Originally posted by: Penguinus
Thanks a bundle oneshot. I guess I'll just stop being lazy and temporarily scavenge an old floppy drive off one of my other comps...
Originally posted by: everman
Just to clarify, by drivers I mean your motherboard SATA chipset driver (I am assuming you are using a SATA mobo connector). You don't need a floppy if you can figure out how to create a custom winXP install disk with the driver you need. I have never done that but would like to try it, sometimes referred to "slipstreamed" I think?
Originally posted by: Anubis08
I just bought a new 160 GB sata Seagate OEM and installed it on a new computer as a single drive. I have an MSI K8N Neo2 PLatinum mobo, but I just put in the windows CD and it formatted and loaded on its own: No drivers needed. The only thing you need drivers for is a Raid setup. It actually was easier than the IDE hds I have isntalled. It is completely NOOB friendly.
The worst of it is a lot worse than that, oneshot47Originally posted by: oneshot47
Originally posted by: Anubis08
I just bought a new 160 GB sata Seagate OEM and installed it on a new computer as a single drive. I have an MSI K8N Neo2 PLatinum mobo, but I just put in the windows CD and it formatted and loaded on its own: No drivers needed. The only thing you need drivers for is a Raid setup. It actually was easier than the IDE hds I have isntalled. It is completely NOOB friendly.
It all depends on the mobo, but the worst it should be is having to install one set of extra drivers during setup. Certainly a lot easier than manually entering the drive geometry, like you used to have to do....
Ah yes, it was so simple. He didn't need to press the F6 key, even!hi mechBgon
thanks for all your help.
first of all - i've built a few pcs before and never used memtest86 - its great - i'll be using it a lot from now on!
secondly, i found the problem thanks to your other thread. i'm not sure if it made any difference, but i aslo installed all the sata drivers during the windows installation - although i definitely installed an sata disk before on a different box without having to do this (but it wasnt win2003 - so maybe that needs it)
but where i think the main problem was - was in the bios settings - here are the settings that worked for me (this one is without raid - im waiting on a second disk to set up the raid):
note - these are from memory (and from your other thread) - i dont have the box in front of me atm:
Under Integrated Peripherals -> OnChip IDE Device:
IDE Bus Master - Enabled
OnChip Serial ATA - enhanced
OnChip Serial ATA Mode - ide
SATA RAID ROM - Enabled
Advanced BIOS Features:
Hard Disk Boot Priority - 1. Bootable Add-in Device
Bootable Add-in Device - Onboard sata
Boot Other Device - Enabled
Originally posted by: mechBgon
The worst of it is a lot worse than that, oneshot47Originally posted by: oneshot47
Originally posted by: Anubis08
I just bought a new 160 GB sata Seagate OEM and installed it on a new computer as a single drive. I have an MSI K8N Neo2 PLatinum mobo, but I just put in the windows CD and it formatted and loaded on its own: No drivers needed. The only thing you need drivers for is a Raid setup. It actually was easier than the IDE hds I have isntalled. It is completely NOOB friendly.
It all depends on the mobo, but the worst it should be is having to install one set of extra drivers during setup. Certainly a lot easier than manually entering the drive geometry, like you used to have to do....Check out this info from a guy who finally managed to get his Abit P4 board (which does natively support SATA!) to actually boot from the drive:
Ah yes, it was so simple. He didn't need to press the F6 key, even!hi mechBgon
thanks for all your help.
first of all - i've built a few pcs before and never used memtest86 - its great - i'll be using it a lot from now on!
secondly, i found the problem thanks to your other thread. i'm not sure if it made any difference, but i aslo installed all the sata drivers during the windows installation - although i definitely installed an sata disk before on a different box without having to do this (but it wasnt win2003 - so maybe that needs it)
but where i think the main problem was - was in the bios settings - here are the settings that worked for me (this one is without raid - im waiting on a second disk to set up the raid):
note - these are from memory (and from your other thread) - i dont have the box in front of me atm:
Under Integrated Peripherals -> OnChip IDE Device:
IDE Bus Master - Enabled
OnChip Serial ATA - enhanced
OnChip Serial ATA Mode - ide
SATA RAID ROM - Enabled
Advanced BIOS Features:
Hard Disk Boot Priority - 1. Bootable Add-in Device
Bootable Add-in Device - Onboard sata
Boot Other Device - Enabled(although he did anyway)
Starting to see where I'm coming from? I think my post count would be several thousand lower right now if SATA were always "simple" to set up.It's currently the biggest single problem I'm trying to help people with, and not just newbies.
PATA. If it ain't broke... yeah.![]()