You didn't state the model of HD nor Chipset.
Nevertheless, I had similar problem with my sata drive. There is one jumper that sets transferrate of the HD. In my case, it was set on 3Gb/s and Chipset (Nforce4) supports up to 2 Gb/s. The jumper sets it between 1.5 and 3 Gb/s (In my case maxtor 160 Gb).
Didn't work until I've set it on 1.5 Gb/s (which is, BTW, impossible to achive unless we talk double RAID)
Chaky
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By name, model and capacity, we have same HD (160 Gb). There is one jumper there I described that is causing the problem.
Chaky
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That is a windows issue with sata drives. I bypassed it in a very strange and annoying way (had to figure out by my self). I sugest the next steps:
Plug in both drives
In BIOS setup disable the new drive (Windows will be able to "see" the drive regardless of this setting)
Disable ANY RAID arrays
Booting should go normal now.
Use Windows disk managment to create the partition on the new drive.
Format the paritition. Have in mind that you will not see a new drive listed in windows explorer until the partition is created.
Now you can reboot and reenable the drive in BIOS setup.
Chaky
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I set up the RAID with the Hitachi on RAID 0 and the WD on Serial ATA 1 (of 2) and it booted into the OS with both HDs connected.
This is not clear to me. Did you set up RAID array level 0 or by "RAID 0" you ment Serial ATA 0 channel?
If you ment Serial ATA, have in mind that you need to CREATE A PARTITION on a new drive in order to see it in OS.
If you ment RAID array 0... RAID arrays "merge" the drives together, thus making it look like 1 drive with combined capacity.
As I said, XP has problem with most SATA controllers, because the technology in newer than XP.
Chaky
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