WTF SATA? RAID & A BBQ
NeonSpyder
"Das est NTLDR?" Join Date: 2003-07-03 Member: 17913Members
in Off-Topic
<div class="IPBDescription">Acronyms FTW!</div>Right, so I've got a tech problem and I beg for assistance from the hive-mind of techno-wizardry.
Basically every time I plug in my new SATA drive my computer locks up. If I plug it in and then boot, it takes about 10 minutes to get to the windows sign-in screen, periodically stopping and then starting to load windows along the way.
If I plug the drive in while in windows, the computer locks up. Unplugging the drive fixes the issue.
My questions is wtf?
The Sata HDD I currently have works fine
I have tried two different cables, I tried the three other SATA ports on the mother board. I can't figure out wtf is wrong with it.
Tech Specs:
Abit AX8 socket 939 motherboard
amd64 +3000 cpu
corsair DiMM DDR2 Ram x2 512mb
the current HDD is a seagate and the new one is western digital.
Windows XP pro SP2
I beg assistance, this has been screwing with me my entire sunday <img src="style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/sad-fix.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=":(" border="0" alt="sad-fix.gif" />
Basically every time I plug in my new SATA drive my computer locks up. If I plug it in and then boot, it takes about 10 minutes to get to the windows sign-in screen, periodically stopping and then starting to load windows along the way.
If I plug the drive in while in windows, the computer locks up. Unplugging the drive fixes the issue.
My questions is wtf?
The Sata HDD I currently have works fine
I have tried two different cables, I tried the three other SATA ports on the mother board. I can't figure out wtf is wrong with it.
Tech Specs:
Abit AX8 socket 939 motherboard
amd64 +3000 cpu
corsair DiMM DDR2 Ram x2 512mb
the current HDD is a seagate and the new one is western digital.
Windows XP pro SP2
I beg assistance, this has been screwing with me my entire sunday <img src="style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/sad-fix.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=":(" border="0" alt="sad-fix.gif" />
Comments
I doubt it is the hard drive that is bad. <img src="style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/sad-fix.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=":(" border="0" alt="sad-fix.gif" />
Also, funny story, but I don't have a windows cd to use, as a matter of fact the main reason I need this second hard drive is to store my files while I format the first one for a Debian install. I suppose I could download the Debian install dvds, burn them, use them to format the new HDD in FAT or something so both OS's can read it, then move the files over and proceed with the format.
Oh hey, wait, I've got a knoppix CD kicking around somewhere, that has some format functionality doesn't it?
Also, funny story, but I don't have a windows cd to use, as a matter of fact the main reason I need this second hard drive is to store my files while I format the first one for a Debian install. I suppose I could download the Debian install dvds, burn them, use them to format the new HDD in FAT or something so both OS's can read it, then move the files over and proceed with the format.
Oh hey, wait, I've got a knoppix CD kicking around somewhere, that has some format functionality doesn't it?<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Do you have your mobo manual? I'd check and make sure it doesn't want the plugs in a certain arrangement.
If you have any way to format the harddrive without the other one being plugged in, I would definetly try that first though.
Cross your fingers.
(good advice about the manual)
Next step: get knoppix CD, format new HDD.
But the likely issue why its taking 73 years to boot into Windows is because you don't have the correct drivers installed. Windows has default drivers for IDE and SATA controllers, but they are usually very slow (1-3 MB/s instead of 100-300 MB/s) and very buggy. Goto the MFG website and download the latest chipset / IDE drivers for your motherboard and it should fix the problem.
Im pretty sure it isnt a driverissue because i know i had all the appropriate drivers and it was working just fine with good read/write speed's up untill one day.
Ofc it could be different for you tho.
I'm betting this is his problem, after looking up the motherboard technical specifications I see the following
'Storage Interfaces ATA-133 - connector(s): 3 x 40pin IDC, Serial ATA-150 - connector(s): 4 x 7pin Serial ATA'
From what I understand SATAII is twice as fast as SATA-150 making that a 3.0GB/s (or there abouts) SATA-300... otherwise I've just piled through a load of crap to read lies.
Full specification sheet for the motherboard if anyone else has any other ideas <a href="http://shopper.cnet.com/motherboards/abit-ax8-motherboard-atx/4014-3049_9-31243243.html?ar=o" target="_blank">ABIT AX8 Specifications</a>
Have you got a link to the SATA drive you bought which isn't working correctly for you NeonSpyder? Maybe this could help clear up the problem.
Are you sure that you have only Sata HDDs plugged into your PC?
Running IDE and Sata HDDs at the same time usually causes lockups or errors upon booting.
Are you sure that you have only Sata HDDs plugged into your PC?
Running IDE and Sata HDDs at the same time usually causes lockups or errors upon booting.<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
I have 2 IDE and 2 SATA drives in my fileserver at home with windows XP and it's never had a problem...
Hmm, I what mobo/bios do you use?
'Storage Interfaces ATA-133 - connector(s): 3 x 40pin IDC, Serial ATA-150 - connector(s): 4 x 7pin Serial ATA'
From what I understand SATAII is twice as fast as SATA-150 making that a 3.0GB/s (or there abouts) SATA-300... otherwise I've just piled through a load of crap to read lies.
Full specification sheet for the motherboard if anyone else has any other ideas <a href="http://shopper.cnet.com/motherboards/abit-ax8-motherboard-atx/4014-3049_9-31243243.html?ar=o" target="_blank">ABIT AX8 Specifications</a>
Have you got a link to the SATA drive you bought which isn't working correctly for you NeonSpyder? Maybe this could help clear up the problem.<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
If you do the bits to bytes conversion, SATA II can do about 375 Mbytes/sec in bursts. the 3000 thing is just measured in gigabits (8 bits = 1 byte.) But 3 IDE connectors? Never seen that before in my 13 years of building custom machines.
<!--quoteo(post=1650004:date=Sep 17 2007, 07:08 AM:name=Faskalia)--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Faskalia @ Sep 17 2007, 07:08 AM) <a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=1650004"><{POST_SNAPBACK}></a></div><div class='quotemain'><!--quotec-->Ok, I might get flamed for this, but:
Are you sure that you have only Sata HDDs plugged into your PC?
Running IDE and Sata HDDs at the same time usually causes lockups or errors upon booting.<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
This might be true on trash budget boards from shady manufacturers, but I have had several machines with both IDE and SATA 150 and SATA II drives in them at the same time and had no issues whatsoever.