After installing this converter the bios see's the drive but after
booting into winxp it doesn't show up. Partition Magic 8 can't
see it. When I say bios see's it I mean when the computer is
starting up it the screen show's it's installed and I can press the
tab key and get into the raid setup where it show's up but say's
there are not enough drives for raid. When I press del key
during setup and check bios there isn't anything that I can see
to enable the sata drive. Can someone advise me how to use
this drive?
czm wrote:
> After installing this converter the bios see's the drive but after
> booting into winxp it doesn't show up. Partition Magic 8 can't
> see it. When I say bios see's it I mean when the computer is
> starting up it the screen show's it's installed and I can press the
> tab key and get into the raid setup where it show's up but say's
> there are not enough drives for raid. When I press del key
> during setup and check bios there isn't anything that I can see
> to enable the sata drive. Can someone advise me how to use
> this drive?
>
> thanks
> czm
Serial ATA to IDE converter make and model number ?
URL of the place where you bought it ?
Make and model of motherboard ?
Which connector on the motherboard, is the converter and HDD
connected to ?
*******
In situations where a RAID connector is the only thing
available, the controller might be RAID0/RAID1 only, in
which case you'd be out of luck with one disk. Sometimes
you can select "JBOD" or Just a Bunch Of Disks, and use
a single disk in that mode. And sometimes, just the fact
that the disk is not a member of an array, makes it
available as a single disk in Windows.
If the drive is just a data drive, a RAID management
application running in Windows, can do the same kinds
of operations that the RAID BIOS offers. But in order
to use the RAID management software, the RAID driver
for the hardware chip, would have to be installed.
There are many possibilities.
The use of a converter, increases the number of
things that can go wrong. Not all converters work
properly.
"Paul" <nospam@needed.com> wrote in message news:f5k3ub$cr9$1@aioe.org...
>
> Serial ATA to IDE converter make and model number ?
> URL of the place where you bought it ?
>
That's IDE to SATA instead od SATA to IDE http://www.geeks.com/details.asp?invtid=SIL3611&cpc=SCH
>
> Make and model of motherboard ?
ABIT KV7-V
>
> Which connector on the motherboard, is the converter and HDD
> connected to ?
SATA1
czm wrote:
> "Paul" <nospam@needed.com> wrote in message news:f5k3ub$cr9$1@aioe.org...
>> Serial ATA to IDE converter make and model number ?
>> URL of the place where you bought it ?
>>
> That's IDE to SATA instead od SATA to IDE
> http://www.geeks.com/details.asp?invtid=SIL3611&cpc=SCH
>> Make and model of motherboard ?
> ABIT KV7-V
>> Which connector on the motherboard, is the converter and HDD
>> connected to ?
> SATA1
>
It is a lucky thing that one of the pictures for the adapter
has an interesting name:
The same chip is apparently used in the Abit Serillel2, so
you can Google on that product name, to find more comments
about how well the SIL3611 adapter chips work. In the figure
on the left, the tiny text suggests setting the drive to
MASTER.
The K7V-V appears to have a VIA 8237 for disk I/O.
The article here implies a RAID driver is used, even if
one disk is present. For the single disk to appear in
WinXP, you'll need the VRAID package download from
viaarena.com . Give that a try. SATA ports should be
enabled in the BIOS ("Onchip SATA Device" [Enabled]).
"Paul" <nospam@needed.com> wrote in message news:f5lmbb$jsk$1@aioe.org...
>
> http://www.viaarena.com/default.aspx...5&ArticleID=93
> http://www.viaarena.com/default.aspx...icleID=467&P=2
>
> HTH,
> Paul
>
Thanks Paul, the drivers got it working. It even works booting with Win98
startup disk. The package says "no need driver" so I wasn't expecting to
need drivers. It also said I can hot swap drives, but I wonder if I should?
czm wrote:
> "Paul" <nospam@needed.com> wrote in message news:f5lmbb$jsk$1@aioe.org...
>> http://www.viaarena.com/default.aspx...5&ArticleID=93
>> http://www.viaarena.com/default.aspx...icleID=467&P=2
>>
>> HTH,
>> Paul
>>
> Thanks Paul, the drivers got it working. It even works booting with Win98
> startup disk. The package says "no need driver" so I wasn't expecting to
> need drivers. It also said I can hot swap drives, but I wonder if I should?
>
> Thanks again
> czm
>
I wonder if hot swapping would really work smoothly under Win98 ?
I think I'd just be happy it was working :-) That is a big
enough accomplishment.
In article <467eeb95$0$16277$88260bb3@free.teranews.com>, czm
<czm@crazymonkey.com> writes
>Thanks Paul, the drivers got it working. It even works booting with Win98
>startup disk. The package says "no need driver" so I wasn't expecting to
>need drivers.
The dongle doesn't need drivers, but your motherboards's serial ATA
controller does.
> It also said I can hot swap drives, but I wonder if I should?
No. Hot-swap requires OS, driver and hardware support. You might get
away with it, but I wouldn't recommend it.
"Mike Tomlinson" <mike@jasper.org.uk> wrote in message
news:AEIzVpDExCjGFw6i@jasper.org.uk...
> In article <467eeb95$0$16277$88260bb3@free.teranews.com>, czm
> <czm@crazymonkey.com> writes
>
> The dongle doesn't need drivers, but your motherboards's serial ATA
> controller does.
>
>> It also said I can hot swap drives, but I wonder if I should?
>
> No. Hot-swap requires OS, driver and hardware support. You might get
> away with it, but I wouldn't recommend it.
>
> --
> (\__/) Bunny says NO to Windows Vista!
> (='.'=) http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut00...ista_cost.html
> (")_(")
>
>
I'm running Windows XP. I've only booted to windows 98 to see
if the drive is still there and it is. Hot swapping works in Win_XP.
Have you noticed all the refurbished Seagate drives for sale at Geeks.com?
It makes me wonder if the new drives are worth buying or even if I should
buy a Maxtor drive since they merged.
Has anyone bought a Seagate or Maxtor drive lately and had good or bad
luck? Let me know.
czm
czm wrote:
> "Mike Tomlinson" <mike@jasper.org.uk> wrote in message
> news:AEIzVpDExCjGFw6i@jasper.org.uk...
>> In article <467eeb95$0$16277$88260bb3@free.teranews.com>, czm
>> <czm@crazymonkey.com> writes
>>
>> The dongle doesn't need drivers, but your motherboards's serial ATA
>> controller does.
>>
>>> It also said I can hot swap drives, but I wonder if I should?
>>
>> No. Hot-swap requires OS, driver and hardware support. You might
>> get away with it, but I wouldn't recommend it.
>>
>> --
>> (\__/) Bunny says NO to Windows Vista!
>> (='.'=) http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut00...ista_cost.html
>> (")_(")
>>
>>
> I'm running Windows XP. I've only booted to windows 98 to see
> if the drive is still there and it is. Hot swapping works in Win_XP.
>
> Have you noticed all the refurbished Seagate drives for sale at
> Geeks.com? It makes me wonder if the new drives are worth buying or
> even if I should buy a Maxtor drive since they merged.
>
> Has anyone bought a Seagate or Maxtor drive lately and had good or bad
> luck? Let me know.
> czm
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
Recently bought several drives at FRY's Electronic$. There were Maxtor's -
factory sealed.