Help

Discussions about anything Computer Hardware Related. Overclocking, underclocking and talk about the latest or even the oldest technology. PCA Reviews feedback
Post Reply
User avatar
murph
Goober Member
Posts: 1
Joined: Mon Apr 18, 2005 12:28 am

Help

Post by murph »

im hoping someone can help......im having problems picking up my WD1600JB Serial ATA hdd. Ive installed the drivers for the mobo, plus i dl'd the drivers for XP. Im looking for the RAID controller drivers, but none seem to be working...

any ideas?

CPU - AMD 2900
mobo - Abit KV7
WD1600JB serial ATA hdd (serial to board, but using legacy power)


I've tried to download the files from Abit, but they didn't help much...
VooDoo
Golden Member
Posts: 1553
Joined: Sat May 04, 2002 6:31 pm
Location: earth
Contact:

Re: Help

Post by VooDoo »

Originally posted by murph
......im having problems picking up my WD1600JB Serial ATA hdd.....


use both hands, and bend at the knees

and welcome to PCA, enjoy your stay

its late to ask for help, most of the peeps that know this tech shuff are in bed.

just a side note, what is the model of the mobo.

me
guess i need a new one...
User avatar
eGoCeNTRoNiX
Posts: 7362
Joined: Wed Oct 23, 2002 12:51 pm
Location: HELL

Post by eGoCeNTRoNiX »

Do you have the drive controller enabled in the bios?
PM before Email People!!
Image
Heat Under eGoCeNTRoNiX :)
Who Farted? BEANIE!!!
!Welcome to the United States of the Offended!
User avatar
b-man1
Posts: 5201
Joined: Wed Nov 22, 2000 10:23 am

Post by b-man1 »

things you didn't mention but should check if you haven't:

1. jumper settings (...sata doesn't really use jumpers, but who knows)
2. cables...power and data connections on the drive and mobo
User avatar
FlyingPenguin
Flightless Bird
Posts: 33162
Joined: Wed Nov 22, 2000 11:13 am
Location: Central Florida
Contact:

Post by FlyingPenguin »

A couple of important questions:

- Is this an existing OS install or a clean OS install?

- If it's an existing OS install are you replacing your IDE boot drive with the SATA drive, or is this just a secondary drive?

There should be seperate SATA controller drivers that came with your mobo, or you can download them from the mobo manufacturer's website.

If this is a clean OS install you MUST have a copy of the SATA drivers on a FLOPPY (not a CD or on the hard drive). When the WInXP installer comes up it will briefly prompt you to press F6 if you want to install SCSI or other controller drivers. Press F6, wait a few minutes and eventually it will prompt you for the floppy with the drivers.

The driver files must be on the floppy (usually there's 3 or 4 files). If you download the drivers as a zipped archive then you must unzip the files to the floppy.

If this is an existing OS but you want to replace your IDE drive with the new SATA drive then once you've cloned the old drive to the new one (using whatever utility came with the drive or Norton Ghost) then you need to do AT LEAST a boot sector repair to let Windows install the proper boot sectors on the new drive (this would not be necessary if you were swapping an IDE drive with another IDE drive).

The problem is that the SATA controller has a different hardware address than the IDE controller and WinXP will be looking for OS on the wrong hardware address unless you do a sector repair.

TO PERFORM A BOOT SECTOR REPAIR:

Boot from the XP Install CD-Rom, press F6 and provide the SATA drivers on a floppy as explained above. Choose the "Repair" option during setup from the first menu, and run the Recovery Console. When you are logged on, type FIXBOOT at the command prompt and hit the ENTER key.


This may not work, depending on a LOT of factors. If after doing the Sector Repair WinXP boots to a BSOD then you need to do a repair install of WindowsXP.

Instructions here: http://www.michaelstevenstech.com/XPrepairinstall.htm
---
“The Government of Spain will not applaud those who set the world on fire just because they show up with a bucket.” - Prime Minister of Spain, Pedro Sánchez

Image
Post Reply