More information:
The master computer is an Emachines computer model number W3622
The current master hard drive is model number ST380815A5
The computer I am extrating this hard drive from is a Compaq Presario Prod#PW791AA
The soon to be slave drive is model number ST340015A
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I need novice directions on how to add this to my computer starting from scratch. I have the soon to be slave hard drive removed from the Compaq, but I need to know how to put it into the Emachines computer and make it the slave drive.
You can also contact me on AIM. My screen name is ThePrepH8er1990.
check the jumper at the back of the hard disk next to the socket of IDE. i think you should place the tiny jumper in the middle pins to make it a slave. another way is to just remove the jumper. this sometimes doesn't work but i assume it will. on SATA hard disks you just only need to plug in the SATA cable into one of the sockets on the motherboard next to the primary one.
One of the things computer users worry about most when buying a new computer is how to get the information off of their old one. While more recent operating systems come with handy software which claims to do this for you, it will not work on many older operating systems, and is not without its own shortcomings, problems, and pitfalls. There are also methods of transferring data from one computer to another - such as networking, uploading to an online storage area then downloading to the new computer, and even copying all of the data to CD or removable drive and transferring it manually - but these methods are time-consuming and cannot transfer actual programs and registry keys. Slaving a hard drive is probably the most effective method of transferring data from one computer to another, but only works with desktop computers.
Slaving a hard drive is actually easier than it sounds:
1.Locate the 80-wire ribbon cable connected to the hard drive.
2.In newer models, there will be a connection clearly labeled “SLAVE;” in older models, any of the existing connections will suffice.
3.Plug the hard drive into one of these connections.
4.In some cases, you will have to switch the jumper on the drive to be slaved into the SLAVE position; this is not the case with newer hard drives and computers.
5.Plug a four-wire power cable into the new hard drive. The power plug is multicolored and fits only one way.
6.Turn the computer on and browse to the My Computer, Computer, or similar icon. There, you will see a new drive (possibly D:, E:, F:, or something similar): This is your slaved drive, which you can access as you can any other drive, such as your CD-ROM.
Transferring data from an old computer to a new one is not the only reason to slave a hard drive; slaved drives have many uses. They can be used as storage, especially for large files, such as media files; because slaved drives can be accessed like any other drive, programs can be installed on, and run from, them as if they were a CD or the original hard drive; slaved drives can also be used as removable media for sharing data on more than one desktop computer, but they are far more trouble than CDs or actual, removable drives.
Slaving a hard drive is actually pretty easy, though fighting wires makes it a chore, but can only be done on desktop computers.
The second drive.....
Configure the hard drive as the master and the CD-ROM as the slave.
There are jumpers on the drive itself that can be configured to set it up as a master or a slave. Refer to your hard drive's documentation for the pins to use for these configurations.
Hard drive as master and DVD writer as slave.
To remove a partition on a slave hard drive you can go into the BIOS. You should look up a guide if you plan to do this.
Hard Drive configuration is used to define the Slave and master Hard Drive. When we are attaching more than one hard drive the configuration is used. Configuration is done by jumper setting which is available in back side of hard drive...1st two pins for master hard drive and last pins are slave..
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
IF the CD drive shares an IDE channel with a hard drive, make the hard drive the master and the CD drive the slave.
the hard drive should be set to master...
It is using the EIDE connection. The book says that if you have a hard drive and a CD that the hard drive should be the master and the CD will be the slave.
first Hard drive is Master and additional will be set to slave.
In computing, you can have two disks, the main and the slave - these are set by jumpers on the hard drive. In classical hardware, the main would have priority over the slave. However, with better electronics's, most computers don't differentiate between slave and main anymore.