Guest W. Watson Posted August 17, 2007 Posted August 17, 2007 Learned from various sources including the thread I started here, "Can W2K Be Installed on SATA Drives?" Let me start with an explanation of "the Hard Way". I have a P5NSLI ASUS motherboard that supports both IDE and SATA controllers. The key word is "both". I wanted to install W2K on the STATA HD, a 320G WS SATA drive. I had some fun trying to get to a point where the OS install asked how I wanted to partition the drive. I was stumped by this window that came up in the install: ============================== 76294 MB Dis 0k on bus 0 on atapi C:NIFS(Drv1_main) 76003MB<6360MB Free D:FAT32(Drv1_extra) 290MB<237MB Free 131070MB Disk 0 at at 0? on? bus 0 on atapi (I didn't copy the ? legibly) Unpartitioned space 131069MB =============================== What puzzled me is that the disk was showing about 76G of space, but yet I had 320G. In my sometimes dizzying attempt to get this far, I asked ASUS tech, the techs at the store I bought the MB at, and others what's this all about. Just continue on they all said. When you apply SP4, it'll take care of the discrepancy. Wrong! That was my IDE 80G HD from my previous system. I had mounted it safely, I thought, on the IDE controller thinking an install would choose the SATA master. Not so. Let me say, charitably, the contents of the 80G HD are no longer with me. (80/76 vs 320--Get it?) Instead it contains only W2K. I probably won't miss the data too much, since over the years I've moved the important stuff to my PC in the den. The world has changed in the four years since I last completely built a PC, etc. :-) I had a long discussion with the ASUS tech on how to get this right. Basically, and what seems the simplest way, is to pull the 80G drive. That will force the install to to the SATA drive. Then I'll clean (reformat) the 80G HD later (after hooking it up again). Here's the step by step procedure. Make sure you've taken care of IDE/SATA issues as above. Make sure you are booting from CD as first choice. Make adjustment as required. Most of this should be good for any MB. 1. Fire up the PC 2. Place their driver CD in the drive 3. Wait for the initial ASUS screen to appear, and finally a prompt to boot from the CD. Press a key to start the boot. (Of course, you need to set BIOS to know to start the boot from a CD before trying a HD or other device. 4. Wait for a prompt to choose 32-bit, 64-bit or DOS prompt 5. I selected 32-bit. Wait for a prompt for a floppy 6. Place a 3.5" (fresh) floppy disk in drive-A. Wait for 8 files to be copied to the CD Continuing with the install of W2K 1. Insert the W2K CD 2. Press the boot button when asked 3. Hit F6 soon 4. A prompt for the floppy appears. 5. Put the floppy in and continue 6. Select the "required" sources. In my case there were two. Select one, then loop around to select the second. 6. Press F8 to continue the install 7. Continue on until you get to the partitioning. Make sure you don't fumble the ball like I did. 8. Continue to the end of set up. Change boot priority in BIOS to first boot from HD (see HD selection in BIOS too) before you examine that it works. *You're not finished yet. See next paragraph.* Here's what to do after you get W2K installed (From Patrick above). I haven't tried this, but it looks sound. Be sure to apply SP4 and these two below to your new install before connecting to any network. Internet included. (sasser, msblast) http://download.microsoft.com/download/E/6/A/E6A04295-D2A8-40D0-A0C5-241BFECD095E/W2KSP4_EN.EXE http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/MS03-043.mspx http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/MS03-049.mspx Then Rollup 1 for Microsoft Windows 2000 Service Pack 4 http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?amp;displaylang=en&familyid=B54730CF-8850-4531-B52B-BF28B324C662&displaylang=en Then http://support.microsoft.com/kb/305098 -- Wayne Watson (Nevada City, CA) Web Page: <speckledwithStars.net>
Recommended Posts