Windows Xp Sp2 Sata Drivers

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If you have to repair for clients or your own PC than must go install the operating system, the question is Motherboard Drivers?? I also have many ways to get drivers for that machine. This cd will help you integrate the drivers into in Windows XP SP2 installation time automatically installing drivers. No NEED SERIAL KEYS If you get a car from the store, it better have keys or otherwise it was stolen. (edit by Nuno) it's one of the best windows xp for Desktop and Laptops (all kind of Laptops) it's integrated with sata drivers It is warez and nobody knows for sure what comes packed inside. (edit by Nuno) (edit by Nuno) Edited by Nuno Brito, 08 June 2011 - 10:09 AM.

  1. Windows Xp Sp2 Update

I, Basava, shall not post Windows images without a written authorization consent from Microsoft. Hi Basava, This is not the right place to post files from Windows without permission, otherwise it is considered as warez and something that we don't like seeing around here on reboot.pro If you want people to download your files, you can (for example) contribute as a script developer for boot disks projects. This is a legal and welcomed manner of participating in our community.

Will sata drivers be integrated in xpsp3? Windows XP Service Pack 3 (SP3). I have a new 1t seagate sata. I want to install xp, sp2 on that drive. If I have a Windows XP SP2 cd-rom, will I still need SATA floppies to install onto an SATA drive?

We all know how to get illegal Windows images from the Internet and that is easy but boring. What we do like around here is to build our own images using legal processes. I hope you understand a bit better our community culture now. This is your first time posting so I will be nice, please don't repeat such posts with Windows images in the future.

Windows xp sp1 sp2 sp3

Windows XP Pro SP2 error with SATA - RAID drives (STOP: 0x0000007B) Hi there, here are my system specs: Asus P5LD2 Mobo P4 3.2Ghz 2MB 2x WD 80GB SATA HDDs 2GB DDR2 RAM I am trying to setup the two identical HDDs as a raid set and windows is having problems with it. I have done the following in order: - Set the IDE config to RAID in BIOS - Setup a RAID array using the two HDDs which seems to be working fine. Restart the comp and begin installing windows - Press F6 to use the asus RAID drivers - Drivers install fine and windows continues to load it's files - The message 'windows is starting' pops up and then I get a STOP error which freezes my comp Here is the STOP error: STOP: 0x0000007B (0xF78D2524, 0xC0000034, 0x00000000, 0x00000000) I looked the error up on the MS website and reached the conclusion that windows isn't liking my HDDs for some reason. I have tried only using one of the HDDs in case one is broken with no success.

I have tried using the latest RAID driver from the ASUS website. I have updated the BIOS with the latest files. I have even tried only using one of the RAM chips in case it was those, no luck.

Its the same error EVERY TIME. I've been at this for a good two days. Nothing seems to work. I had the same issue for the past two weeks and finally resolved it last night. I tried everything from the SATA II drives to memory incompatibilities and eventually it came down to my CD / DVD drives and the way that ASUS motherboards deal with onboard IDE's. On my Asus P5WD2, which is very similar to yours, I have three onboard IDE's. Two of them are grouped together and one is sort of on its own on the side of the motherboard.

Make sure that the optical drives (CD and DVD) are plugged into the side IDE and not the two that are grouped together. Secondly make sure that you use the IDE cable with the blue, black and grey connector and not any of the other cables. Also remember to set the one drive as master and the other as slave and plug the grey connector into the master and the black connector into the slave and the blue one into the motherboard. The problem comes from the fact that Windows or Linux (I've tried both) is seeing the optical drives as hard drives and therefore is not able to start up properly. Yeah I've been doing a little hair pulling and head scratching over this problem for the past couple days. Kept on getting that 0x7b BSOD error as well on the same motherboard. Used partition magic bootable floppies to actually wipe out all the existing data on the entire drive and then formatted them numerous times to try to get rid of that error.

Simply by switching the cd/dvd drive to the side ide connector like you mentioned is now allowing me to install xp on my new machine as I'm typing this on my crappy oldie (733 Mhz ugh). That damn manual should be more explicit about stuff like this. I thought it said you can plug in ATAPI/CD devices on primary or secondary ide connectors. Also don't like the position of the CMOS pins are. It's hard to clear it and have to use needle nose plyers (sp?) to do it cuz I have an IDE drive connected to the Primary IDE connector. But this should be for a different thread I guess. Again many thanks for the quick and easy solution to the BSOD problem upon windows xp install.

If I had read this thread earlier I might have been able to simply do a repair install and not have to install all my apps again. But I'm just happy that I got past the damn problem.:giddy: -pogdish. I'm having the exact same problem as Zenzin, except I'm using a different motherboard and smaller HDDs. Asus A8N-SLi Mobo Athlon 3200+ 2x WD 36.7GB SATA HDDs 1GB RAM - Enabled NVRAID in BIOS using channel 1 and 2 on the controller - Setup a RAID array using the two HDDs (showing as 'Healthy' stripe, bootable) - Restart the comp and begin installing windows - Press F6 to use the asus RAID drivers - Drivers install fine and windows continues to load it's files - The message 'windows is starting' pops up, followed shortly by STOP: 0x0000007B. I saw the post by edfam, but this mobo doesn't have an additional IDE controller, just IDE 1 and IDE 2.

Many thanks in advance, Steve. You're a lifesaver! I love you!!!!

Winpe 3.1 bootloader

(or something:haha: ) I've been pulling my hair since yesterday afternoon with this problem, and simply changing the IDE-cable for my DVD-RW made the Windows XP setup work and detect the SATA 2 HDD without the use of any of the Asus SATA-Floppy-Drivers:haha: Had I only read this thread throughoutly earlier! Thnxz again so much!!! This should be made a sticky (or at least Asus should have put this info/solver on their product/support site a long time ago!). I had the same issue for the past two weeks and finally resolved it last night. I tried everything from the SATA II drives to memory incompatibilities and eventually it came down to my CD / DVD drives and the way that ASUS motherboards deal with onboard IDE's. On my Asus P5WD2, which is very similar to yours, I have three onboard IDE's. Two of them are grouped together and one is sort of on its own on the side of the motherboard.

Windows Xp Sp2 Update

Make sure that the optical drives (CD and DVD) are plugged into the side IDE and not the two that are grouped together. Secondly make sure that you use the IDE cable with the blue, black and grey connector and not any of the other cables. Also remember to set the one drive as master and the other as slave and plug the grey connector into the master and the black connector into the slave and the blue one into the motherboard. The problem comes from the fact that Windows or Linux (I've tried both) is seeing the optical drives as hard drives and therefore is not able to start up properly. I had the same issue for the past two weeks and finally resolved it last night.

I tried everything from the SATA II drives to memory incompatibilities and eventually it came down to my CD / DVD drives and the way that ASUS motherboards deal with onboard IDE's. On my Asus P5WD2, which is very similar to yours, I have three onboard IDE's. Two of them are grouped together and one is sort of on its own on the side of the motherboard. Make sure that the optical drives (CD and DVD) are plugged into the side IDE and not the two that are grouped together.

Secondly make sure that you use the IDE cable with the blue, black and grey connector and not any of the other cables. Also remember to set the one drive as master and the other as slave and plug the grey connector into the master and the black connector into the slave and the blue one into the motherboard. The problem comes from the fact that Windows or Linux (I've tried both) is seeing the optical drives as hard drives and therefore is not able to start up properly. I had the same issue for the past two weeks and finally resolved it last night. I tried everything from the SATA II drives to memory incompatibilities and eventually it came down to my CD / DVD drives and the way that ASUS motherboards deal with onboard IDE's. On my Asus P5WD2, which is very similar to yours, I have three onboard IDE's.

Sata

Two of them are grouped together and one is sort of on its own on the side of the motherboard. Make sure that the optical drives (CD and DVD) are plugged into the side IDE and not the two that are grouped together. Secondly make sure that you use the IDE cable with the blue, black and grey connector and not any of the other cables.

Windows Xp Sp2 Sata Drivers

Also remember to set the one drive as master and the other as slave and plug the grey connector into the master and the black connector into the slave and the blue one into the motherboard. The problem comes from the fact that Windows or Linux (I've tried both) is seeing the optical drives as hard drives and therefore is not able to start up properly.