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I would have unplugged the CD, imaged the drive to drive, rebooted with the new drive in the old drive's slot and the CD hooked back up. Although a clean install is always "best" in the long run, it is so hard to justify via time it takes....
_________________________
Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau.
Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
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Jeffry J. Brickley wrote: ...imaged the drive to drive...
Kinda hard to do when the old drive does not work.
Jeffry J. Brickley wrote: ...rebooted with the new drive...
Drive must be formatted with an OS before it can be booted from. This can't be done without the CD drive.
Jeffry J. Brickley wrote: ...CD hooked back up.
Does the CD suddenly work now?
Jeffry J. Brickley wrote: Although a clean install is always "best" in the long run, it is so hard to justify via time it takes....
With the exception of once, I've never installed one Windows OS atop another. Too much residual stuff left behind that causes problems later. I'd rather spend an extra 45 minutes up front rather than several hours later on.
"Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed" - 2 Timothy 2:15
"Judge not by the eye but by the heart." - Native American Proverb
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DavidCrow wrote: Kinda hard to do when the old drive does not work
then why bother hooking it up at all? If the drive is working, then it can be imaged.
DavidCrow wrote: Does the CD suddenly work now?
well, if you replace the disks without trying to share IDE hosting, yeah it does.
other than that you are back to checking master/slave issues with IDE, or you can drop the old drive into an IDE case on the USB and copy anything that remains after you have your OS installed.
Perhaps I misunderstood the problem, but the way it was stated, you made it sound like the main issue was sharing IDE and the drive was failing, but not completely dead. If completely dead, remove it, move the new drive into it's IDE slot and don't bother trying to share IDE channels.
The other possibility is that it is the IDE controller, not the drive or CD which is why you can't seem to read either.
_________________________
Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau.
Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
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Jeffry J. Brickley wrote: then why bother hooking it up at all? If the drive is working, then it can be imaged.
Windows somehow got corrupt. Hooking it up as a slave, Windows XP will attempt to repair the bad spots on the drive. I can then copy data files from the old drive to the new drive. I can then reformat it and use it as secondary storage (going on the assumption that the old HDD does not have any physical problems).
At one point in time, the old HDD was removed from the picture. At that point, I simply wanted to boot from the CD so that I could format the new HDD. That's when I put the HDD issues aside and started down the "CD drive is messed up" road.
"Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed" - 2 Timothy 2:15
"Judge not by the eye but by the heart." - Native American Proverb
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DavidCrow wrote: Can the CD drive and the HDD share the same IDE cable?
Yes. I believe the Hard disk has to be the first on the cable, then set the CD to be the slave.
Truth is the subjection of reality to an individuals perception
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is there anybody who can help me to and an additional ide controller to intel 195 motherboard.
i have connected 2 SATA HDD and 2 combo drives with my system, and i want to add an additional IDE to my system and my system is having only 1 IDE controller. is there any way yo increase IDE controller.
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a PCI based IDE card. You might be hard pressed to find a plain one because most have the same low end raid setups as the mobos use. Any raid card that supports JBOD (Just a Bunch Of Drives) can be used as a normal IDE controller.
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I had a Promise Ultra100 TX2 card in an old computer which only had ATA/33 on the motherboard (440BX chipset). That was a fine card. If you wanted to boot Windows 2000 or XP from it, though, you needed to supply Setup with a floppy disk with the drivers.
It's been discontinued but its replacement, the Ultra133 TX2[^] should still be available.
If you're going to start adding additional controllers, though, you should probably consider switching to SATA disks (where possible).
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is there anyboby who can suggest me how to control electronic electricity kwh meter through computer or any other way.
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vikramjeetpta wrote: ...is there anyboby who can suggest me how to control electronic electricity kwh meter
Like the one on the side of your house, or on the pole?
"Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed" - 2 Timothy 2:15
"Judge not by the eye but by the heart." - Native American Proverb
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Well, that's easy enough... Just turn every light and every other electric device ON inside your house and I'll bet the numbers on the meter will tick faster... Also, you can turn OFF every electric device in the house and the numbers will tick slower -- might even stop!
How's that for control?
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Can a PCI card (Universal 3.3 volt) card be used in a PCIX slot?
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I'm not sure, but my PCI-X card will work in a standard PCI slot, so I'd assume the reverse was true as well. IIRC PCI-X just added another 32 bits of datachannel and pumped the maximum clock speed.
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hi i am thinking of buying a 3d accelerator / gpu for gaming
dont know much about them
can anyone please guide me which will be the best buy
thanks
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thank you sir
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thank you sir
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Was hoping the hardware gurus could provide some insight into this comparison.
dual 15,000rpm drives setup with raid-0
vs
single SATA 10,000rpm drive with databurst cache
These will be used on a development machine for code compilation.
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I doubt that RAID-0 of two 15000 rpm drive could be beat by a single drive.
Farhan Noor Qureshi
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Well, I figured the dual raid-0 drives would be better. What I'm wondering, though, is how much better. i.e., if its only a minor improvement, it might not be worth the extra money to get the dual raid-0 drives.
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Dave Calkins wrote: dual 15,000rpm drives setup with raid-0
vs
single SATA 10,000rpm drive with databurst cache
Depending on the drive... but generally single SCSI U320 single 15k runs at 87 MB/s, a RAID0 pulls about 140+MB/s. My fastest RAID0 was a 4 disk RAID0 of 15K U320 drives. It's average speed was 280 MB/s, and was a hardware RAID0.
A single 10k SATA runs at about 78 MB/s with RAID0 starting at 120 MB/s and going up.
_________________________
Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau.
Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
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Just purchased:
* AMD Athlon X2 64 3800
* 450 watt power supply
* Corsair XMS2 TWIN2x1024A-6400 (2x512)
I put these components together using the stock AMD heatsink and fan. These are the only components attached at this point other than a keyboard and speaker and power button.
When I try to boot this to get to the BOIS, it just makes repeated long beeps (or could be a long beep and short beep very close together as a get a click in the middle of the long beep). The manual says it is a problem with RAM or MB, but they are new and have been reported as compatible. I tried a stick of KByte 512 DDR2 PC2/533/400 and it did the same thing.
The power supply was first connected by the 20 pin connector and the 4 plug 12v connector for the CPU. After this did not work, I tried adding the four plug extension to make the 24 pin plug and still no change.
Any ideas of what it could be besides dead parts? It is not like there is a lot of components, just MB, RAM and power.
Is there any way to determine the CPU is install correctly and functioning? The CPU dropped right in and seem to go easy.
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Rocky Moore wrote: Any ideas of what it could be besides dead parts? It is not like there is a lot of components, just MB, RAM and power.
Either youi've got the RAM in the wrong slots, for instance in slots 3&4 instead of 1&2, or the RAM and/or sockets are bad. If replacing the memory does the same thing, you've probably got a bad motherboard.
I had two Gigabyte motherboards in last machine I built. Both of them exhibited problems where the machine would just hang a random. After replacing everything else in the machine (CPU, RAM, Video), I put the original stuff back in the machine and swapped the motherboard with an Asus. Worked like a charm. The machine has been running for two years straight without a single crash or lock up.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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