There was no cable with the drive.  I'll look into getting one of the
newer cables.  Now I have to be gone for the next two days, thanks for
the posts, I'll try the other suggestions when I get back on Tuesday...

-brandon

On Sat, 2003-02-15 at 06:41, Ed Wilts wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 15, 2003 at 02:58:29AM -0800, Brandon Dorman wrote:
> > 
> 
> Other people are addressing other issues, but I'll tackle one.
> 
> >     So I bought a new Seagate 80GB one.  I installed it with no problem,
> > just set the jumper in the same place as the old Quantum, same cables
> > and everything.  
> 
> There is a known issue with using the same cables.  There's a good
> chance that your original cable was a 40-conductor cable, whereas with
> newer drives, you'll need the 80-conductor cable.  That cable likely
> came with the drive.  You'll notice it's the same width but much
> smoother, and the ends are color-coded (blue for the motherboard end, I
> think grey for the slave and black for the master).
> 
> If you use an old cable with the new drives on a recent motherboard that
> supports DMA66 or later, you will have drive issues, but not like what
> you described - they'll bite you later.
> 
> >     Also curious is that when the computer starts up it shows it as only
> > being 10GB.  My computers an aging Gateway with a PIII 450...
> 
> This might be an issue too.  You could have a BIOS issue here, although
> I would not have expected that with a PIII.  If the BIOS can't figure it
> out, it's unlikely that Linux or Windows will be happy.
> 
> -- 
> Ed Wilts, Mounds View, MN, USA
> mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Member #1, Red Hat Community Ambassador Program
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