IME if an EFI partition is detected, the installer will default to an EFI install. If you have a GRUB BIOS partition instead of EFI (or a clean slate), then the installer will not ask for an EFI partition and install without it. I doubt you can have a hybrid boot setup. I suppose if you had Windows on one disk along with EFI and installed grub to another disk (while the EFI disk was unplugged) you may be able to boot Windows somehow from a custom GRUB.
Sounds like a lot of trouble for no real benefit.
The best solution IMO is to run Windows in a VM where it belongs and leave the hardware to a real OS.
Sounds like a lot of trouble for no real benefit.
The best solution IMO is to run Windows in a VM where it belongs and leave the hardware to a real OS.
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