Phillip, that doesn’t work. I never perform automatic installs/partitioning, it’s always 100% manual. I selected the EFI system partition from the Windows drive and marked it as “Do not use partition”, selected the new EFI system partition I created for Ubuntu and marked it as “EFI system partition” (which is equivalent to what you said about mounting it to /boot/efi, and note that all partitions used by Ubuntu are on a drive that’s meant only for Ubuntu) and selected the proper drive (which contains the EFI system partition to be used) on the “Install bootloader to” dropdown. Therefore, manual partitioning does not solve the issue. It’s even more serious that Ubiquity ignores the fact I mark the incorret EFI system partition as “Do not use the partition” and messes everything up the same way.
Phillip, that doesn’t work. I never perform automatic installs/ partitioning, it’s always 100% manual. I selected the EFI system partition from the Windows drive and marked it as “Do not use partition”, selected the new EFI system partition I created for Ubuntu and marked it as “EFI system partition” (which is equivalent to what you said about mounting it to /boot/efi, and note that all partitions used by Ubuntu are on a drive that’s meant only for Ubuntu) and selected the proper drive (which contains the EFI system partition to be used) on the “Install bootloader to” dropdown. Therefore, manual partitioning does not solve the issue. It’s even more serious that Ubiquity ignores the fact I mark the incorret EFI system partition as “Do not use the partition” and messes everything up the same way.