I don't have a Raptor, but here are some things I know:
- Many BIOS programs will not see the Raptor, as it is not a standard IDE drive. There is a SATA BIOS that is seperate from the motherboards BIOS. If your friend really needs to see the drive in the BIOS, he needs to find what key combination the SATA controller uses. If Windows sees the drive, it's working fine.
- The Raptor can not be "set" as anything (Master, Slave or Cable Select) at this time. SATA is currently a one device connector. Plug one end to the drive, the other to the controller. IF a jumper needed to be set (say for a PATA drive using a SATA adapter) it would need to be set as Master.
I told him he needs to set the Raptor as a master, and have it plugged into the Primary IDE channel, but he doesn't understand the jumpers (he says its not like regular jumpers)...
- He doesn't need to understand the jumpers, and the instructions to have him connect the drive to the Primary IDE channel is plain wrong. IDE is Parallel ATA. The Raptor is a SATA drive. They can be connected via an adapter, but why would you do this if you have a SATA connection? If Windows detects and can access the drive, you don't need to do anything to use it. If he wants to install Windows onto the Raptor, he needs to install it via booting to the Windows CD, pressing F6 when asked and installing the SATA drivers. This should get the Windows installer to see the Raptor and allow him to install Windows onto it. The motherboard BIOS may need to be set to allow SCSI/RAID booting or "Other Device" booting. Different motherboards often have different terms for this.
\Dan