-
March 10th, 2008, 04:20 AM
#1
IDE makes me suicidal
So I was attempting to get a faulty IDE HD, an aged IDE Optical drive (on the same data ribbon b/c there is only one IDE input on the board) working together in my fairly recent desktop. My primary hard drive is SATA. For starters, jumper settings apparently override everything in the BIOS. *facepalm* Also, there is no jumper setting on a SATA drive, therefore unless it is designated primary in the BIOS....it's a pushover. If I set them both (IDE HD and Optical drive) to cable select, neither show up. If I set the optical drive to Master and the HD to Slave, the HD shows up and behaves but the optical drive doesn't. If I set the Optical drive to slave and the HD to master, they both show up and seem to work but then the IDE HD completely overrides the SATA drive and it engages in the never ending disk-check that I can't even opt out of because it takes so freaking long for it to load drivers for my USB keyboard.
I ordered a decent SATA CD/DVD burner earlier which should be here in a couple of days so I won't even have to worry about it, but it was interesting to run into such a headache.
At some point I want to *attempt* to repair this screwed up HD if possible and load linux on it rather than partition off my primary HD. Any suggestions? Most of this I just figured I'd share, but if anyone has some thoughts that could help me out I'm quite open to advice.
-
March 10th, 2008, 08:22 AM
#2
SATA doesn't have master/slave. It's dependent on which connector you use. Set the IDE drives correctly, HD on master and CD on slave.
There should be a boot order switch in you BIOS. That will tell which drive to boot from. I have a machine with SATA and IDE harddisks and it boots of the SATA without any problems.
NB If the IDE disk has any bad sectors on it, throw it away.
Oliver's Law:
Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it.
-
March 10th, 2008, 09:22 AM
#3
Hi folks,
I am suspecting that the fact that the IDE HDD has problems of its own might be a part of the issue?
I would forget the optical drive. Create a folder on your SATA drive with your diagnostic and repair tools in it. I would use the ones from the manufacturer rather than Windows
With the SATA as the master/boot and the IDE as slave you should be able to run the diagnostics/repair from the SATA drive.
As SD~ says, if you find bad sectors then the drive cannot be trusted. Personally, I keep them if the motherboard is OK, which this one is. I have made some good friends and some serious money replacing HDD MoBos and recovering the data
-
March 11th, 2008, 09:55 PM
#4
Try a USB-to-IDE cable to run chkdsk. Works for me all the time.
“Everybody is ignorant, only on different subjects.” — Will Rogers
Similar Threads
-
By gore in forum Newbie Security Questions
Replies: 11
Last Post: December 29th, 2003, 08:01 AM
-
By One Who Watches in forum AntiOnline's General Chit Chat
Replies: 4
Last Post: July 20th, 2003, 11:09 AM
-
By bugsthecat in forum AntiOnline's General Chit Chat
Replies: 3
Last Post: May 25th, 2003, 10:10 PM
-
By -DaRK-RaiDeR- in forum Site Feedback/Questions/Suggestions
Replies: 7
Last Post: January 21st, 2003, 02:33 AM
-
By Noble Hamlet in forum AntiOnline's General Chit Chat
Replies: 1100
Last Post: March 17th, 2002, 09:38 AM
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|