage Controllerħ. You will find the Intel native SATA storage controller driver installed.Ħ. Click the + symbol beside IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers, this would show the devices under this category.ĥ. Right-click the My Computer icon, click Manage, select Device ManagerĤ. Then download, extract, and save these drivers to a folder you name whatever you want. First download and install the chipset driver and reboot. I suspect that You probably mean AHCI (advanced host controller interface).ġ. Simply click and then enter the required product key. By accessing this option, the user gets the chance to alter the Windows XP Professional product key. The process runs until Windows tries to start. I have found that I can start the process by holding f9 when starting Windows 10 which gives me a boot option menu to boot from usb or cd. Difference is that my laptop came with Windows 8 and was recently upgraded to Windows 10. You cannot change the setting back until you load the ACHI driver, or the notebook won't boot. Open the properties option after right-clicking on Start and then Computer. I too want to dual boot XP on my Windows 10 machine. Install XP, post back when you are done, and I will give you the step by step directions to install the ACHI driver so you can change the storage setting back from IDE to ACHI. That will enable your HDD to be able to use native command queuing, which is not available to you IDE mode.
The tricky part is to install the SATA ACHI driver after you installed XP so you can change the setting back to ACHI. Save the setting there (F10 key), and again when you exit.īoot from your XP disk and it should now install problem-free. Read the setup guide section of the service manual at the link below, Chapter 5, page 100.Ĭhange the SATA device mode from ACHI to IDE. On your particular notebook it is easy to install Windows XP if you know what to do.