Re: reading specs for Asus P5LD2 motherboard?



On Apr 1, 3:03 pm, John Smith <crassono_s...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Tue, 1 Apr 2008 09:41:35 -0700 (PDT), Flasherly <gjerr...@xxxxxx>
wrote:



On Mar 31, 10:09 am, John Smith <crassono_s...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I'm a baby at home building pcs. I've never done one but I'm getting
the itch. As a start I cobbled one together in the ComputerDirect
Configurator. I used the Asus P5LD2 motherboard. I realize the new mbs
use mostly SATA drives, but I want to use some of my collection of
PATA drives from my old pc. In particular I want the OPTION of
slapping a cloned c: drive in from my old XP system and booting from
it, rather than installing XP from scratch.
Asus specs:http://www.asus.com/products.aspx?l1=3&l2=11&l3=185&l4=0&model=515&mo...

Storage/RAID
Intel ICH7R Southbridge:
- 1 x UltraDMA 100/66/33
- 4 x Serial ATA (3Gb/s)
- RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 5, RAID 10 and Intel Matrix Storage technology.
ITE 8211F controller:
- 2 x UltraDMA 133 support four hard drives

The way I interpret the above is that I have 1 PATA connector on the
board which I must connect my CD and my CD R/W to. Unless I cable my
cloned drive in place of one CD drive, OR stick the cloned PATA drive
on a RAID connnector and try to boot from that, that's the only choice
I have for hooking up my PATA drive to boot from.

First, is it true that I need to hook CD and CD R/W drives to my one
PATA connector? Does that '1 x UltraDMA' mean I get an IDE cable
capable of driving two IDE devices, master and slave?

Can someone make this a little clearer for me?
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Besides you, there are others who apparently could stand having a
clearer conception of IDE assignments.

I've a similar board - an ASUS for an A64, though - that has three IDE
connectors: two normal, one is 2-drive RAID. Not being a big fan of
RAID of any type, the 3rd wouldn't pick up optical devices, anyway.

Newegg isn't carrying the MB. If IDE manageability is a necessity -
another way of going after it is through a PCI add on controller, such
as SYBA.

Also, another thing that stands out is that with this the type of
board - it's something where you *do* want REV 2.

Have a look (a quick over gives me the feeling not to rule out the
possibility that a better board is to be had in this instance)

http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductReview.aspx?Item=N82E16813131048...

Good grief, those reviews are all over the place! Actually, I have no
idea what I am doing, I just picked a motherboard that would take a
fast Intel CPU and had RAID on it. I'm really glad I started hanging
out here. Right now I'm ambivalent about getting into the home-build
arena at all at this point. My 6 year old MSI6398 mini-tower is
running XPpro just fine right now. I THINK most of my nagging
insecurity was remedied by a new power supply. But the recent struggle
has got me interested in, at least, finding out how to put together a
cuttingedge machine. WHEN to make the jump is the question right now.

Another question from a beginner: how much good will a Dual Core CPU
do me running XP with almost all my software apps about 5 years old?
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I do that also, periodically rebuild myself a "hypothetical" system -
in fact, from the reviews at newegg. Jump in on a popular MB for user
reviews and take it from there - can end up at totally different ends
(figuratively speaking) based on this or that suggestion, how
"discerning" it appears, and where one's expectations lead to. Last
time, mine was a budget or averaged "bang for the buck" bias on an
Intel dualcore, an E-series it seems, possibly E2250 (Conroe?) with a
Gigabyte motherboard (which would be a "hypothetical" first - I've
been stuck up till now buying ABIT, ASUS, or MSI). Both drew a high
quantity of reviews - a lot of people buying them means more likely
proven true, with the Intel well regarded for an easy overclocker.
I've DDR, so DDR2 was also found reasonably priced, and I don't want
more than a value PCI-express videocard (under $50). ATI and NVidia
were both considerations, although I've mostly been buying ATI the
past few years. Anyway, all together, it came in at under $250. With
a little comparative shopping - Intel dual cores look to me well
positioned for performance value on the dollar.

(fwiw - my last was a near as to a micro I could build for the
cheapest possible - Celeron D, DDR, AGP, ASUS MB. All under $200,
including case, and at it for a blown PS replacement - a $30 SPARKLE/
FORTRON. Basically it serves a large flatpanel for videos and music.
Massive HDs or an extra nice soundboard, of course, is more -) )
.



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