Re: Does the 300GB segate harddisk work on Dell Poweredge 400sc?

Tech-Archive recommends: Repair Windows Errors & Optimize Windows Performance



I haven't followed all of your threads.
I have a few questions for you.

Does you Bios recognize the 300 GB drive as 300 GB?
Does the computer have USB 2?

Forget the USB enclosure.
I doubt that your USB is USB 2.
USB enclosures do not work accurately enough to do what you want to do.
A USB attached drive cannot boot, so you will have to put the drive in the
computer anyway.

Connect the 300 GB drive to your computer using the CD cable.
See if the Bios recognizes the full size.
If your Bios does not show the full size, you have to buy a card.

1. is not going to work.
2. won't work because only letters can be used for drive letters.
You can't have C1, etc.

The computer will not boot from the 300GB because copying partitions does
not copy the Master Boot Record.

See if the Bios recognizes the drive.
Remove the drive not containing C and D.
After it does, copy C to the 300 GB drive.
<pause>

Why don't you use disk cloning software to move the C drive to the 300 GB
drive?
--
Ronald Sommer

"cfman" <comtech.usa@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:utY0$CzfHHA.284@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
: Hi all,
:
: Thanks a lot for many of your expert suggestions and excellent
advice(please
: refer to my previous posts and your kind replies).
:
: Just before I start, I have a question about the 300GB segate harddisk,
will
: it work on Dell Poweredge 400sc, which is a PC bought a few years ago and
I
: think it's quite old?
:
: I am currently installing a USB converter on it, so I can use it as an
: external drive. I attach my plan of attack below:
:
: I haven't started yet. I guess I will be able to format it when using it
via
: USB as external drive.
:
: But then later I will need to use it to replace the current primary drive,
: and serve as new C drive, and then reboot,
:
: Will it have any troubles, according to my plan below?
:
: Thanks a lot!
:
: ------------------------------------------
:
: JCO and everybody,
:
: Bad news! I've just looked at my partitions, C(OS) and D(Program Files)
are
: unfornately on the same harddrive. Even if I combine them into a new C
: partition, it doesn't gain me anything, because both of these two
partitions
: are currently fully loaded. An estimate of the free space after combining
is
: about 50MB out of a total space of approximately 38GB.
:
: Originally, I planned that if C, E, F are on the same harddisk, I can
remove
: the data files on E and F, so after combining the partitions, all the 38GB
: will be for OS, so it will have a lot free space.
:
: Now, since C and D are on the same harddisk, I cannot remove those program
: files. So there is no gain.
:
: Now I am planning to do the following:
:
: 1. Attach my new 300GB harddisk as a USB external drive to the PC;
: 2. Create three partition on 300GB harddisk, call them C1, D1, E1, for OS,
: Program Files and Data, respectively(Please note that I have to keep the
: Program Files on D, since otherwise I will screw up many applications). I
am
: thinking of making C1 to be 30GB (vs. the original 11GB), D1 to be
70GB(vs.
: the original 27GB), and allocating the remaining space to E1 (for data);
: 3. Duplicate the content on C precisely and exactly onto C1;
: 4. Duplicate the content on D precisely and exactly onto D1;
: 5. Without rebooting, change the letter of C to be C2, and change the
letter
: of C1 to C, hence finish the swap;
: 6. Without rebooting, change the letter of D to be D2, and change the
letter
: of D1 to D, hence finish the swap;
: 7. Shutdown the PC. Remove that harddisk(of C and D) physically, and use
the
: 300GB harddisk as a replacement of that very harddisk;
: 8. Reboot back. (Since I made exact copy of C and D partitions onto the
: 300GB harddisk, I should be able to successfully reboot the system).
: 9. The remaining are just housekeep task. I am done with joys, not with
: tears!
:
: Are the above procedures well-thought and fail-proof?
:
: I am not sure about steps 3 and 4: C and C1 have different sizes, which
: software will allow me to do an exact duplicate for partitions with
: different sizes? Without having used PM, Ghost,Acronis, etc. before, I am
a
: little bit hesitant.
:
: Could the experts here confirm my plan and so I will be able to
jump-start?
:
: Thanks a lot and have a great weekend!
:
:
:
:
:

.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Does the 300GB segate harddisk work on Dell Poweredge 400sc?
    ... then work on the other partitions. ... With the new drive plugged in as slave/secondary, boot the floppy, ... Does the computer have USB 2? ... :: Just before I start, I have a question about the 300GB segate harddisk, ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.general)
  • Booting XP(E) to USB without any Bios support
    ... Now I am writing what I do, to succeed there with USB boot. ... Bios supports booting from USB, this new method from s4e to fake the MBR ... Connect an USB harddisk to your working XP or install first a fresh XP ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.embedded)
  • Re: boot from USB
    ... But if the BIOS tries to boot from lilo on the USB drive's ... USB harddisk should be straightforward. ... Have you tried Enabling "legacy USB support" in the BIOS? ...
    (comp.os.linux.hardware)
  • Problems with HP dx5150/ATI Xpress 200 chipset
    ... ATI USB ... For all the installs I made the following changes to the default BIOS ... basic functionality, including network working. ... APIC settings did not seem to affect obsd boot or installs, ...
    (comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc)
  • Problems with HP dx5150/ATI Xpress 200 chipset
    ... ATI USB ... For all the installs I made the following changes to the default BIOS ... basic functionality, including network working. ... APIC settings did not seem to affect obsd boot or installs, ...
    (comp.unix.bsd.openbsd.misc)