Yes, that is what I suggest to do.magreen wrote:What do you think I should do? Do you think I should go ahead with your Plan B from your post above and reinstall with the HDD unplugged and with your custom drivers?
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Yes, that is what I suggest to do.magreen wrote:What do you think I should do? Do you think I should go ahead with your Plan B from your post above and reinstall with the HDD unplugged and with your custom drivers?


Fernando 1 wrote:Yes, you may try the following:Good luck!
- Download >this< 32bit driverpack and unzip it.
- Unplug the HDD and then boot off the Vista DVD.
- When you get the option to load any driver, load the content of the SATA_IDE folder, which is part of the downloaded package. Choose the "NVIDIA nForce Serial ATA Controller".
- Let Vista Setup delete and recreate the partition, where you want to get Vista installed.
- Let the Vista Setup do its work.
Fernando


Fernando 1 wrote:@ magreen:
The experience, that you got the SSD detected as SCSI device is nothing to worry about.
Nevertheless the behaviour of your system after having tried to replace the NVIDIA nForce Serial ATA Controller by the Standard Dual Channel PCI IDE Controller is very strange. It seems to me, that your SATA Controller has been set to "RAID" mode.
Do you see any "Storage Controllers" section within the Device Manager? If yes, which device is listed there?
Furthermore I would like to get the HardwareID's of the "NVIDIA nForce Serial ATA Controller" resp. "Standard Dual Channel PCI IDE Controller", which are listed within the "IDE ATA/ATAPI Controllers" section of the Device Manager. You will get the HardwareID's by right clicking onto the Controller > "Properties" > "Details" > "Property" > "HardwareID's".


Fernando 1 wrote:@ magreen:
The HardwareIDs verify, that your Dell System has an nForce 430/410 (=MCP 51) southbridge and not an nForce4 one as you have written within the thread title.
Nevertheless I have no idea why you are not able to replace the NVIDIA nForce SATA driver by the generic MS IDE driver named PCIIDE.SYS.
EDIT:
Have you ever tried to connect your SSD with the second SATA port and to change the SATA cables?
If not, unplug the HDD and the CD/DVD device and connect your SSD with the SATA cable, which you had used with your HDD until now.
After having done that, boot into the OS and try to replace the "NVIDIA nForce Serial ATA Controller" by the "Standard Dual Channel PCI IDE Controller".
Good luck!
Fernando

Error message when you start a Windows 7 or Windows Vista-based computer after you change the SATA mode of the boot drive: "STOP 0x0000007B INACCESSABLE_BOOT_DEVICE"
To resolve this issue yourself, enable the AHCI driver in the registry before you change the SATA mode of the boot drive. To do this, follow these steps:
1.Exit all Windows-based programs.
2.Click Start, type regedit in the Start Search box, and then press ENTER.
3.If you receive the User Account Control dialog box, click Continue.
4.Locate and then click one of the following registry subkeys:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\Msahci
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\IastorV
5.In the right pane, right-click Start in the Name column, and then click Modify.
6.In the Value data box, type 0, and then click OK.
7.On the File menu, click Exit to close Registry Editor.
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During the Windows 7 or Windows Vista installation process, any unused storage drivers are disabled. This behavior speeds up the operating system's startup process. When you change the boot drive to a driver that has been disabled, you must enable the new driver before you change the hardware configuration.
For example, assume that you install Windows Vista or Windows 7 on a computer that contains a controller that uses the Pciide.sys driver. Later, you change the SATA mode to AHCI. Therefore, the drive must now load the Msahci.sys driver. However, you must enable the Msahci.sys driver before you make this change.
This issue affects only the boot drive. If the drive that you change is not the boot drive, you do not experience this issue.

I don't think, that the quoted Microsoft article has anything to do with your problem.magreen wrote:do you think this could solve my issue? that my Pciide.sys driver could somehow be "disabled," whatever that means?Microsoft wrote:Error message when you start a Windows 7 or Windows Vista-based computer after you change the SATA mode of the boot drive: "STOP 0x0000007B INACCESSABLE_BOOT_DEVICE".
it certainly explains the mystery that I only have the problem with the SSD as boot drive, not as a secondary drive.
do you think I should try this regedit after switching to the generic MS IDE driver and before rebooting?


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