You bought a new hard drive and you want to install it, what you should do?
There is one thing called jumper on the hard drive, you need to change its location from Master to Slave if you have the Master, if not live it as master. This is not needed when installing SATA drives.
It is not important if its IDE or SATA drive, the process of installing it is completely the same. You will get some cables that are used to connect the drive to your motherboard, just try to secure a safe place in your tower for the new drive. Also try to avoid touching other cables, circuits and panels in your computer tower. First connect data cable and after that you can connect the power.
Watch when installing because hard drives are really sensitive piece of hardware.
After that you should turn on computer and enter BIOS immediately to check if it recognizes the drive, sometimes it recognizes it automatically, sometimes you need to change some options in order to make BIOS know the component is there.
Now you should know that drives are low formatted when you get them, so you should do “high level format” before using it. You could just boot for example XP and go to “my computer” to find a new drive located in that folder. Then select the new drive, right click on it, go to tools and select Format. It will ask you to choose the file system and you should choose NTFS system, click start after that and be patient. This operation can last long, especially with large capacity drives, but leave computer working until this operation is finished.
Once it is completed you can reboot your personal computer and then find the new drive. Adding a new drive may change letters for other drives, so don’t be confused with it. This is what needs to be done, but you can never know what can go wrong with computers.
If your computer’s system still uses FAT32 you may have problems with bigger capacity drives like 120Gb drive or a larger, the system sometimes can’t recognize them. Service Pack 2 could solve this problem, or you can update your BIOS if you have some really old motherboard. You can also turn off your computer, check cables again just to make sure everything is connected as it should be. After that reboot, go to BIOS to see if the device is recognized now, you may even need the boot disk for your system or you can download it too, it is needed to format this new drive before it can be installed as a slave drive of your original Master drive.
If this does not help try calling some computer repair service, or computer repair on site service that can look at the problem and fix it in no time. You can try to fix problem yourself but it is always advised to contact some help and support and see what is the best thing to do when a problem occurs.