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So, here's the coup: I'm not certain which of the two sockets in the motherboard (asus a7v133) the cable (flat, wide one) goes in?
The black one nearest the edge or the blue next to it..
Also, does anyone know what to look for to reset the bios?
Many thanks and sorry for being vague, i wouldn't be in this mess if I knew what I was doing ;)
Nick
Now browse through there and get a feel for the screen that cover hard disk related issues like DMA, primary/secondary/master/slave ... and terminology like that. Anywhere there do you see your seagate hard disk listed as available?
PS: Also, do you have a Windows 98 boot floppy disk by any chance?
Now that you are in the BIOS, find the boot sequence and set it to boot first from A:
Then save and exit
Put the floppy in and restart the computer. It will get you to an A prompt. Type in fdisk
(if the PC is set to correctly recognise the disk and the disk is not faulty fdisk will see the drive whether or not it is formatted)
When you type fdisk you may get a message requiring you to press Y or N. Go for Y for the moment. The next fdisk screen will give you options like creating or deleting partitions. You don't want to do either. Go down the menu and you find an option to view the existing partitions. Check that out and get back to me before you exit from fdisk.
With older versions of Windows you did also need to enable DMA for the hard disk in the Windows Device Manager. I have no idea about Linux, but if you are getting the message after the PC starts to load Linux then that may be something for the Linux forum. (But of course, as you say it's not in Linux)
Oh, and if they're "round" cables, there's a pull tag - don't pull on the cable as the pressure might not be even and can literally kill it, use the pull tag instead.
You can get a very good diagnostic program off Seagate's site. Put that on a floppy and run a full diagnostic on the hard disk (Don't use any other manufacturer's diags - use the Seagate one)
Is that the one where you can change the DMA? - I tried it and it detected the disk and had it set to DMA 5...
Nick
There is no alternative to using tweezers and getting the jumpers out. Seagate's website should give you the diagram of what the settings are for your model of disk.
The RAID port does not act like a normal IDE port so you may not see the same error (It acts more like SCSI and shows up in Windows as SCSI - and SCSI's don't show up as UDMA100 etc)
Just as an aside, what a lot of people don't know is that even when using an 80 pin cable if you connect the hard disk to the "middle" socket of the cable you won't get the same speeds from the hard disk as if you kept the middle socket free and connected the hard disk to one end and the mobo to the other.
I've got a lot of old mobos lying around. If I get a chance I'll plug in an Asus A7V133 Raid (is that the one?) and see how I can reproduce your error. But do I take it that the hard disk is working fine otherwise?
Just as an aside, what a lot of people don't know is that even when using an 80 pin cable if you connect the hard disk to the "middle" socket of the cable you won't get the same speeds from the hard disk as if you kept the middle socket free and connected the hard disk to one end and the mobo to the other.
I didn't really get that bit. I have the cable running into the blue socket next to the black one that is connected to the CDROM. The blue one is the furthest from the edge and is detected as the primary master...
Running the seatools on the primary ide port (the blue one I mentioned above) it detects it pretty quickly but I gave up waiting for it to find the drive when it was plugged into the raid port..
Make any sense?
Nick