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Gilly
January 24th 06, 07:20 PM
I just received a new Dell XPS computer and put in a second SATA hard drive
for storage. I installed the 2nd drive and bios picked it and recognized it.
I formatted the drive in disk management with NTFS. Now when I boot the PC,
it takes forever to boot up, about 1 minute. I checked the connections on the
mainboard and it's on SATA1, original drive is on SATA0. Should i have
installed or formatted it differently? Any suggestions would be GREATLY
appreciated! Not sure what to try.

R. McCarty
January 24th 06, 07:26 PM
If the additional drive causes an extended Boot time, then I would check
BIOS setup for boot devices and ordering. Perhaps, BIOS is attempting
to boot the new drive before the original SATA drive.

"Gilly" > wrote in message
...
>I just received a new Dell XPS computer and put in a second SATA hard drive
> for storage. I installed the 2nd drive and bios picked it and recognized
> it.
> I formatted the drive in disk management with NTFS. Now when I boot the
> PC,
> it takes forever to boot up, about 1 minute. I checked the connections on
> the
> mainboard and it's on SATA1, original drive is on SATA0. Should i have
> installed or formatted it differently? Any suggestions would be GREATLY
> appreciated! Not sure what to try.

Tsuniper-X
January 24th 06, 08:21 PM
(From [Tsuniper-X])
Try pull of the new hard drive. If the booting time is fast enough, then
check the pin for the drive. It determines whethe the drive is Master, Slave,
etc.
--
[W]hat''s
[C]hris''s
[D]ecision
for
[C]ompany?
Tsuniper-X -> ID -> 1.


"Gilly" wrote:

> I just received a new Dell XPS computer and put in a second SATA hard drive
> for storage. I installed the 2nd drive and bios picked it and recognized it.
> I formatted the drive in disk management with NTFS. Now when I boot the PC,
> it takes forever to boot up, about 1 minute. I checked the connections on the
> mainboard and it's on SATA1, original drive is on SATA0. Should i have
> installed or formatted it differently? Any suggestions would be GREATLY
> appreciated! Not sure what to try.

R. McCarty
January 24th 06, 08:31 PM
SATA (Serial ATA) is a single channel, device technology.
There are no M/S jumpers on SATA drives.

"Tsuniper-X" > wrote in message
...
> (From [Tsuniper-X])
> Try pull of the new hard drive. If the booting time is fast enough, then
> check the pin for the drive. It determines whethe the drive is Master,
> Slave,
> etc.
> --
> [W]hat''s
> [C]hris''s
> [D]ecision
> for
> [C]ompany?
> Tsuniper-X -> ID -> 1.
>
>
> "Gilly" wrote:
>
>> I just received a new Dell XPS computer and put in a second SATA hard
>> drive
>> for storage. I installed the 2nd drive and bios picked it and recognized
>> it.
>> I formatted the drive in disk management with NTFS. Now when I boot the
>> PC,
>> it takes forever to boot up, about 1 minute. I checked the connections on
>> the
>> mainboard and it's on SATA1, original drive is on SATA0. Should i have
>> installed or formatted it differently? Any suggestions would be GREATLY
>> appreciated! Not sure what to try.

The Unknown P
January 24th 06, 08:55 PM
You are joking aren't you? One minute boot time and you're complaining? LOL
LOL. That's absurd. Be satisfied. Even on a clean install\system I can barely
achieve under one minute let alone with added hardware to be detected and
set. LOL If that's all you have to complain about be thankful. It could be
much worse.
--
There are three types of people in computing, those that can count and those
that can't.

Ken Blake, MVP
January 24th 06, 09:11 PM
Gilly wrote:

> Now when I boot the PC, it takes forever to boot up, about 1 minute.


One minute is "forever"?

One minute is excellent, and most people's computers take at least that
long. Learn a little patience.

--
Ken Blake - Microsoft MVP Windows: Shell/User
Please reply to the newsgroup

Michael Stevens
January 25th 06, 10:01 AM
In ,
The Unknown P <( )> replied with a ;-)
> You are joking aren't you? One minute boot time and you're
> complaining? LOL LOL. That's absurd. Be satisfied. Even on a clean
> install\system I can barely achieve under one minute let alone with
> added hardware to be detected and set. LOL If that's all you have to
> complain about be thankful. It could be much worse.

Even if your support information is correct and helpful; when you snip all
the post you reply to it makes it very difficult for anyone not familiar
with the thread to know what you are talking about. Please include enough of
the post you reply to to make your reply relevant.
--
Michael Stevens MS-MVP XP

http://www.michaelstevenstech.com
For a better newsgroup experience. Setup a newsreader.
http://www.michaelstevenstech.com/outlookexpressnewreader.htm

Gilly
January 25th 06, 07:51 PM
I set up the second drive as a storage drive with the utility CD that came
with the drive. The PC seems to be getting worse and now seems to take for
ever to shut down as well (4 minutes on both startup and shutdown,
progressively worse). Should I set-up the second drive as bootable as well
and still boot off the original drive? Should I re-install and format and let
the OS pick-up the new drive and let it recognize and set-up the way it wants
to?

"R. McCarty" wrote:

> If the additional drive causes an extended Boot time, then I would check
> BIOS setup for boot devices and ordering. Perhaps, BIOS is attempting
> to boot the new drive before the original SATA drive.
>
> "Gilly" > wrote in message
> ...
> >I just received a new Dell XPS computer and put in a second SATA hard drive
> > for storage. I installed the 2nd drive and bios picked it and recognized
> > it.
> > I formatted the drive in disk management with NTFS. Now when I boot the
> > PC,
> > it takes forever to boot up, about 1 minute. I checked the connections on
> > the
> > mainboard and it's on SATA1, original drive is on SATA0. Should i have
> > installed or formatted it differently? Any suggestions would be GREATLY
> > appreciated! Not sure what to try.
>
>
>

Paul Knudsen
January 28th 06, 05:46 AM
On Wed, 25 Jan 2006 11:51:03 -0800, "Gilly"
> wrote:

>I set up the second drive as a storage drive with the utility CD that came
>with the drive. The PC seems to be getting worse and now seems to take for
>ever to shut down as well (4 minutes on both startup and shutdown,
>progressively worse). Should I set-up the second drive as bootable as well
>and still boot off the original drive? Should I re-install and format and let
>the OS pick-up the new drive and let it recognize and set-up the way it wants
>to?
Kind of drastic. Do a virus/malware scan first.
--
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http://www.democraticunderground.com/top10/

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