Formatting questions

vrifaj

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Hi all, Im sorry if this is not the space for this cause I dont know to use forum so much,but I want to make something clear:
I have changed my sata type from ahci to ide and than formated with xp and 7 (dualboot) and make 3 partitions, but now I need to change it again to ahci and it needs to be formated, but what I wanna know is: when I change the sata type again, does the data in other partiton exept C: can be deleted? (D: and E:)??

Thanks so much!
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x86
Hi all, Im sorry if this is not the space for this cause I dont know to use forum so much,but I want to make something clear:
I have changed my sata type from ahci to ide and than formated with xp and 7 (dualboot) and make 3 partitions, but now I need to change it again to ahci and it needs to be formated, but what I wanna know is: when I change the sata type again, does the data in other partiton exept C: can be deleted? (D: and E:)??

Thanks so much!


you can't change that. your hard drive is what it is.
if you have a big flat ribbon cable on it it's a IDE (aka pata etc)

a sata drive has a small cable about a 1/2 inch wide.
 

My Computer

OS
windows 7 ultimate 64 bit
CPU
amd athlon 64 X2 5000+
Motherboard
asus A8M2N-LA
Memory
4 gigs pc2 5300
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia GeForce 8600 GTS
Sound Card
Realtek alc888 high def 8 channel
Monitor(s) Displays
17"samsung syncMaster and 32" LCD panasonic viera tv
Hard Drives
300 gb Hitachi sata 7200rpm
1T seagate Barracuda sata 7200rpm
150 gb WD PATA
250gb WD my passport USB 2.0
PSU
Antec
Other Info
Altec lansing ATP3 3 pc speaker system(these things rock!)
Running your SATA controller in either IDE or AHCI mode simply changes the way the controller and the drive talk to each other (and consequently, the driver Windows uses to talk to the controller).

This does not affect any data, files, partition layouts or anything else on your disk at all.

The only thing to watch out for is that you must enable the MSAHCI driver in Windows 7 before you reboot and change the SATA type in your BIOS.
With XP it's unfortunately a bit more complicated - in fact I don't know the exact steps, but Google will no doubt turn up something.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom-built
OS
Windows 7 Professional SP1 32-bit
CPU
Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 2.4GHz
Motherboard
Asus PL5D2
Memory
4GB DDR2-667 (4x1GB in dual-channel config)
Graphics Card(s)
nVidia GeForce 9800 GT
Sound Card
Creative X-Fi XtremeMusic
Monitor(s) Displays
Acer P236H
Screen Resolution
1920x1200 (DVI)
Hard Drives
OCZ SSD Vertex Plus 60GB SATA (Firmware 3.55), 64MB cache
Hitachi HD321KJ SATA, 320GB, 7200rpm, 16MB cache
PSU
Antec TruePower 2.0
Case
Cooler Master Centurion
Cooling
Too many fans
Keyboard
Standard
Mouse
Microsoft wireless optical mouse
Internet Speed
AT&T U-verse (18mbit/sec)
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials
Browser
Firefox
Other Info
Other devices:
Compaq CQ-60 laptop
Google Nexus 7 (2012) tablet
Nvidia SHIELD tablet (US/LTE)
Hardkernel ODROID-XU single-board computer (Samsung Exynos 5420)
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