first of all good day,
my answer in that question is simple.
The computer recognized the hard disk drive as a normal.
he can be a slave nor a master.
thank very much,
that is only my opinion.
This question is highly dependent on the specifics of your hard drive. Some hard drives have jumper set ups where theres a setting that has no jumper. If that's your type of hard drive then there should be no issue. Either way the computer should boot regardless of jumper setup. It just may not be able to load the Operating System.
ya mom by adam amos
On a hard drive, you have options to set a jumper. It is a plastic piece that contact two pins on the plug side of the hard disk. This jumper specifies if the hard disk is Primary, Secondary, or Cable Select. If you select Primary, this is telling your computer to boot from this disk (Usually containing the operating system). Secondary is telling the computer that this drive is only for extra storage and cable select means your computer will determine based on the order of which it's plugged in. (Not recommended if you know what the drive is going to be used for)
How do you get a computer to boot up with no hard drive? What are the steps or what is the process of getting a hard drive installed into your computer if it is not bootable because of a missing hard drive.
A CD-ROM drive is not needed to boot the computer. Just put the hard drive first in the boot order in the BIOS.
Go to system settings when the computer starts to boot up, and then it will show you what drive is your hard drive. The hard drive is what the computer normally boots in unless changed and the letter is normally C:/
Because, you didn't choose the CD drive like a bootable, or the CD disk is not bootable.
If you add an additional HD to your computer, the second drive becomes the slave drive because the computer must boot from the Master drive
Make sure you are installing the older hard drive as a second drive, not the initial drive used for boot-up. Be aware that some Microsoft products have a dumb copy protection system that prevents you replacing faulty drives. You have to phone them for a new licence key if you alter hardware components. You may need to move a jumper to make the drive a "slave" not a "master" drive. Your computer will boot-up using its normal drive. It should boot up fine. If you can see the second drive you can then copy files off it. If you cannot see it, you may need to get into the BIOS setup and changes setting there. That's an advanced topic, not easily written about here.
1. Switch ON the computer. 2. Press F2 3. Select the drive you're using to boot.
The boot sequence order of devices is the order in which your computer will boot its devices. You can usually choose from the hard-drive, the disk-drive, and a few more options.
Your Bios has an option to boot from your DVD Drive or external drive. If the internal or external drive has no boot sector or disc with a boot sector the system will not boot. You will need to go into your bios at boot time most often by tapping your delete key or whatever option your motherboard bios requires and change the option back to boot from your hard drive.