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Crisis: Need some help with an older mobo AB9 PRO

scrambles

Junior Member
Hello all,
long time lurker, first time poster.
Unfortunately, I must succumb to the old mother's adage of "only calling when you need something".

Basically, I have a raid setup on my ab9 pro.
Recently, within the last week, my ab9pro got the dreaded 9.0. post code, "uguru taking over boot". I've tried everything that I've seen on these and the abit forums, and narrowed it down to mobo or cpu.
What I'm looking for is to either purchase or "financially borrow" (loan with collateral) a board while I transfer all my stupidly raided data onto another HDD. (Which is a whole other stupid endeavor as I attempted to upgrade without realizing that I'd need to reformat, and I went for a mobo that didn't have IDE, which is what my dvd drive is)

As you can see, it's been an awesome time over here.

Thanks for reading and thanks in advance for any help you can give me.:colbert:
 
google RAID2RAID

Mount RAID arrays and Dynamic Disks created with all current Intel, nVidia or VIA chipsets on any other chipset and on all versions of Windows with free Raid 2 Raid software.
 
After reading your suggestion I decided to give a little more detail on my problem.

So, my old ab9 pro had 9 Satas.
The current one has 4. Today I'm picking up a controller card for the pci to hook up the ide dvd so that I can install windows on the new mobo.

So, I'm picking up a new hard drive to do this as I don't want to lose any data on any of the drives. (one raided 1 as c; 3 raided 0 as d😉
I then download raid2raid after installing software and everything.
Turn off the computer, plug the hard drives in (forgot to mention that I lost track of the order somewhat...does that matter with this software?)
Turn in back on, run the program and make images of the disks...?
And this can all be done on a completely different motherboard?
 
So, I ordered a new motherboard.
I'll keep you up to date with the events, and get to the bottom of whether this is a processor thing or mobo thing.

I'm thinking that it might be the Bios chip, and hopefully it is because that would mean only a 10$ fix.
 
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