I used to have this ancient computer that wouldn't recognize more than I believe a 40GB drive. So it wouldn't recognize the 80GB drive I put in it. Once I booted the machine from a floppy, linux would see the drive without any problems. So once your older computer is booted into linux, you shouldn't have any trouble accessing the drive. At least that's been my experience.

On 11/20/2011 0:15, Michael Havens wrote:
I gave up on the external hd aspirations because my mobo probably won't boot a USB. You say that older mobos have problems recognizing larger disks.... 160 gb is probably one of those. Could I partition it maybe and it would see more of it... is there a work around?

On Sat, Nov 19, 2011 at 8:32 PM, Jim March <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Let me add some hard disk advice, regardless of whether you do
    IDE/PATA or SATA.

    Laptop-class drives (2.5") are smaller and slower than a
    desktop-class drive (3.5").  BUT the laptop drives are much
    tougher, esp. in terms of drop-resistance, and put out a lot less
    heat.

    You'll pay more for the gigabyte for a laptop-class drive.

    If you're using a laptop IDE drive in a desktop computer, you need
    an adapter to make it work.  Costs $5 at Fry's Electronics.  On
    SATA drives the connectors are the same for laptop or desktop.

    If you have a motherboard without SATA support, a SATA PCI adapter
    card is very cheap - about $20 tops (Fry's has tons).  It can be a
    much, much better idea to buy a SATA drive plus PCI adapter now as
    opposed to an IDE drive for an older motherboard.  By jumping to
    SATA right away you gain the ability to upgrade to a hotter
    SATA-support motherboard later.  And usually, the SATA PCI adapter
    card will let you run a big SATA drive on a motherboard that
    doesn't otherwise support big IDE/PATA drives, because the SATA
    PCI adapter takes over a lot of the hard disk support firmware
    from the motherboard.

    The best hard disks today are made by Western Digital, in my
    opinion.  A very close second is Seagate.  Comparatively speaking,
    the Japanese such as Hitachi, Toshiba and Fujitsu suck.  In terms
    of reliability Samsungs from Korea are actually better than the
    Japanese drives.  Maxtor is Seagate's "budget line" - avoid.

    If you're buying an external drive that is NOT made by one of the
    above drive-makers (LaCie, Buffalo, SimpleTech, many MANY more)
    then you're buying a pig in a poke.  You have no idea what brand
    of actual drive is in there unless you either crack the case open
    (breaking the warrantee most likely) or you use software tools to
    probe the make/model info.  If however you buy a Western Digital
    external drive fr'instance, you can take it to the bank that
    there's a WD drive in there.  Same concept for all the rest,
    except that Seagate owns Maxtor and might slap a Maxtor drive
    under a Seagate-brand chassis.

    Hope this helps,

    Jim


    On Sat, Nov 19, 2011 at 7:18 PM, JD Austin <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

        IDE, EIDE, and PATA (Parallel ATA) have the same interface.
        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallel_ATA

        Older motherboards may have trouble recognizing larger drives.
        IDE/EIDE/PATA is on it's way out.... get SATA if you have a
        choice since it's unlikely you'll find a motherboard with EIDE
        on it.
        Open Box= someone else didn't like it.
        I'd go SATA if I were you (supports native hot swapping).
        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serial_ATA
        I often use laptop drives for such things.

        On Sat, Nov 19, 2011 at 18:48, Michael Havens
        <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

            this is the ad:
            
http://www.macconnection.com/IPA/Shop/Product/Detail.htm?sku=8239542&cm_mmc=Base-_-8239542-_-Used-_-WN3&ci_src=14110944&ci_sku=8239542
            
<http://www.macconnection.com/IPA/Shop/Product/Detail.htm?sku=8239542&cm_mmc=Base-_-8239542-_-Used-_-WN3&ci_src=14110944&ci_sku=8239542>



            On Sat, Nov 19, 2011 at 6:44 PM, Michael Havens
            <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

                I have a sales guy telling me at
                http://www.macconnection.com/ that an eide drive
                (theirs) will work on an IDE system. Is this true. As
                stated before I don't know if my system is ide or
                eide. I have an IBM NetVista computer. This is what
                they're trying to sell:


                  Open Box Western Digital 160GB Caviar SE EIDE 3.5"
                  Hard Drive - 8MB Cache



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