HDD performance problem, possibly IDE channel related

Discussion in 'PC hardware help' started by rliebhar, May 24, 2005.

  1. rliebhar

    rliebhar Member

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    Hi all - I recently purchased and installed a Seagate Ultra-ATA hard drive (120 GB, 7200 rpm) in an EMachines with a 2.6 GHz processor, 256 MB RAM, and a Western Digital 80 gig drive as the main boot drive.

    From the beginning, my new drive has been plagued by slow performance. Last night, I was copying LPs to the new drive through my soundcard. My audio software took the data into temp storage on my master drive with no trouble, but then required over a minute to save the file to my new drive (compared with 10-15 seconds on the main boot drive.) Furthermore, mp3 playback from this drive has been slow and "choppy" - I'm hearing a significant number of small clicks, lags and silences.

    I've checked my jumper settings on the drives (which share a cable to the same IDE controller on the motherboard), and they are correct; I've also ensured the absence of kinks in the data cable. (Also, the same mp3s play normally when copied to my C: drive, so I've eliminated corrupted files/storage as an issue.)

    I did notice, however, that my computer thinks the new drive (F:) is a slave on the *secondary* IDE channel, rather than a slave on the primary... even though it shares a cable and controller with the primary master, i.e. my original HDD. The primary slave is D:, my CD/DVD-R, and the secondary master is E:, my DVD-RW (installed aftermarket, replacing a factory CD-RW unit.) Could this IDE confusion be the cause of my problem? How might I go about fixing it? Thanks in advance for your help.
     
  2. ddp

    ddp Moderator Staff Member

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    have both hds on seperate cables
     
  3. rliebhar

    rliebhar Member

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    Thanks for the suggestion - I'm just about to try it. Before I do so... I just realized that I forgot to mention something even weirder. Windows detects the drive, but BIOS doesn't (!?!)

    Windows sees my IDE channel configuration as:
    Primary Master - original 80 gig HDD
    Primary Slave - DVD-R
    Secondary Master - DVD-RW
    Secondary Slave - new 120 gig HD

    BIOS, however, tells this story:
    Primary master - original 80 gig HDD
    Primary slave - none
    Secondary master - DVD-R
    Secondary slave - DVD-RW

    Your suggestion of a cabling issue makes sense... I just want to make sure that this new information doesn't change the solution, before I proceed. :)
     
  4. ddp

    ddp Moderator Staff Member

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    put both hds as masters on each cable with a rom drive as slave. make certain all drives are set as master or slave & not cable select
     

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