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Rapporter et oversættelsesproblem
Might want to check and see if there is a firmware update for "Force GT" as those are quite old now and may have had some updates released since u bought it.
Overview - http://www.corsair.com/en-us/blog/2013/may/the-corsair-ssd-toolbox
BTW the download link is located here:
http://www.corsair.com/en-us/support/downloads
My bad I just did a google search and clicked on the first link that was a corsair website that had information on the Corsair SSD Toolbox and assumed that the download link was there. Thanks for the correction. I edited my post.
Most Corsair Force GT series came with firmware 1.3.3; the latest one available for that series however is 5.5
So if u are about to wipe the drive, then I would use that as a time to update to latest firmware version via the SSD Toolbox. Once completed and you reboot, run it again and do a Secure Wipe of the SSD. Then reboot and enter the OS installer with just the SSD connected (and installer drive need for your OS, such as Optical or USB). U will want to make sure that before installing an OS that your SATA Mode in BIOS for where the SSD is connected is set to AHCI Mode, to allow for native performance. You also want to ensure that if your motherboard has more than one brand of SATA Chipset, that u use the main one provided by your board; such as Intel or AMD Chipset. Your optical drive should run fine off a 3rd party chipset, but most SSDs can have issues running off of chipsets such as (NVIDIA, Marvell, JMicron, Silicon Image)
Once your at the OS installer screen, follow the steps provided by Toquen above in order to partition and format your SSD without creating the 100MB partition that OS' auto-create upon OS install. As that won't be needed anyways. If you don't want to do it this way via CMD Prompt, you can do it under another working OS/System, by partitioning the SSD in a Windows OS; under Control Panel > Admin Tools > Computer Management > Disk Management.
check in disk management
^This
As far as SATA Chipsets; which Motherboard do you have?
The tech specs for your motherboard (and in the manual) should point out which ports are for which chipset. Usually ports 1-4 are for one chipset and anything after that is for another; but again this depends on the motherboard model; as it will differ.
You don't have an extrenal usb drive adapter case? Should get one as they are useful for backup/trouble shooting regardless, cheap online/ebay/amazon.
Test on another computer.
Rarely do motherboard sata ports go bad, anyways you have more than one port left to test right?
More likely ssd went bad.
If don't have any extra, disconnect your SATA Optical Drive for the moment and try that cable on the SSD.