I've found a number of 64 bit drivers for my motherboard that apparently work with 7, some even named 'SATA Controller' but these don't affect the install.
My HD is plugged into port 1, also tried it in port 0.
You're right about the Dell BIOS, next computer I get I will be building myself!
Tomorrow I'll get some new cables and see how that goes.
Already tried that, same message.Try this:
NOTE: for this example, I am using Promise Fastrak 376.
PC is first-hand and taken care of well. The Seagate drives were functioning properly when running Vista 32bit. The BIOS doesn't give me an option for SATA, I think it's always enabled by default.Can you explain history of PC.
Is it second hand?
Are u putting extras in the PC that were not in there(working) before?
ie are you adding the Seagate 750Gb to the original spec or was it working in there with XP/Vista?
Can your pc support over 500Gb hard drives(without a bios update from Dell?) - just a thought.
How is your PC 'boot' set up in bios?
name each line like >
CD/DVD boot1
Scsi boot2
hdd0 boot3
?? boot4
Is 'SATA' turned on in Bios > SCSI/SATA line setting?
When creating a bootable USB device, I am getting an error about bootsect
To make the USB device bootable, you need to run a tool named bootsect.exe. In some cases, this tool needs to be downloaded from your Microsoft Store account. This may happen if you're trying to create a 64-bit bootable USB device from a 32-bit version of Windows. To download bootsect:
- Login to your Microsoft Store account to view your purchase history
- Look for your Windows 7 purchase
- Next to Windows 7, there is an "Additional download options" dropdown
- In the dropdown, select the "32-bit ISO" option
- Right-click the link and save the bootsect.exe file to the location where you installed the Windows 7 USB/DVD Download Tool (e.g. C:\Users\username\AppData\Local\Apps\Windows 7 USB DVD Download Tool)
- Once the file has been saved, go back to the Windows 7 USB/DVD Download tool to create your bootable USB device