Torniquet wrote:frankly thts confused me even more lol...
are you saying that i cant have 2 P-ATA drives on one cable and have the S-ATA as my 'master' or boot drive?
No. I say that Master and Slave got NOTHING to do with that. I will try explain why Master/Slave exists:
Master and Slave is used when 2 drives are connected to the same P-ATA cable. This is because when the motherboard sends data/commands to the P-ATA cable both drives will receive the command/data. To avoid that, we use Master/Slave jumper setting. When the motherboard sends the command it will say that the data/command is for master or slave and then only the correct drive will respond to that command.
Why don't we use Master/Slave on S-ATA then?
Simpy bacause there is only ONE drive on each S-ATA cable, and therefor the commands can't reach the wrong disc.
Will give an example on how to setup a system with 4 P-ATA discs (on 2 P-ATA Cables) and 2 S-ATA discs:
Disc 1 & Disc 2 are connected to P-ATA cabel 1, Disc 1 set as master and Disc 2 set as Slave
Disc 3 & Disc 4 are connected to P-ATA cabel 2, Disc 3 is also set as master and Disc 4 are also slave.
Disc 5 is connected on S-ATA cabel 1, and no need for master/slave here
Disc 6 is connected on S-ATA cabel 2 and no need for master/slave here
So here you have 2 master and 2 slaves, but that is ok, as they are on seperate cabels, remember that master/slave is just labels used to seperate which drive that gets which commands on the same cable. Almost like an adress.
Now all drives will be working correctly. And you can choose which drive to boot from in the BIOS setting on the computer under "Harddrive Boot Priority". The C: drive will be the one you choose to install Windows on.
Tried to explain it as good as possible.