VOGONS


First post, by jheronimus

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So, it's becoming quite a tradition that every time I get a new piece of hardware, it doesn't work 🤣

I've bought a used 80GB IDE HDD from Seagate 7200RPM, 2MB cache. It's set as Primary Master.

I've patched my motherboard with an LBA patch. The name of the motherboard is LuckyStar 5ITX1 rev 2.0, the chipset is Intel 430TX.I think the patch should work, because now when I go to "Standard CMOS Setup", I have an option to set the hard drive mode to LBA.

My only other drive is a Sony CD-RW drive, set as Secondary Master.

As I try to boot, my BIOS hangs at detecting the Primary Master (i.e., the new Seagate drive). Meaning, it won't advance, it won't skip, but I can enter the setup menu without rebooting.

I've checked the jumpers, they're the same as they were on my previous hard drive (just to be clear, I switched the hard drives, I don't have them both installed).

Then I googled, and someone suggests manually setting the drive so that BIOS thinks it's a 528M drive. I've tried that, and now the BIOS detects the secondary master (as the primary master doesn't need to be detected) and hangs. Again, to be clear, at this point my boot sequence starts with a CD-ROM, so I'm definitely not waiting for a missing OS.

What should I do? Thanks.

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Reply 1 of 6, by jheronimus

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OK, so I used the jumper from the old HDD to set the new hard drive to 32GB mode and it works now. Does that mean the LBA patch didn't take or what?

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Reply 2 of 6, by kixs

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LBA is "everything" over 512MB so it does work. Only there are other BIOS limits... there was 8GB limit, then 32GB and 136GB...

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Reply 3 of 6, by JayCeeBee64

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Looks like your patched BIOS has a 32gb limit. Bummer 😐

At this point you have 3 options:

- Use the Seagate hard drive with the 32gb jumper set. It will work without a problem.

- Use a Drive Overlay. This is software that allows access to a hard drive's full capacity.

- Install a controller card with its own BIOS. Your hard drive gets detected with full capacity and can be used.

The choice is yours to make.

Ooohh, the pain......

Reply 4 of 6, by alexanrs

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Can't you just set the HDDs parameters manually to limit it to 32GB?

Reply 5 of 6, by jheronimus

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alexanrs wrote:

Can't you just set the HDDs parameters manually to limit it to 32GB?

Like I said, I already did that, so now I have a working Windows installation. But I'd rather have all 80 gigs at my disposal

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Reply 6 of 6, by alexanrs

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Oh sorry, I'm a bit tired due to the christmas festivities. I believe you can use an ODD even with the parameters set manually to use its full capabilities.