![]() Where to find the adjustment and how to change it depends on your system manufacturer and BIOS version so you may end up having to just look around for it. It sounds like you need to enter the BIOS on your system by pressing the "Del", F2, F10 or F12 key (whatever key is right for your system), locate the section where the hard disks types and hard disk interfaces are configured and temporarily change the setting so the XP Setup is able to find the hard disk. It just means the XP Setup is not able to find it. It doesn't necessarily mean your hard disk is defective and if it was working before, it is most likely still plugged in. When you see a message like this, obviously XP Setup is starting to load, but then when Setup needs to go out and find your hard disk it is not finding the hard disk. This many involve running a manufacturer-supplied diagnostic or setup program. Make sure any hard disk drives are powered on and properly connected to your computer, and that any disk-related hardware configuration isĬorrect. Setup did not find any hard disk drives installed in your computer. If you are seeing a message(s) like this: Here are some general purpose instructions that should get you going: ![]() Then you do what you need to do (run chkdsk /r), then change the BIOS back to the original settings when you are done. ![]() If your system of unspecified make and model has SATA drives, the Recovery Console CD (or even genuine bootable XP media) will not be able to "see" the HDD unless you first get into your system BIOS by pressing whatever key you need to press to do so, and temporarily change the HDD interface mode to something the XP startup process does recognize. If your system has SATA drives (Courtesy of Jose Ibarra) ![]()
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