Installing A Hard Drive – Step by Step

Introduction

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Before Installation

Installing a hard drive is a medium level job. If you are confident in yourself and would like to save the money a computer guy would charge to do it, go ahead and do it yourself. It won’t be that bad. The physical installation is actually pretty easy. Getting it ready for use takes a little longer.

The worst part about installing hard drives is setting the jumpers on the drive so that it works correctly with your current hardware. You only need to worry about jumpers if you are using an IDE hard drive. IDE hard drives have settings for master, slave and cable select. This is because, for an IDE drive, it matters. For Serial ATA drives (SATA), you don’t need to worry about jumpers at all. Now that SATA is becoming much more prevalent than IDE, it is becoming a lot less likely that you will need to worry about jumpers during this process.

Before installation, inspect the inside of the computer’s case and determine where you want the drive to go. If you are using an IDE hard drive, you want to optimally connect the drive on a different IDE channel than your DVD/CD drives. Most motherboards have two IDE channel connectors. So you would put your disc drives on IDE2 and your hard drives on IDE1. For SATA drives, your life, again, got easier. SATA gets it’s own channel and, as of this date, SATA DVD drives are very uncommon.

Materials Required

  • Hard drive
  • Copy of the hard drive manual (if you need to set jumpers; this can be downloaded if your drive didn’t come with one)
  • Controller card (optional; use this if you don’t have a spare connector on the motherboard or space on an existing ribbon cable to connect your drive to. Make sure you get one that matches your drive – Serial ATA for an SATA drive; ATA/100 or ATA/133 for an IDE drive; SCSI for a SCSI drive.)
  • Data cable for the drive (if you aren’t installing the drive as a slave on an existing cable)
  • Power cable Y-splitter (if you don’t have a spare power connector)
  • Ultimate Boot CD (if you want to clone your old hard drive to your new one)

How will you be using your new drive?

If you are replacing your primary hard drive, make sure you back up any data you want to save before you start. If you don’t want to reinstall Windows, you can clone the contents of your old hard drive to your new one using the setup utilities that hard drive manufacturers provide, or you can use a specific cloning program like HDClone or PC Inspector Clone Maxx. All of the above-mentioned utilities are available on the Ultimate Boot CD, so you can download and burn that and then choose the utility that is easiest for you to understand. (If you don’t have access to a high-speed internet connection, you can order a CD for a small fee.)

If you are willing to reinstall Windows, make sure you have discs for Windows and all your programs. This will prevent frustrations about losing programs after you have already formatted your computer.

If you are simply installing a secondary hard drive for storage, you don’t have to make any changes to the configuration of your current hard drive. If, however, you are installing a second IDE drive, it is possible that you will need to alter the jumper configuration of your primary hard drive. If your current hard drive is set as “Cable Select” (meaning it is the only drive on the channel), then you may need to change it to “Master” which will allow you to add the second hard drive as a slave (see below).

Setting Jumpers: IDE Drives

IDE can accommodate two drives per channel, with most computers having two channels built in. The primary drive on a channel is called the Master, and the secondary one is called the Slave. The IDE channels are also labeled as Primary (or IDE1) and Secondary (or IDE2). The hard drive that the system boots from is usually the primary master. Generally, if you’re adding a second hard drive you would set it up as the primary slave. (The secondary master and slave are usually used for optical drives, although they can accommodate hard drives if needed.)

Most drives come set to be used as masters, so if you want to use one as a slave, you’ll have to change the jumpers, which are located between the power connector and the IDE connector. Each manufacturer has different jumper settings, so I can’t give you exact instructions here. However, there is often a diagram on the top of the drive telling you how to set the jumpers, and if not there will certainly be instructions in your hard drive’s manual (which you can download from the manufacturer’s website if your hard drive didn’t come with one).

Another jumper setting, which you can use if you have an 80-conductor ribbon cable, is Cable Select. 80-conductor cables can be identified by their much finer wires compared to 40-conductor cables and by their connector colors (the motherboard end will be blue, red, or green, and the drive connectors will be black for the one on the end and gray for the one on the middle). With both drives set to Cable Select, the computer will recognize the drive hooked up to the black end connector as the master and the one hooked up to the middle gray connector as the slave.

Setting Jumpers: SATA Drives

Good news! There are no jumpers to worry about on SATA drives. Some SATA drives do have a jumper which controls the speed of the SATA drive itself, but you do not need to worry about anything related to master, slave or cable select.

Physical Installation

Now’s when you actually take off the case and get your hands dirty. Let’s get started:

  1. Turn the computer off, unplug it, and take the case off. At this point, you may want to make some quick sketches of just how everything is in there: Which direction is everything facing? Where and how are the cables connected? For some people, such sketches help to put everything back when you are done.
  2. If you are replacing your old hard drive, remove the cables from the old drive. You will see both a ribbon cable and a small power plug. Do not force them out. The ribbon cable is usually quite easy to remove. Sometimes, though, the power connector can become stuck. Just rock it back and forth (lengthwise along the narrow side of the drive), taking care not to rip the connector off the drive. Then remove the mounting screws that hold the drive to the case frame. Sometimes, you may need to tip the case or get into some strange positions to reach all the screws; other times, the hard drive is mounted in a cage that you’ll be able to take out to get to the other side of the drives. Finally, remove the old drive from the case. Be sure not to bump anything too hard on the way out.
  3. If you are replacing the old drive, slide the new drive in right where the other one came out. If you are adding a second drive, just pick any empty drive bay – one a bit below the current drive might work best, because it will make it easier to route cables. If you are installing a 3.5″ drive into a 5.25″ drive bay, you may need to add rails or a mounting bracket to make it fit. Screw the drive into place, making sure the screws aren’t going in crooked. Don’t force them.
  4. If you need a separate controller card, install it now into any unused motherboard slot. Chances are that you don’t need to worry about this. It is usually only necessary if you want to add more IDE drives than your computer will support with it’s two built-in channels. If you are using SATA, your motherboard likely comes with enough SATA ports. If not, you can extend it using a controller card just the same way as with IDE.
  5. Attach the cables to the hard drive and to the motherboard or controller card if necessary. There are two cables: the ribbon cable (or SATA cable) and the power cable. The ribbon cable goes from the controller to the drive. Most cables are keyed to the connector so they only go in one way; if the cable isn’t going in, try flipping it over. Don’t force it. If you are adding a second drive, simply choose a connector on the same ribbon cable that is not used. Most IDE ribbon cables come with three connectors: one on the end (usually black) and one mid-way (usually gray), then one further away on the other end which connects to the motherboard (usually blue, green, or red). In general, the master drive should use the black connector on the end and the slave should use the gray connector in the middle, but if each drive is set either as master or slave, the position is not as important. On a SATA hard drive, position of the drives on the cable does not matter at all because a SATA cable only accomodates one drive.
  6. Plug the system in and turn it on. It is best to leave the case cover off for now in case you need to fiddle with something or troubleshoot the installation.
  7. If you did not use a controller card, enter the BIOS (usually by pressing the F1, F2, F10, F12, or Delete key when you see the Power-On Self-Test or the manufacturer logo). Check the BIOS to make sure that the drives are all being recognized. If you installed a drive on a connector that was not in use, you may have to set the corresponding drive to “Auto.” If your BIOS has an auto-detect feature, you can use that as well. If you did use a controller card, it will pop up a screen showing the name of the card and any drives it has detected.
  8. If the drives are not being recognized, check that both power and data cables are in tightly (including the motherboard end for the data cables), and that the jumpers are set correctly. If they are all recognized correctly, let’s move to the next section.

Software Installation/Cloning

Now that your new drive is installed, we can move on and get it set up with Windows. If you are replacing your current drive and cloning it to your new drive, you will need to connect both drives. Change any necessary jumpers (see “Setting Jumpers” above) so that both drives as well as a CD drive are recognized. At this stage it is not important to screw in your old drive; you can just rest it somewhere convenient, but don’t leave it hanging in midair. Boot from the Ultimate Boot CD, and select the utility you want to use to clone the drive. Go through the appropriate prompts, making sure to select your older drive as the source and your newer one as the destination (pay careful attention to the hard drive sizes indicated by the cloning program). You don’t want to clone your new drive with nothing on it to your old drive with all your data!

If you are replacing your current drive but not cloning its contents to the new drive, put your Windows CD in the drive and boot from it. You will be prompted during the first part of setup to partition and format your drive; if you are using Windows 2000, XP or Vista, make sure to use the NTFS file system.

If you are simply installing a secondary drive, boot into Windows. In Windows 2000/XP/Vista, your new drive will not appear at all in My Computer until you format it. In Windows 9x/ME, it will appear, but you will need to right-click on the new drive and choose “Format” from the menu. To format the drive in Windows 2000 or XP, right-click on My Computer and go to “Manage”. In the window that comes up, click Disk Management in the left pane. Once it loads, you should see an “Initialize Disk” wizard pop up. Partition and format the disk to your liking, but make sure not to convert it to a dynamic disk, as doing so will provide plenty of annoyances down the road.

Finished!

Congratulations, your new drive is installed!  Now that you have installing your hard drive under your belt, you might be interested in partitioning your hard drive (that means dividing your space so you can separate data).

Next Step?

You’ll need to backup and restore your data to your new hard drive. This is VERY time-consuming usually. PCMech has long been a fan of Acronis True Image. This full-featured backup/restore utility from a trusted company will help you clone your PC and restore it to your new hard drive.

Discover how well Acronis True Image Home 2011 and Windows 7 work together to better protect your PC.

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158 comments

  1. working on a computer with two hard drives. I’m familiar with computers but this is the first dual setup I have seen. Computer recognizes both drives. System runs windows xp.If I look at the drives in computer management, both drives show up as healthy, but one is labeled “system” and the other is labeled “page files” There are no jumpers on the ide drives. Problem is , that there is very little space left on the system drive. You constantly get a message that space on drive c is dangerously low, which it is. What I am not sure about is if the second hard drive should automatically store overflow data from the first drive same just as if the first drive were twice as large.Also the drive does not show up in my computer. Should I simply add jumpers and format the second drive? Thanks

  2. Without getting involved in a conversation about whether or not myself or anyone else can understand the lingo here…I’m simply attempting my first HD replacement due to a crash. The system is old but loved so can you tell me the difference between an IDE and SATA HD? Assuming I have an IDE now, can it simply be replaced by a SATA drive or is the motherboard specific to each? Sorry for the dumb question but is there really such a thing anyway??

  3. hi, nice step by step, but can you tell me how can i locate the slave hard drive when it is not shown in the Disk Management. The Drive is found under the device manager under mass storage but not in disk manager. the drive is working properly. i want to format it… thanx

  4. All the Bickering that I read in the begging of this is absolutly POINTLESS!!!! Every one knows what they are capable of!!! This was more than enough to help even the Lowest level of expearance Swap or add a hard drive!!!

    I want to say Thank YOU!!! I am in the happy Medium of the geek world. I toruble shoot circuits for a living and use computers every day for work. BUT I do NOT repair. This was more than Helpfull in my Latest Conquest!!! Rebuilding a Relic for my Kids. Your step by step made the Job so much better!!

    Thank You!! Not one problem with your directions!!!

    Any Idea if I can have a Windows 2000, Windows XP and Windows Vista 64 all in the same wireless network? My next Challange!!!

    Cheers Tim

  5. Fantastic article!! I just installed a new SATA drive but couldn’t figure out how to get Windows XP to recognize it and assign it a dive letter. Thanks for the info.

    • Geoffrey /

      This guide helps even those who are good at computers. Good job A+ on te article

  6. RepairGal /

    Anyone who doesn’t understand what a “jumper” is shouldn’t be trying to change out their hard drive. What they need is to study “Computers for Dummies” first -then- read this article. That said, this article was a real help for my reinstall. The tip on setting the jumper properly is what got my drive up and running. Thanks!

  7. Nice guide, but you tell vista doesnt show the HD till you format it.
    How do you format a HD that you cant see then?

  8. this guide is … what can I say? EXCELLENT!!!!

    thanks guys for creating this it sure is a help for newbies out there :)
    as Kyle said waaaaaay back, “I did’nt know that disk management exist” hehehe

  9. I read in a magazine recently how to install a drive. In the article, it mentioned that the PC should not be plugged into the internet until XP SP3 is installed; they then provided the link to d/l the SP3 patch.

    However, when I read the Microsoft website, it said that SP 3 should not be installed until SP 1.a (I believe this was correct) or SP 2 are installed.

    Does anyone know if this is correct? Thanks in advance!

  10. Hi

    I am trying to install a new sata drive onto my pc. Im very sure I have it connected correctly, but when I boot up and try to enter the setup it takes a very long time and eventually goes black bar a cursor. When it runs a self test the drive is detected but only when I press f1 to enter setup and then it will not enter setup. Any idea on what i might be doing wrong?

    Tom

  11. Great, thank you! One problem though – after setting up the new drive and using Norton Ghost 10.0 to clone the old drive, I can’t boot from the new drive. Booting from the old drive allows recognition of the new drive no problem, just can’t boot from the new one. Any suggestions?

  12. Thanks for taking the time to write this guide, it was just the manage part i forgot about :)

  13. Thank you, thank you for posting this helpful tip on how to install a hard drive. I managed the installation of the hardware on my own, but was at a loss on how to assign the drive letter. I was told by computer support group that I can only assign a letter once I installed the startup disk (which unfortunatley I couldn’t find). Your website got me passed this and told me how to do it without that. I’m so happy I found your website.

  14. If my current hard drive is corrupted with a virus and I transfer the content to a new hard drive, will it transfer the virus to the new hard drive?

  15. i have a 6g hard drive, but i have a 40 g new hard drive. Can I replace the 6g with the 40 safely.

  16. Dear Sir, I am using windows xp 2003 operatin g system. Now I want to remove this and install Ubuntu. When I insert the CD on the drive I am getting a dialog box that I require 256MB memory. I a senior citizen with only a little computer knowledge. Can u please guide me/help me to install the new system. Thanking you,
    Yours truly,
    B.Ranganathan

  17. Michael /

    Thanks. Sorted things out.

  18. Michelle /

    Help!
    My computer was infected with a Virus so a friend of mine reformatted my computer. All is good except for the fact that my hard drive has a “C” and an “I”. Now, the C drive only has 550 mb on it & the “I” drive has 159 GB on it. My problem is that it thinks the “C” drive is the main drive & when I try to update my windows or drivers, it is not giving me the option to say save to the “I” drive & just shoots me an error message saying I don’t have enough room. Can someone please tell me how to change that?? PLEASE?!? Thank you so much in advance for your help!

  19. Natalie /

    I recently puchased completely new parts to build a new computer. I bought an Uber Chakra case and a WD Caviar Blue Hard Drive. Here is my problem, the drive rails that came with my case do not fit on the hard drive. The metal the case is built from is thicker than average so the screws I have do not reach to try and install it that way. What do people recommend to safely install my hard drive?

  20. nice article! I’m somewhat of a techie and i do understand all the jargon. however, if you’re one that does not understand any of this info, or part of this awesome info…then go google it elsewhere…speaking of google…great tool to “look-up” info about this you don’t know about!!! hello!!! help yourself before you can be helped!!! A+ on the info! thanks

  21. Okay… here is my issue and I am at whits end.

    My hard drive crashed, but I had a back up one. In the process of removing my backup files and converting to use the back up as the main drive, I got the message “hard drive failure is eminent”. I bought a new hard drive and used the Restore CD to format it. With the new drive as the only HD hooked up, it won’t boot and has a disk read error. Using the old drive to boot and connecting the new one as a slave, I see all of the files created by the restore disk.

    Did I get a bad drive or is there something that I need to do to get the new drive to be recognized as the boot drive?

    Thanks for any advice that you guys give…

  22. I just installed a new HD and followed all the steps, but while it was formatting the drive i got a BSOD..im afraid to try formatting again until someone can give me some advice

  23. Jonathon /

    Hey I have been trying to put in a third hard drive in don’t ask why because I just like the extra space. I plugged all three in and my computer screeched at me!!!! Then i remembered that one is set to slave the other to master what do i set the third one to i tried slave but still screeched at me! Should I try Cable select?

  24. I would first try cable select though I cannot verify the results. The best solution is to go into your setup menu and format the third hard drive to correspond to the primary hard drive.

  25. Dinis /

    David,

    Thank You for the above web site that help me install the hard disk and and on formatting the second half of the disk.

    Thanks David Risley

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