The only other person, other than yourself, I've seen in this NG running
external SATA drives is Colin Barnhorst... if he doesn't respond... well,
too bad, I guess. I don't recall ever seeing that he had the types of
problems you're having with Vista and external SATA drives.
I can only assume that you both are using different SATA controllers into
which you attach your external SATA drives...
Lang
"Adam Albright" <> wrote in message
news:...
> While some may not think so, I'm actually not a Microsoft basher. I
> just expect them to do a better job when I paid $200 for a upgrade.
>
> I'm using the Business version. I previously mentioned in other
> threads how I had troubles with my SATA drives not being seen in
> Windows in spite of me installing the latest Intel controller drivers
> and confirmed by a splash screen in BIOS they are in fact installed
> and should be able to perform in AHCI mode. Windows Device Manager
> reports "no problems" either.
>
> This post isn't about that. I've resigned myself to run my external
> high speed drives in cripple mode, as IDE drives in an external case.
> That too was a issue for Vista. It couldn't "see" my SATA drive when
> plugged into a SATA channel, not even if the channel is setup to limp
> along in IDE mode.
>
> Now I got another issue. I switched the external case to its USB 2.0
> port rather then the preferred SATA port. Now Vista won't let me
> unmount this drive "safely". No matter what it tells me "in use", I
> know it isn't, but Vista isn't as smart as I am about such things. So
> I wait a reasonable time to be sure the drive spins down, a couple
> minutes which is way overkill, but I wait. I then just shut off its
> power supply to use brute force to unmount of this drive.
>
> Now a new problem. Vista hasn't seemed to mind this process until
> today. I fire up some of my external drives and Vista brings up the
> dreaded need to check disk window. I gulp, now what? Usually when
> Windows does this is has detected some fault with the file system. So
> it asks can it scan and repair this drive's file system? Well, if I
> don't say yes, it will no doubt just keep nagging till I do say yes.
> Besides NTFS as a file system is pretty stable and usually Windows can
> repair normal issues on the fly so I say ok. It comes back with no
> errors so just a false alarm.
>
> The point is being an experienced user I know how to work around these
> annoying issues. People with less experience probably don't which
> means Vista will scare the crap out of some people in either refusing
> to do things it should or worse suggesting something is wrong when it
> isn't. This is just one of my several issues, SATA drive support or
> more correctly worefully poor support of them.
>
> 1. BIOS sees them, so does Windows Device Manager.
>
> 2. I HAVE installed the latest drivers.
>
> 3. Nowhere does Vista complain anything is wrong with these SATA
> drives yet depending on how they are configured either can't see
> them in Windows Explorer so I can't access them or refuses to turn
> them off and unmount under other conditions.
>
> 4. Even disabling features for these SATA drives, Vista still has
> issues and even using its own USB controller driver it all by
> itself install to run all my USB devices isn't smart enough to be
> able to always unmount them so I can safely turn them off without
> risking possible file corruption.
>
> 5. Now I have 2 external SATA drives both running under USB 2.0 and
> Vista lets me shut one down, but not the other. Neither is
> accessing anything, no application are open that uses them, Windows
> Explorer the usual offender to generating false "open" calls is
> closed.
>
> My conclusion is Vista hasn't been tested well enough. Not in real
> situations. How it performs in a sterile lab setting I don't know or
> really care. It can and does drive you nuts sometimes, always when
> you're trying to get your work done. You would think Microsoft would
> like to know about these issues. MVP's try to sweep them under the rug
> or just call posters that post about them trolls.
>
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