1. A slave drive is, indeed, the second drive in your computer. Your first hard drive is your master, and your second hard drive is your slave. It's designated by the IDE cable and jumper settings on the back of the hard drive. (e.g. you'd connect the IDE cable first to the master drive, and then to the slave drive. also, you'd set the jumper cables to their slave setting). In most cases (not always), unless you're dual booting, you'll want to run your operating system off of the first partition of your master drive.
Installing a hard drive consists of:Turning the computer off.
Mounting the hard drive in the computer's chassis (case).
Daisy-chaining the IDE ribbon cable from the old hard drive to the new hard drive.
Connecting a free power cable from the power supply into the new hard drive.
Checking the drive's manual for the correct jumper settings for a slave drive, and setting those jumper settings (manually on the back of the drive).
Turning the computer on and making sure that the BIOS correctly recognized the new drive.
Booting up into Windows and formatting the new drive from the Windows explorer.
2. You can install any program to your secondary (slave) hard drive. However, if you already have an operating system installed on the primary drive, you'll want to keep it there. If you have programs installed on the primary drive that you will want to move to the secondary drive, you'll have to uninstall them, and then reinstall them to their new location.
3. Installing a hard drive should not screw up your machine. However, if you've never done this before (or aren't an expert at it) then you should definitely back-up your important data to removable media such as a CD-R or zip drive, just in case.
4. Windows XP can format a partition as either FAT32 or NTFS. If your partition is over a certain size (I think it's 32 gig but I'm not sure) then WinXP will ONLY format as NTFS (although you can still format as FAT32 from DOS or Windows 2000). To format a new drive, simply right click on it from Windows Explorer and choose Format from the popup menu. The dialog box that pops up will notify you that it will be formatted via NTFS.
cscgal
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So in other words you're saying that adding a second drive will make both drives run an equally teeny tad slower than either would run had it been in a computer alone?
What about my scenerio. One of my machines has a RAID0 array with one drive using parallel ATA and another running off of serial ATA.
The mac I have now has 2 serial ATA drives. What's the advantage to this? (They're not using RAID but I'm probably going to set it up in the near future.)
cscgal
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One PATA, and the other SATA? How do you have that set up? An SATA adaptor? I'm assuming that would be a software based RAID set.
Yes, software raid. More specifically, the raid that's built into my motherboard. My motherboard comes with two IDE channels and two SATA channels, or whatever they're called. (e.g. IDE0, IDE1, SATA1 and SATA2)
IDE0 is connected to a 120gb PATA drive
IDE1 is connected to a dvd+rw which is dasiy-chained to a cd-rw (I know, this is bad)
SATA1 is connected to a SATA->PATA converter which is connected to a second 120gb PATA drive
SATA2 is free
Does that make sense? I really don't know much about this sorta stuff - just as much as I needed to know to get the thing to work.
cscgal
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I found a 160GB hard drive the manufacturer is Maxtor its a 7200RPM internal hard drive with a 8MB cache is that good enough to store mp3s,movies, and programs?
Yes, but makesure that the BIOS will support a 160 GB drive. Until very recently, 137 GB was the limit. Check your manufacturer's website to confirm compatibility.
TallCool1
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My computer was made May 2003 is that good, because I dont know where to check the compatibility at the website.
Where would I find out how much it supports?
And what would happen if it only supports 137GB?
Another thing is BIOS even needed to recognize the hard drive on XP?
There's no useful info on the eMachines site, but I got this from the Maxtor site: https://maxtor.custhelp.com/cgi-bin/maxtor.cfg/php/enduser/std_adp.php?p_faqid=960
I hope this helps.
TallCool1
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I answered that question already--in detail--in an earlier post. Check it out (end of page 1).
TallCool1
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Not to bash by any means, but that's just...odd. Mirror or Stripe? And it would be a hardware RAID if you're controlling things via the RAID BIOS on your motherboard.
To be honest, I've never heard of a split PATA/SATA RAID set, 0 or 1. 1 I could see, but not 0.
Makes perfect sense, just not the usual.
I'm sure she said RAID 0 on the last page.
Also the SiS 180 chipset supports pata/sata mix RAID 0,1,0+1. Dunno if this is what she has but....
Just a suggestion for cscgal, if you have the time:
You could get another sata-pata converter ($20) for the current primary HDD, and RAID 0 on sata. Then you could undo your:
"IDE1 is connected to a dvd+rw which is dasiy-chained to a cd-rw (I know, this is bad)"
of course you would have to reinstall the OS, but bigggg deal.
jjorgensen626
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