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Thread ID: 18894 2002-05-04 11:07:00 seagate in old compaq Guest (0) Press F1
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47134 2002-05-04 11:07:00 Have a compaq deskpro 575 running windows 98se.
have 2 hard drives c=808mgs and d=323mgs.
Tried to install seagate 8.6gig drive NO SUCCESS
Downloaded Disk Wizard from seagate and seagate firmware from compaq to try to get puter to accept hdd.
The disk is not being recognised at all error 1790 and 1791.
Have tried it as c and d and by itself
No luck
Only thing with download from compaq is model number is slighty out so havent really found correct compaq recognition or accept seagate software
HELP PLEASE
Thanks all
Julie-Ann
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47135 2002-05-04 12:02:00 Some older mother boards wont accept large hard drives 2 options easy option try spliting into 2 or even 3. Hard option new mother board Guest (0)
47136 2002-05-04 12:48:00 Thanks for that but how do i partition it if puter cant read it.All i get is disk error etc etc
Thanks again
Julie-Ann
ps motherboard change is not an option sadly
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47137 2002-05-05 04:02:00 Those 17xx erors are controller errors. That's worse than not recognising the disk. Is the LED on the drive on all the time? That indicates that the cable is upside down at one end. Check your cabling. The stripe indicating pin 1 should be closest to the power connector.

Try installing the disk on its own first. Make it master and put it on the primary IDE cable.
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47138 2002-05-05 07:23:00 Thanks everyone
Now i tried it on its own and instaed of save changes i selected ignore changes,now i get recognition,formatted,installed windows sweet BUT now on reboot i get the 2 options again save or ignore.I have to select ignore changes to boot up windows.
Surely this cant be good to have to boot with this selection.
Its the only way to get the drive recognised.
ALSO tried to find a bios upgrade but cant find my model.
If i boot on save changes i get the 3 statements re have to partition but cant partition because in this mode the drive is not recognised.
I know it sounds a bit messy.
Anyone want a pathetic phonecall with me wimpering about how im stumped!!!!
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47139 2002-05-07 09:46:00 Hi Julie-Ann, I found the following on the net some time ago when trying to rebuild a deskpro 590.Hope it is usefull to you also.
Cheers steve.

Compaq Diagnostics, their use and how to load them
Compaq CMOS SETUP explained
How to access SETUP
How to load DIAGNOSTICS and SETUP to disk.
Unlike the 'clone' MB community which uses a CMOS SETUP routine that resides in
'silicon' on the MB, Compaq uses a SETUP diskette to access the CMOS in their
systems and a DIAGNOSTIC diskette to perform system tests and inspect system
level information. Images of these floppies are loaded to a 4 MB non-DOS
partition on the hard drive when Compaq configures their systems. The F10 key is
used to access them from the HDD on boot.
When upgrading to a new or larger hard drive these diagnostics will not be
present and a hard drive crash may corrupt these diagnostics. In either case you
will need the Compaq diskettes to load the diagnostics to the hard drive.
These procedures are correct for the Compaq desktop products like Deskpro,
Prolinea etc. I do not know if it is the same for their server product line.
The steps outlined herein assume standard Microsoft partitioning software
(FDISK), not the 3rd party 'xxxx magic' partition utilities available. I have
not tried to move and create a new diagnostic partition on an existing drive
using these utilities and cannot verify their success or failure. Do so at your
own risk.
How do I access the CMOS SETUP routine on my Compaq?
1. At boot time the cursor will appear as a large block in the upper right
corner of the screen after beeping twice. Press F10 AFTER the memory test
completes or when you see the block cursor and the DIAGNOSTIC utility screen
will appear. Perform your standard CMOS functions from the utility screen.
NOTE!! If the diagnostics are not loaded on the HDD the block cursor WILL NOT
appear after the two beeps.
2. If the F10 at boot sequence fails, boot with disk 1 of 2 of the
SETUP/DIAGNOSTICS in the drive. Proceed with the standard CMOS SETUP functions
from the utility screen.

How can I get the SETUP and TEST diagnostic diskettes if I have lost mine?
You can create the diskette images from the F10 boot utility if that is still
functional on your disk. If the hard drive has been wiped and you don't have
copies of the diskettes perform the following steps:
1. Go to: www.compaq.com
2. Click on the type of system you need help with (IE desktop, server or
peripheral).
3. Enter the system model information in the dialogue boxes and press the Locate
Software button on the page.
4. Scroll down to the ROMPaq selection for your model. Download the ROMPaq file
to a temp directory on your disk.
5. The file is a self-extracting file that will create the SETUP and the
DIAGNOSTICS diskettes on 3. 5' floppies.
6. Label the disks Compaq diags 1 of 2 and 2 of 2 to have them in the correct
sequence for booting and creating the diagnostic partition.

How can I load the diagnostics on a new hard drive-- OR --I repartitioned or
formatted my hard drive and want to load the diagnostics back?
This is where the problems occur. You will need the 'SETUP' and the
'DIAGNOSTICS' floppies to proceed.
Click on the link above to DL the ROMPaq for your system if you don't have them.
1. Boot from Disk 1 of 2 and define the HD parameters if installing a new HDD.
For an existing drive this should not be necessary.
2. Have NO PARTITONS defined on your hard drive. Delete any and ALL partitions
you may have created in previous attempts to load diagnostics.
NOTE! If you try to load the diagnostics with a DOS partition defined it will
say there is not enough room to load diagnostics because it needs the FIRST 4MB
of the drive to load them. (Available space on the drive is unusable) If you
loaded an OS and your applications and want to preserve them, you CANNOT load
the Compaq diags to the hard drive.
3. Boot from Disk 1 of 2 and it will detect no diagnostic partition on the hard
drive and prompt you to create one on the drive.
4. Follow the prompts to create the partition and insert the diskettes when
requested. This is a 3 pass operation, to create the non-DOS partition,
recognize the partition and transfer the diskette images. Now you will have F10
functionality at boot.
5. Run FDISK and partition the remaining space on the drive, as you would
normally do. I personally use a single partition in Win98 to simplify things.
6. Format the drive with the DOS command FORMAT C: /s and the C: drive will be
bootable and have the Compaq diage above procedures and loaded standard
Microsoft Win95/98 (not Compaq's customized version) on the hard drive with no
problems.
Disclaimer!!
This document instructs you on how to prepare a blank HDD to have the F10 boot
function available and be ready to load/restore an OS.. It is not a tutorial how
to restore Compaq software configurations. Please DO NOT Email me asking for
driver info for Compaq products, how to use Quickrestore CD or where is Works
and Quicken on my Quickrestore CD. . I am not a Compaq guru and other than this
system, have little experience with Compaq's proprietary OS configurations and
restore utilities. The best forum for these questions is a newsgroup called
alt.sys.pc-clone.compaq That is where I gathered the various bits of info for
this document
I wrote this document because there was no central point to get Compaq
comprehensive diagnostic info when I needed to resurrect a 'bare bones' Prolinea
5120e to donate to a graduating high school senior.
My system did not contain any unique Compaq options or I/O controllers that may
have required Compaq specific drivers. It is a bare bones Prolinea 5120e, FDD,
HDD, CD-ROM (found by Win95/98) and external modem. Installing a NON Compaq
version of Win95/98 may require installation of drivers for the Compaq supplied
options and locating these drivers is YOUR responsibility before you proceed.
.Dick Perron........
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