Re: New drive



Thanks

for the info.


Rod Speed <rod_speed@xxxxxxxxx> writes
nospam <nospam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
craigm <none@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes
nospam wrote:
Hi,
 I have just ordered a new drive, due tomorrow.
 I will add it to the slave connector and keep my current hdd (which
has  3 partitions) as the boot drive. This one is just for extra
storage.
 I assume it will come with a diagram to link it as a slave.
 Do I have to fdisk it?
 Do I then have to format it using the command
 format g:   ?
 or will it all be done?
 Just plug it in and go!
 Thanks


The answer depends upon your OS and your hardware setup.

But, you may have to change jumpers on the drive. There may or may
not be documentation with the drive, depending upon how you purchased it
(OEM vs. retail package). You either need to be setup as the slave
drive, or as cable select. That depends upon the existing drive and
cable. Yes, you will have to 'fdisk' it. You will have to create a
partition. The exact method depends upon your OS.

Yes, you will have to format the drive. It may not be G: however.
This depends upon your operating system and how you setup your
system and partitioned the drive.

It will not all be done because there is no way the manufacturer
knows what OS you are using and how you want it partitioned and what
file system you want. On the other hand it does not need to be
difficult for you to do

If you specify the OS you have, what PC you have, how the original
drive is jumpered and the type of IDE cable, and what you current
partitioning and drive letters are, someone may be able to give you a
specific answer.

You need to provide more information to get a useful answer.

Sorry

it is Win2k sp4

I have a 30 GB drive labelled as C: G: H:

I have two CD-ROM's labelled as D: E:

I bought the hard disk from the company I bought the PC from many years ago. a
web based retailer (http://www.cclonline.com).

Yes the new 120GB drive will start at label I: though if possible to avoid
confusion I would like to start it at J:

You can change that letter in Win2K after you have partitioned and formatted it.


I was thinking of four 30 GB partitions.

Its generally better not to have lots of partitions per physical drive now.

It will work fine however.

The current 30 GB disk is obviously the boot disk but I don't know how it is
linked. I guess as the master.

Yes.

Assuming hard disks have links on them in the 21 century. Cant they plug and
play and work it out for themselves.

They can if jumpered for cable select.

Your original drive may or may not be,
depending on how old the system is.

I'd check how the original drive is jumpered, and check that
the new drive is jumpered cable select before you install it.

Guess not - probably cause more trouble than its worth.

Nope, it is in fact the simplest approach.

The current 30 GB disk is attached to the end of the ribbon cable and the plug
is marked master.

The ribbon cable plug that is in the 'middle' is marked slave.

Thats normal with a modern 80 wire ribbon cable.

I guess I just use the DOS command box to type fdisk and format J:

Its better done using Disk Management in Win2K.

are there any switches to the format command that I need?

Nope, and if you do it in disk management it will ask you to specify the format you want, NTFS or FAT32.

The disk is just for data.




.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: New drive
    ... I will add it to the slave connector and keep my current hdd (which has 3 partitions) as the boot drive. ... Do I then have to format it using the command ... The current 30 GB disk is obviously the boot disk but I don't know how it is linked. ...
    (comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage)
  • Re: New drive
    ... >>> I assume it will come with a diagram to link it as a slave. ... you will have to format the drive. ... > I bought the hard disk from the company I bought the PC from many years ago. ... > I was thinking of four 30 GB partitions. ...
    (comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage)
  • Re: New drive
    ... >> 3 partitions) as the boot drive. ... >> I assume it will come with a diagram to link it as a slave. ... >> Do I then have to format it using the command ... > The answer depends upon your OS and your hardware setup. ...
    (comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage)
  • Re: fdisk problem...
    ... > The thing is that after booting from a bootable w98se cd that I made, ... > that the system didn't discover two active partitions, ... If I put the bootable Win98se cd in the slave Liteon ... > rw drive the system boots okay but, I get the same problem as when ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.general)
  • Re: Having Problems with Win 7 Drivers?
    ... Pre-partition the hard drive you're going to use for 7 into two partitions in NTFS. ... Insert the Seven disk and when it auto starts the install quit the install. ... Copy the entire dvd to the second partition on the newly formatted slave drive. ... If anyone in this group suggests Ubuntu, run the other way and don't look back. ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.vista.general)