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| Tags: detected, drive, hard drive, hardware, operating system, sata, second boot, windows, windows xp |
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#1
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| SATA Drive Detected at Second Boot
hi readers I am facing a serious issue regarding my operating system. I am struggling around with SATA drive. I observed that when I boot my pc which is having windows xp as a operating system does not detect my hard drive which is SATA at first bootup. But when I try to have a second time reboot, my drives are getting detected. I know that it is strange but immediately detected right after i rebooted second time. This kind of problem is certainly irrregular, forcing second reboot inorder to get my sata drives detected. |
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#2
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| Re: SATA Drive Detected at Second Boot
Use this checklist to determine whether the BIOS has detected your hard drive, and to troubleshoot situations where it has not. Typical Symptoms: After the Gateway/eMachines splash screen:
Only "Hard Drive not found" or "Missing hard drive" error messages conclusively indicate a hard drive has not been detected. Other symptoms could be a result of bad hard drive data or BIOS boot order settings. Use proper Electrostatic Discharge procedures Drive jumper settings are not applicable to SATA (Serial ATA) drives. |
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#3
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| Re: SATA Drive Detected at Second Boot
I guess this can help you:
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#4
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| Re: SATA Drive Detected at Second Boot Try to Check RAID configuration If your computer has a RAID configuration: Check RAID BIOS. If status is listed as Normal in the RAID Volumes section, there is not a RAID issue. If you are unable to enter RAID BIOS or a RAID volume is not listed in RAID Volumes section, a RAID volume has not been configured. Check the list of drives and RAID types. If the required number of drives for your RAID type, plus any non-RAID drive(s) included in configuration are not listed, continue with this checklist.
This checklist is only applicable to RAID when BIOS has not detected one or more of the required RAID volume drives. Unlike system BIOS, RAID BIOS, if accessible, will present a clear indication of the hard drives that have been detected. RAID BIOS will also present the status of any configured RAID volumes. |
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#5
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| Re: SATA Drive Detected at Second Boot Have you checked Hard Drive settings in your Bios: Check hard drive settings in BIOS: To check BIOS settings: Start the computer. Press the F2 or F1 key repeatedly until BIOS Setup Utility Main page is displayed. A message is displayed on the screen as to which key should be pressed. Make sure that the ATA/IDE Mode (or similar setting) is set to Enhanced or Native, not Legacy. If the computer has RAID, make sure that RAID is Enabled. The RAID enable option may be included under either Configure SATA or RAID settings. Check the Drive Configuration (or similarly named) page, or the Standard CMOS Features page to make sure all hard drives are detected. If all hard drives are listed, exit the BIOS. If all hard drives are not listed, continue troubleshooting. If a drive name contains odd characters, size appears to be incorrect, and cannot web browse the product name, assume the drive, cable, or port connection is defective. There may have been a read failure associated with one of those components. If the configuration has more than one hard drive: Note the port name for each detected hard drive. This information is required to troubleshoot undetected hard drives connected to other ports. Note the name of the first hard drive listed. In a non-RAID configuration, this drive should be the drive from which operating system starts. The Drive Configuration page (or similarly named page) provides a list of all detected serial ATA (SATA) and Parallel ATA (PATA) devices that have been detected. If this page identifies all installed hard drives, Desktop Hard Drive not detected is not the proper checklist. |
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#6
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| Re: SATA Drive Detected at Second Boot
Strange problem but you can go for Use Disk Management Use Disk Management in Windows XP to perform disk-related tasks, such as format, change drive letters, convert to a dynamic disk, delete a volume, create a new volume, color code the disk detail pane, and for adding a second hard drive. You can refer for using Disk Management to configure basic disks in Windows XP at: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/309000 for additional information.
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