If you added a second hard drive make sure it's set as slave...you will see those pins at end of the drive
2006-10-23 14:39:47
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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It sounds as if it was an unformatted drive. If it shows up at boot, the jumpers (master, slave, CS) is configured correctly. It does sound as if it needs to be partitioned though. There isn't any boot sector. A quick way is as someone else suggested. Use the Administrative Tools to set the partition and logical drive.
If this is a new drive, it should have came with a utility disk to set the partition. Check the box. The instructions are pretty straight forward. Use this if the Windows Administrative Tools is a problem.
Good luck
2006-10-23 21:55:36
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answer #2
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answered by Brett S 2
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1. the drive jumper must be set correctly. Most computers need the first drive on the end of the IDE cable to be set as Master.
Drive in the middle connector on the IDE set to slave. (Except for some Compaqs, older eMachines, etc. that run as Cable Select, or, CS for the jumper) Cable select makes the end drive Master.
2. No CDroms on the hard drive IDE cable.
3. Upon boot, enter the CMOS Setup, and let the drives be AUTO selected. Must format the drives after that. After format, or partitioning, you should restart the system, so BIOS recognizes the drives.
2006-10-23 21:47:42
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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First of all check the cabling. If you use a flatband cable make sure you have the adapter plugged in correctly. You should always have the master drive be sittign closer to the controller and the slave at the end of the daisy chain. Then check the Jumber settings. The master drive jumpers need to be checked to because they will need to support master/slave mode as well! Most people only look at the jumper settings on the slave drive...
Lastly, check your BIOS settings. More recent BIOSs will auto-detect the drives...
2006-10-23 21:45:10
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answer #4
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answered by Joey Madison 2
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2014-10-18 12:58:08
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Check the slave/master settings... the two rows of four pins at the rear of the drive. Set this drive as the slave.
Just giving the same advice to build confidence in the answer.
2006-10-23 21:41:47
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Depends on how you added it! Was it pre formatted? Did you set the jumper right? If its a slave drive, make sure the original drive is jumpered to master and not cable select and the slave is set to slave. When you boot, you should see a brief description of both drives. After you have booted up, look in "my computer" to see if it shows.
2006-10-23 21:45:25
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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check the jumpers on the back of the hard drive thats the most likely problem most people forget to switch it to a slave drive, because its boxed as a master.
2006-10-23 21:39:00
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answer #8
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answered by mathewhp22 2
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Is it in the Disk Management app (control panel)? It's been a while, but I'm wondering if you have to format it to have Windows see it as a drive. I'm betting you do, since linux partitions don't show up as drive letters.
2006-10-23 21:45:29
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answer #9
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answered by geek49203 6
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There may be many reasons for this problem. I can give you a link that deals with hard drive problems. Some hard drive problems can be easily fixed yourself by using easily available tools. I found the info at http://fixit.in useful
2006-10-24 05:16:16
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answer #10
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answered by blsruthi 3
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