Error Code 50 Read Not Write Optical Sata Iii

Oct 31, 2009
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  • #1
I just built what I idea was going to be a peachy new system ($1,900 worth of information technology):
Antec Nine Hundred
ntec TruePower New TP-750 750W Continuous Power ATX12V V2.three
Asus P6T Deluxe V2
Intel Cadre i7 920 2.66GHz
COOLER Master Hyper 212
Thou.SKILL 6GB (3 x 2GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1333 (PC3 10666) Triple Channel Kit Memory
HIS 5850 Video carte
Western Digital Caviar Blackness 1TB hard drive (HOOKED-UP SATA)
LITE-ON Black 24X DVD Author Black SATA Model iHAS-324-98 - Retail (HOOKED-UP SATA)
LG Black 8X Blu-ray Burner - Bulk SATA Model WH08LS20K - OEM (HOOKED-Upward SATA)
Microsoft Windows 7

I was extremely conscientious to install everything properly per all of the great guides on this site. I have not installed the operating system yet because I cannot go through the BIOS.
I get the one beep like I am supposed to, the memory is detected correctly, the SATA difficult drive and optical media drives are automobile-detected, but then I get "SATA ane Hd Error / Press F1 to resume". If I let it go through the normal boot cycle I get "No hard bulldoze is detected!".
When I get into the BIOS the HDD is not there but the opticals are. I disconnect the opticals and plug the HDD into the aforementioned SATA ports on the mobo and SATA power cablevision and withal zippo.
I called WD and they said to call ASUS to see if their drive was compatible with the mobo, of course ASUS says their mobo is uniform with all SATA drives, etc...

I thought maybe I needed to install Windows 7 1st to recognize the HDD but it will not commencement in the optical drives fifty-fifty when I set the Kick PRIORITY to DVD 1st.

I even held the difficult drive while booting to brand sure it was spinning and it was.

Any thoughts? My guess is a bad hard drive, but how do I convince WD?

Thanks for any assistance!

dndhatcher
Aug 30, 2009
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  • #21
I've never heard of a SATA drive that was incompatible. Like WD said, its just SATA.
dndhatcher
Aug 30, 2009
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  • #2
Some motherboards require the boot HDD to exist in the SATA 1 connector. try making sure the HDD is in SATA 1 and the DVD is in SATA 2 and disconnect the blueish ray until you have everything installed.
October 31, 2009
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eighteen,510
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  • #3
Some motherboards require the kick HDD to be in the SATA 1 connector. try making certain the HDD is in SATA 1 and the DVD is in SATA 2 and disconnect the blue ray until you have everything installed.

dndhatcher, I tried that too. I also asked ASUS (when Western Digital made me confirm that there was no disharmonize with their drive) if I needed to have some sort of SATAII commuter or something and they said no. They said that since the BIOS was reading the DVD bulldoze in several different SATA ports and not the hard drive in ANY of the ports that they thought the problem was in the hard drive.

One thing that is bothering me is why does the "kicking" automobile-read the drive (SATA ane...IDE Hard Bulldoze / SATA two...DVD Drive / SATA three...DVD Drive) simply the BIOS does not recognize the HDD? I disconnected all of the optical drives and tried just the HDD in unlike SATA ports and I have the same issue: the Difficult Drive is "auto-detected" but not shown in the BIOS.

Whatever more suggestions? The jerk at WD basically said their drives don't have this problem and there must be something else!

Cheers.

sheath
April sixteen, 2009
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  • #4
Have any other computers you can try the drive on? Merely to meet if information technology works in the commencement place.
Oct 31, 2009
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  • #5
I may get flamed for request this i but the new hard drives practice come up formatted, right? I hope information technology is non something featherbrained like that.

Is at that place an explanation for why the bulldoze would be recognized in the auto-detection when booting just non in the BIOS?

Oct 31, 2009
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  • #half dozen
Accept any other computers y'all can attempt the bulldoze on? Just to run into if information technology works in the start identify.

I do accept some other figurer I can try it on. I guess if it doesn't show up in the BIOS of the 2nd figurer than it is a bad drive?

banthracis
Oct 13, 2009
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  • #vii
I may get flamed for asking this one just the new hard drives do come formatted, right? I promise it is not something light-headed similar that.

Is there an explanation for why the drive would be recognized in the auto-detection when booting just non in the BIOS?

OEM drives don't come up formatted.

However, you should nonetheless be able to kick off your optical drive using Win seven DVD and so format your HD.

I'm not fully certain what your problem is. Are you unable to kick off your DVD? Because technically even in unformatted bulldoze information technology should load drivers, etc and give you options to then partition/format a drive.

October 31, 2009
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  • #viii
Thanks for the response banthracis.

I tried booting off of the Windows 7 deejay I accept in the DVD drive but it did not boot either. I downloaded a full Windows 7 Professional Student Edition and burned the file to a CD or DVD. Maybe the CD/DVD need to be in another format for booting in a DVD drive?
I was trying so many combinations of SATA optical drives and the SATA hard bulldoze that I can't retrieve the configuration I had when I tried to kick from the DVD drive. I know I went into the BIOS and had the DVD drive 1st and the HDD 2nd on the boot guild.

I have no options to format or division a drive either.

Basically the difficult drive spins, so I know information technology has power, and the hard drive is "car-detected" equally a SATA bulldoze during the boot, simply then I get "Hard Disk Error Press F1 to keep" so I press F1 to go to BIOS and there the difficult drive is not shown.

This evening when I get dwelling house perhaps I tin can put the drive in another reckoner and format information technology? Do yous retrieve that volition work or do think the other computer will give me the aforementioned "hard disk drive fault"?

dndhatcher
Aug xxx, 2009
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  • #ix
Your arrangement should boot on the DVD regardless of the HDD. If you simply copied a file and burned, I dont think you lot made a bootable DVD.

Tin can you boot the oterh computer on that DVD? If not that is your trouble.

October 31, 2009
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  • #ten
Your organization should kicking on the DVD regardless of the HDD. If you simply copied a file and burned, I dont call up you made a bootable DVD.

What is the simple mode to make a bootable DVD?
Seems like the ane matter I did not search the web for and answer to.

dndhatcher
Aug 30, 2009
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  • #11
Sounds like yous got the pupil upgrade version. You may have to install with another Os kickoff. I am not sure how microsoft has gear up that up.
banthracis
October 13, 2009
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  • #12
Oh well, yous should have mentioned all this in the first place!

Ok
1. Your HD is not formatted, that's y its not being recognized.
2. This is Not an issue every bit yous can kick off a DVD and them format/sectionalisation the HD.
3. Student Upgrade thingy requires you to create a bootable iso from the box files yous get
instructions hither:
http://world wide web.mydigitallife.info/2009/x/23/how-to-create-and-make-bootable-windows-seven-iso-from-exe-plus-setup1-box-and-setup2-box-files/

4. However, you tin just DL the bootable iso
http://www.mydigitallife.info/2009/11/10/windows-seven-iso-x86-and-x64-official-direct-download-links-ultimate-professional person-and-home-premium/

5. Burn down the iso, w/due east style you lot go far onto a DVD and utilise that to kicking. Then format your HD and install the OS.

During Os installation do not enter your student upgrade fundamental. Only click side by side. Wait until windows is installed, and so register and enter the key. Student keys read invalid during the installation process for some odd reason, though they're perfectly legal and piece of work fine after installation is consummate.

I take it this is your first build =P

Oct 31, 2009
24
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xviii,510
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  • #13
Oh well, you should have mentioned all this in the beginning place!

Ok
1. Your HD is non formatted, that'due south y its not existence recognized.
2. This is Non an issue as you can kicking off a DVD and them format/partitioning the Hd.
iii. Educatee Upgrade thingy requires you to create a bootable iso from the box files you become
instructions here:
http://www.mydigitallife.info/2009/10/23/how-to-create-and-make-bootable-windows-vii-iso-from-exe-plus-setup1-box-and-setup2-box-files/

4. However, you tin can just DL the bootable iso
http://www.mydigitallife.info/2009/11/x/windows-7-iso-x86-and-x64-official-directly-download-links-ultimate-professional person-and-home-premium/

five. Burn the iso, w/e way you brand information technology onto a DVD and use that to boot. Then format your HD and install the Os.

During Bone installation do not enter your pupil upgrade central. Simply click adjacent. Wait until windows is installed, then register and enter the key. Student keys read invalid during the installation procedure for some odd reason, though they're perfectly legal and work fine after installation is complete.

I take it this is your first build =P

I was hoping it wouldn't exist so obvious that this is my 1st build.
Honestly, I have read sooooo many pages and guides on this site and not one of them mentioned having to format the hard drive! I thought in this twenty-four hour period and age the drives came pre-formatted.

Then when I make the iso kick deejay and install it will at that place but exist an pick to format difficult drive or do i have to enter some DOS commands?

I will try the iso file as you lot show to a higher place and become dorsum to you...thanks and so much!

banthracis
Oct 13, 2009
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21,160
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  • #14
Haha no prob, there'southward ton's of little details not mentioned in guides you actually gotta do a few builds to figure out. I remember my beginning build I had no idea yous could daisy chain fans and then I ended up buying like iv molex splitter cables =D

Simply yea, the way MS handled the student upgrades was dumb, they should have just made it a bootable iso in the first place.

OEM HD's are non formatted equally I judge as a way to save cost, and I approximate cuz the whole OEM system was originally meant for boutique builders who may accept had their own preferred format. We purchase OEM parts because they're cheaper than the retail version which are the parts really meant to be sold to consumers.

For formatting aye, after you load all the drivers, etc, there will be a window asking you to cull a Hard disk drive/partition to install the OS onto. It'll list in a chart Hard disk drive's yous have installed, partitions, size of partitions and /or if something is unformattted. There'll be options to create partitions, format sectionalization and something i can't remember off the top of my head. Just follow onscreen directions, it'south pretty foolproof.

Oct 31, 2009
24
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eighteen,510
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  • #15
then should I partition it or just format the the whole 1TB drive equally one drive? Advantages / disadvantages?

I am not doing whatsoever RAID, just one 1TB SATA HDD.

You mentioned the power cablevision too...should the HDD be a defended cable from the power supply? Tin the ii DVD drives share a cable? What about the fans, can they share a power cable?

Thanks again!

banthracis
October 13, 2009
3,032
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21,160
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  • #16
Benefits read
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disk_partitioning

However, mostly I don't bother sectionalization cept for a recovery partition. I recall Win 7 creates one automatically? Non 100% sure.

Simply yea, unless you plan on having multiple OS, or you're making a server where large number of ppl have their own individual drives (really these are partitions on the server, but read equally drives for the end user), the main reason to partitioning would exist to separate the Bone from media/games.

I'd recommend at least having ii partitions, 1 for the recovery and 1 for the other stuff. If you're paranoid you tin can sectionalization Os abroad from media/games. Notwithstanding, sectionalization doesn't stop virus from damaging your Os, so really of minimal use to a full general user.

I assume yous don't have a modular PSU. In that example information technology really doesn't thing as each cable has multiple plugs on information technology. Feel free to use em all equally yous won't meet load bug on those cables. Whatever decent PSU will see rail load limits long before information technology runs into cablevision load limits.

And so no, you can plugs 3 HD's or 1 HD and two DVD's to 1 cable, w/e as long equally the cables reach the different things. Fans you tin daisy chain practically an unlimited number to a unmarried molex. Power draw from fans is and so low its a not issue unless y'all managed to fit a few thou fans in your case.

October 31, 2009
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dndhatcher
Aug 30, 2009
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  • #18
I would not plug DVDs and HDDs in on the aforementioned cable. DVDs suck a ton of power as they spin up to read a DVD and I dont desire that affecting my HDD power.
Oct 31, 2009
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  • #19
I would not plug DVDs and HDDs in on the same cable. DVDs suck a ton of power as they spin upwards to read a DVD and I dont want that affecting my HDD power.

That'due south what I was thinking besides.

October 31, 2009
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  • #20
OK, so I fabricated a bootable copy of the Windows seven 64-bit pupil edition download.
I installed it into the DVD drive and booted the organisation.
Windows started to install and so said information technology needed a driver for the hard drive.
I looked for a driver on Western Digital'south website simply institute none. The WD site that ALL of their Caviar Black drives are uniform with Windows 7.
I go to Microsofts Website and it says that the WD Caviar Black 1TB is compatible in the 32-chip version but not all the same in the 64-bit...yaaah!

At this point I removed the drive and installed it into my older reckoner with the same results...not recognized in BIOS.

I called Western Digital and asked near this Windows 7 driver and they said that no commuter was needed and that it should plug-and-play since information technology is a SATA drive. When I told them that BIOS was not recognizing the drive and that it was spinning they said that the drive must be bad. They are overnighting one to me, should have it Mon. They were very accommodating when I described the pains I have been going through to go this system up and going. They also said that their drives are already formatted when they leave the factory.

So, we will come across what happens when I get the new drive on Mon!

dndhatcher
Aug 30, 2009
3,574
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23,160
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  • #21
I've never heard of a SATA drive that was incompatible. Like WD said, its just SATA.
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Error Code 50 Read Not Write Optical Sata Iii

Source: https://forums.tomshardware.com/threads/hard-disk-error-on-brand-new-system-please-help.599761/

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