I actually do find this as a bug.
I have a 20G ATA drive in my system for backup purposes (I haven't spent the 
money, and don't really find it necessary to, on an external backup drive)... 
My primary drive is an 80G SATA.
Anyhow, when installing the system the installer finds the 80G as the primary 
drive and does assume the operating system to go on this drive; however, when 
GRUB is installed it installs to the ATA drive... then when I reboot the system 
for first boot to Kubuntu it gave me "Error Loading Operating System" so I was 
like "oh hell..."

However, I found that switching my drives in BIOS so the ATA drive was
primary gave me access to GRUB... why wasn't GRUB installed onto my SATA
drive? I don't think it's an error in the detection of the drives,
because the SATA drive was listed as the first drive within the
installer, but rather within the routine which installs GRUB on the
system.

-- 
Installer doesn't recognise SATA disks as primary.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/32357
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