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Old July 22nd 03, 10:51 AM
Tim
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If what Muttley says is at least in part correct - that you have replaced
the m/b on an existing Windows XP system, at the very least you should run a
repair so that XP setup will run throught the motions of re-detecting and
configuring all h.w. Then install all drivers + updated drivers from the CD
that came with the m/b, then - regardless - put XP SP 1 in (if you already
had it in) just to be safe.

Then recreate your raid array. I have read on one hand that raid configs are
'ubiquitous', interchangeable, bla bla bla. On the other hand I have read
repeatedly 'this bios upgrade may break your raid configuration'. Don't
believe either until 2010.

Best option. fdisk the lot and start again - if you can.

To run a repair for XP, insert the CD, run setup and follow the
instructions - you don't want to go into the recovery console, it is the
other option.

Tim.



"Muttley" wrote in message
...
Hi Mark,

I may be wrong, but........

Am I right in guessing that you transferred an existing array from a

Promise
RAID controller to the ITE RAID controller on this new motherboard?

Did you wipe the drives and re-create a NEW array from scratch? - AFAIK,
There's no guarantee that an existing array will still work after moving

it
to a different controller chipset. I have also heard that in some cases,
even a simple upgrade of a RAID controller's BIOS can sometimes render any
existing arrays unusable.
Did you do a clean install of Windows XP? - Again, usually a very good

idea
when changing the motherboard, especially when changing hard drive
controllers. An existing install of XP will usually refuse to boot if the
hard drive controller setup has been changed.
Another thing, even on motherboards that use an onboard Promise RAID
controller, the driver for the onboard Promise RAID is different to the

one
used for a PCI card Promise RAID controller. The PCI card RAID driver will
not work for the onboard RAID chip, and vice-versa.

I'm guessing that if you re-created the array from scratch and did a clean
re-install of Windows using the ITE RAID drivers, that you probably

wouldn't
have had any problems.

My apologies if I'm barking up the wrong tree with the above.....

Regarding the Dual-Bios problem, I myself have been wondering about the
effectiveness of the Gigabyte software based Dual-BIOS function.
How is the Bios software going to determine that it is corrupt, if the

Bios
itself is so totally screwed up that the board can't boot at all.
The Dual-Bios routines must be part of the Boot-Block BIOS that is

normally
not overwritten during a flash upgrade. I'm guessing that your upgrade

flash
must have somehow overwritten and corrupted the Boot-block portion of the
Bios as well.
I would have thought that a non-flashable fail-safe copy of the original
shipping BIOS that is selected by a jumper might be better.
That said, I have been exclusively using Dual-Bios Gigabyte boards for a

few
years now and haven't had a problem with it.
On the few occasions that it has been needed, it has so far always managed
to load the backup BIOS and rescue the board.

John S.

"Mark Taylor" wrote in message
...
Hello to all
Thought I might share my very unpleasant experience with thso looking at
this board as it might help you to avoid the many long hours of

frustration
I had with this mobo. My main reasons for buying this board was to use the
onboard ITE IDE RAID and the dual bios function. Both do not work properly
so I will probably scrap thsi baord and buy something else, possibly the
Aopen A4C Max.
I have just spent a week setting up this board with an existing Promise

RAID
0+1 from my old system onto this board. Lets say along the way trying to

get
the system to work I managed to screw up the first board and I am now onto
the second board. This was mainly to try and get the blue screen stop

errors
on the ntfs.sys to stop occurring. The onboard ITE IDE RAID controller in

my
opinion is a dud. I mainly bought this board as I had 4 WD 80GB 8MB 7200
drives for my previous RAID which are IDE and wanted to keep using them.
This was one of the few boards that had a RAID 0+1 IDE controller. I now
regret buying this board and I am seriously thinking of changing to
something else. I am now using it with my original Promise PCI Fasttrak

TX2
RAID controller with version 33 bios and 34 driver under Windows XP Pro
which so far is quite stable. I have many years experience with PC's and
must say I think this board needs some serious BIOS work and driver

upgrades
if it is going to be useful. The Dual Bios managed to fail, again one of

the
main reasons for buying this board. The old version had a jumper on the
board so you could force it to use the backup BIOS but this one uses
software after the pre-BIOS boot. The BIOS EPROM's are also surface

mounted
so cannot be removed for easy reflashing via an external provider so the
board became unbootable after I flashed to version f6e which was mentioned
here and thought might fix some of the instability problems. The BIOS

failed
at the prepost so I could not get into the BIOS to use the software to

boot
from the good backup or take the chips out and swap them so basically the
board was screwed. Whoever thought that idea up certainly did not take all
the possibilites into account. I noticed the Aopen A4C Max has two

socketed
BIOS chips with a jumper on the board to force the system to boot from the
backup.
Regards
Mark