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On IDE devices, there are two positions on each IDE chain -- Master, and Slave. The master position is the one on the opposite end of the cable from the motherboard, and the slave is in the middle. A good rule of thumb is to keep HDDs on their own chain, seperate from other devices. If you must share an IDE channel, never share an IDE channel between a HDD and an optical drive. Try and keep them seperate if possible. Also, use 80-conductor IDE cables for HDDs.swirly said:I don't know where my jumpers go, I just got a new motherboard and I need to put XP in so it will work and it cannot read it and the harddrives ar e not being recognized.. Any suggestions???
No, that PSU is more for looks than for power. It's amps are almost as low as the Logisys! I'm sticking with my original recommendations (Enermax, Antec, Thermaltake). By the way, Newegg.com has much better prices and selection than xoxide.com.swirly said:... have an Aspire 500 Watt now and I am getting a new one maybe by next week because the fans blew out the first time I used it.. But I think it is very strong.. Tell me if you think this one is good or a lot better than the one I have now.....http://xoxide.com/500waassuuvr.html
You may experience system instability, and eventually fry the motherboard (and everything connected to it). Not a good prospect. On the other hand, you can get a 420watt Thermaltake PSU from Newegg.com for something like $40. It has much higher amps than both PSUs you listed, and two ball-bearing fans. A great PSU for the money. I really like Enermax, but they are very costly, so Thermaltake is a good compromise between performance and cost.swirly said:Well this sucks, I have no money, no job, nothing.. I guess my pc will die on me soon then =(.......
Amperage is electron density, as far as I understand it. Proper amounts of amperage is what's called "clean power", because it's a steady & even stream of power. Even if a PSU has the wattage your hardware requires, it may not have the amperage necessary to actually provide the full amount of power (dirty power). So in that case the wattage is meaningless. It's said that an Antec 350watt PSU is better than a 600watt generic PSU. The reason for this is amperage.swirly said:That sucks badly I just bought that Logisys PSU for 46 bucks I could have got that one.... What is a high number of ampage? Just wondering..
Addis said:Trust me you don't want to be running a generic PSU for long. Mine died on me within 6 months.