Please help a newb!

charlieg6

Junior Member
Jul 8, 2004
14
0
0
Hi all,

I'm building my first system, and when I try to load XP, it won't recognize the SATA drive. I looked around here
and saw that you have to put the SATA drivers on a floppy to allow XP to recognize the SATA drive- problem is, I didn't plan on
putting a floppy drive in this machine.

Is there any way around this issue? One other option I have is to install an old IDE hdd that I have lying around... I assume this would
allow me to install XP and then I could install the SATA drive with the CDROM in the XP hardware wizard?

Thanks for your help-
Charlie
 

PhoenixOrion

Diamond Member
May 4, 2004
4,312
0
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I had to work on 2 abit boards with a hitachi and maxtor drives and I had the same problems with the NF-7 and IC7. I got a lot of info from the Abit forums.

I remember the 2 main pages I had to work on were:

1. Advanced BIOS features: bootable add-in devices,
2. Integrated peripherals: onchip ide device (quite a few changes here), onchip pci device.
 

MrChad

Lifer
Aug 22, 2001
13,507
3
81
Spend the $10 and buy a floppy drive. Even if you leave it disconnected after you install Windows, it's the simplest and quickest solution.
 

TheGrandHooHa

Senior member
Jun 28, 2001
408
0
0
Originally posted by: magratton
You can also use a USB memory stick I believe....

Does Windows XP setup recognize USB sticks? I know that most mobos can boot off of them, but XP Setup may not load the drivers for them that early.

Still, if you give that a try, let us know how it turns out... I am curious.
 

So

Lifer
Jul 2, 2001
25,923
17
81
Doubt that the memory stick will work, just bite the bullet and have the floppy drive. I still don't see why people insist on not having them, unless they are building a shuttle box. They are still the most universally compatible transferrable media standard around. :confused: