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my old internal sata hd is not being recognized in my brand new machine. i'm pretty sure it's not the hd because the old tower didn't recognize a new hd that i purchased and installed as a new master drive, either. i don't hear any suspicious buzzes or other noises and the power cables definitely work. are there any driver i need to instal first? thnx

2007-05-14 02:49:03 · 4 answers · asked by king_mob23 1 in Computers & Internet Hardware Other - Hardware

Terry M-

yes i'm trying to add another sata drive to a computer which already has a sata drive in it-two drives.

i'll try your soution tonight. should i be worried that my system doesn't recognize that another drive is connected?

2007-05-14 06:55:59 · update #1

4 answers

Update:

I wouldn't think that you should be worried that your computer doesn't recognize your second SATA drive, but I would try looking at the BIOS setups to set the controller to expect "bare" drives instead of RAID.

I have had this exact problem when trying to add an "External SATA" drive to a SATA controller that really only supported RAID - it didn't work well for single drives which is really bad for me. I know it isn't a really great solution, but you might think about keeping your SATA drive as your main drive and exchanging your new drive for an IDE version.

I hope you have better luck than I did.

*****************

You are saying that you are trying to install an old SATA drive in a brand new computer which probably also has a SATA hard drive. So that would give you two SATA drives.

SATA doesn't have "master" and "slave" settings - each drive has its own cable and its own channel to the hard drive controller.

If your motherboard harddrive controller supports RAID, you may need to turn that off because you are trying to set up two different drives as separate volumes. If there is a message when your computer starts to set up the controller or you can look in the BIOS setup screens, try looking for a "Just Bare Drive" (JBOD) setting which is the non-RAID setting.

After getting to Windows, use the "Disk Management" (right click on "my Computer", click "manage", select "Disk Management"). From there you should be able to see and activate the partition on the old drive.

Good Luck

2007-05-14 05:33:06 · answer #1 · answered by TahoeT 6 · 0 1

Like when you start your computer up does it do nothing but go to a black screen saying "Hard drive not recognized" or something like that. If so, when you installed the restore disk or master drive it probably wasn't able to work because something isn't be installed correctly. do you have the installation disk for your new Hard drive? if you are using your old hard drives it wont work. Also check to see if your hard drive is loose or is not connected correctly.


I hope it helps

2007-05-14 03:07:43 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

As soon as you start the computer Press DEL.
BIOS settings menu will appear.
Select Auto Detect Hard Disks.
Save Settings and Exit.
Don't mess up with other settings if you are not sure.
If you are using two Hard disks one will be MASTER ( with the OS ) and another Slave. You have to change the small links in the hard disks. .

2007-05-14 03:17:04 · answer #3 · answered by essbebe 6 · 0 1

First, attempt the force on a different computer. that assist you to understand if the subject the force itself or the computer. If it particularly works, then merely reproduction the information to the recent force using the different computer. If it particularly works, you could attempt to reset the USB ports on your modern-day computer with the aid of booting into secure Mode, using the gadget supervisor to uninstall all your USB ports and then restarting the computer. this might reset all of the USB ports and can get them working back. If the different computer won't recognize the force, then the force itself is undesirable, this may be one among 2 themes. The controller that runs the exterior force may be undesirable. in case you open the exterior force (does this as a final selection basically), you have to be waiting to eliminate the actual not uncomplicated force from the case and then connect it directly to your computer as a 2d inner gadget. (many times it ought to have a similar connectors as your CD/DVD force. You disconnect the CD force and quickly connect the not uncomplicated force in its place so which you will reproduction off the information.) If it nevertheless is merely not referred to as a inner force, then the force itself is undesirable and you at the instant are not likely to recuperate something.

2016-11-28 02:38:46 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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