The 13 gig is I think 5400 RPM, and the 80 gig I know is 7200 RPM. I thought about the power supply, but if it wasn't putting out the power it's supposed to, then why would the larger hard drives operate normally when plugged directly into the motherboard?
When in the mobile racks, there's power going through, but for some reason either the motherboard doesn't want to accept the data transfer through the mobile rack, or the mobile rack can't transfer the data fast enough to the motherboard's liking.
I could get my PSU checked I suppose. I tried tonight a SATA mobile rack, just to see if it would work, but nothing. Then again the SATA didn't want to work even when plugged directly to the motherboard. So maybe either the PSU is faulty, or the mobo is screwed.
If no one minds reading a long post, I'll write my endeavour to build a new system.
Started out back during the summer. I bought a Gigabyte board, same model as I have now. Got a 3800+ single core AM2 processor, and 2 gigs of OCZ memory. When I finally got the PSU, case, and a couple other things, I slapped the computer together, but the system would crash on it's own, sometimes as soon as it booted. I double checked every single connection for nearly 2 days, and found nothing wrong. I concluded the board was bad. Returned it and got another one, but I had another problem with that one. The Windows setup always hung up, no matter what I was doing. Even plugging the hard drive straight to the motherboard wasn't working. Turns out that with this second board, the problem was more than likely the OCZ memory, pure junk if you ask me, but I didn't know it at the time. So, I returned the whole works, got my money back, and left.
Couple weeks later, I buy an ASUS board, another 2 gigs of OCZ memory (at this time I still didn't know the brand was sh*t, and I had returned the last 2 gigs I had), got a 3500+ processor, and attempted another build of the system. Sure enough, wouldn't work. Couldn't figure out why. Spent a whole weekend and part of the following week looking over every single connection, every single component, and nothing. When I managed to get Windows setup finished, it would crash, and one time it gave an error that the BIOS wasn't ACPI compliant. Figured it was a bad BIOS. Returned the board and processor, got an advertised mobo/processor combo, and installed it.
The board and processor I have now is that mobo/processor combo. 240 bucks for a dual core AM2 with a motherboard. That's a steal. I had the same problems as before, where I couldn't get Windows to even install, and where it would hang, even when the hard drive was plugged directly into the motherboard. I did some digging around, researching the models of the hardware I had installed, and came across customer reviews with problems similar to my own, regarding the brand of memory. It was then that I concluded the brand of memory was bad. I returned it, bought a gig of Kingston, which I should have done in the first place, and now I've got Windows installed on several hard drives.
Only problem now, my mobile racks don't work with my larger drives. I suppose it could be the PSU, but I don't know how. It's a 480 watt Antec. Never had problems with Antec supplies in the past. Dished out the power I demanded of it, and had other swear by them in times where power wasn't stable. But then again at this point, I'm willing to re-examine every component. I already know my IDE cables, mobile racks, and hard drives are working fine. The memory is working fine. Graphics, working fine. My soundcard is working fine. So it's either the motherboard, not wanting to work with mobile racks, or the PSU is faulty.
I suppose the mobile rack would need to pull more juice from the connection than the hard drive would because of the power needed to run the fan to cool the hard drive. The thought has crossed my mind, especially since when I looked at the hard drive labels, it says 12VDC IS .90A for my 160 gig hard drives and 250 gig hard drives, and the 13 and 80 gig hard drives are .45A and under. I know my 160 gig drives work with the mobile racks because I had these same mobile racks and hard drives in my last system, and that PSU was only a 350watt Antec, and I know that PSU is still good and going strong.
Dracho, something you just said triggered off in my mind just now, about your wife's board. I tried installing a SATA drive tonight, because I want to learn how to set up SATA drives. I followed all the instructions to the letter that both the motherboard manual and hard drive manual told me to do, and when Windows had finished formatting the drive, during the file copy process, it crashed. Didn't do anything. This hard drive was plugged directly to the system. I also tried using a mobile rack for it. I think I mention this earlier in the post.
Does anyone think that maybe, just maybe, the motherboard brand, Gigabyte, isn't all that good, and maybe the board is the problem when it comes to getting my mobile racks working? I know there's power going to the mobile racks, but for some reason, data doesn't want to be transmitted. So I don't know if it's my motherboard or my PSU is faulty.
If you guys had to guess, which would it be?