Rolf:
Problems with Device Drivers are, indeed, directly related to the number of
OS bits.
Visit a 64-bit newsgroup -- you may discover that your problem is well known
there.
You seem, however, to have mis-configured your Boot Options in the
motherboard BIOS.
"First hard drive" is not the correct configuration. "Boot SCSI", or
something similar, is the correct boot selection, but very likely you will
also have to enter Advanced BIOS settings to ENABLE 'Boot from RAID', or
whatever your manufacturer calls it.
You are going to have to READ the manual for your motherboard, in
particular, BIOS settings, to determine how to set it up to boot from a SATA
RAID Array.
Steve
"Rolf Aslaksen" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:43f1a2a5$0$27270$(E-Mail Removed)...
>
> "Sven" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>> You should post x64 questions to an x64 newsgroup.
>
> Yes, but isn't this a general question not related to the
> number of bits the OS is built for?
>
>> Did you set your BIOS to boot from the array?
>
> I set the MB BIOS to first boot from the HDD, it can't see
> if it's an arry or not.
>
> Regards
> Rolf
>
>
>> "Rolf Aslaksen" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>> news:43f12b9c$0$27341$(E-Mail Removed)...
>> > Hi,
>> >
>> > I've installed WinXP Pro x64 on Soltek SL-NF4PRO-939 MB with
>> > the nVidia nForce4 CK804 chipset and AMD Athlon 64 X2 CPU.
>> >
>> > There's four Diamond Max 200GB SATA in a 0+1 raid array.
>> >
>> > The latest 64 bits sata-raid driver from nVidia is installed.
>> >
>> > After re-booting, the system can't find the raid array and hence
>> > won't start.
>> >
>> > When, in the boot process, pushing F10 and entering the raid set-up
>> > utility, it's reported that the array is bootable and healthy.
>> >
>> >
>> > Any suggestion would be much appreciated.
>> > Regards
>> > Rolf Aslaksen
>> >
>> >
>> >
>>
>>
>
>
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