Worth Saving my P-133?

gsiener

Senior member
Jun 14, 2000
436
0
0
Bear with me while I explain,

My parents just got a new computer so I took their old one to make an mp3 server. It's a Pentium 133 with 32MB ram, and I just bought a 60GB HD to put in it. I realized that the bios is old and probably wouldn't recognize it, etc, but I thought I'd try anyway. Well, I completely reformatted, made sure everything was running, then I went to add the new hd as a slave. I hook everything up, and it only recognizes the primary channel with 2 hds, but not the secondary channel with a cdrom and a zip drive. Interesting, I think. So I start tinkering, but to no avail. Screw it, I say, and take off the secondary channel completely. Well now the new 60GB hd isn't being recognized. And then the computer kept taking longer and longer to get through posting, and now it just hangs like 2 out of 3 times when I power it up. It doesn't even show video sometimes.

I've spent the better part of a day working on this, and I feel like things keep getting worse the more I try to fix them. Does anyone have any advice or experiences that may help me out? Also, could I have somehow damaged my new hd? I tried hooking it up to a friends computer and it didn't recognize it either, but it still powers up.

What the hell is going on here? I'm desperate.

Thanks for your time,
Graham
 

GregMal

Golden Member
Oct 14, 1999
1,427
0
71
Remove all from the primary and secondary IDE slots.
Boot from the floppy. Everything work OK?
Hook up the new 60 gig (jumpered) as master on IDE0.
Keep the floppy in the floppy drive. Reboot.
Does your BIOS recognize the new 60 gig HD? and does it boot to the
A: prompt? You're probably gonna have to use the utilities/software
that came with the drive (or downloaded from the internet) and install
an overlay on the new HD in order to use the whole drive.
Once installed it tricks/overrides the BIOS and your whole drive
is usable. Now I'm assuming you're using Win98 or above because you
have to use fat32 on such a large drive.
Once you get your new C: drive going, then add the Zip and CDRom to
IDE1..........
Greg