1 / 13

That Shiny New Drive

That Shiny New Drive. Or a drive from an older system. History. We bought our new hard disk drive Right size for BIOS and OS Right connections (PATA/SATA) We installed our new drive Stripe to Pin 1 Power connector Master/Slave jumper set correctly – or-

ardara
Télécharger la présentation

That Shiny New Drive

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. That Shiny New Drive Or a drive from an older system

  2. History • We bought our new hard disk drive • Right size for BIOS and OS • Right connections (PATA/SATA) • We installed our new drive • Stripe to Pin 1 • Power connector • Master/Slave jumper set correctly – or- • Serial ATA connector and power connector • We checked that the new drive “shows up” in CMOS, if you want to look

  3. Or • We opened up the case on an older computer and removed the hard disk drive • We cannot install an older drive and expect to boot (Win98/XP) from it in our new computer – but we can recover files/data from that drive if we know where to look

  4. Where to Look • XP Documents: d:\Documents and Settings\<user name>\My Documents • Vista/7: d:\Users\<user name>\Documents • At the same level as Documents will be Favories, Desktop and other directories • Can not copy programs from old drive – installation puts files in Program Files, .DLLs and Registry entries

  5. Physical Connection • Here is the back of a PATA disk drive: Jumper Block 40-pin connector Pin 1 Power connection

  6. Another Drive • Jumper location on back of drive

  7. Data Power

  8. Drive Maximums • Prior to 1995 – 528 MB • Prior to Jan 1998 – 8.4 GB • Prior to Sept 2002 – 137 GB • Now, no limit with 2^48 bits for address, but we stop at 2.2TB • UEFI allows over 2.2TB drive

  9. Physical Installation • Power down the system • Determine the max size disk system will tolerate – may be in motherboard book • Look at existing drive(s) for capacity • Pick controller, make sure jumper is set, plug in cable, add power connector • Power on the system

  10. Boot Order • A CMOS setting, maybe its own page, or part of a page • You get to CMOS at startup by pressing the DEL key (or maybe the F2 key) This could look like: IDE-0 IDE-1, etc.

More Related