Mrious_be,
Western Digital hard drives are unique in my experience in recommending jumper settings as follows:
Single hard drive: "Cable Select" (this may involve no jumper at all depending on the drive). Other brands of hard drive are usually configured as "master" in this most basic configuration.
Master of two hard drives: "Master"
Slave of two hard drives: "Slave"
I do not fully understand the concept of "Cable Select." I understand that it is a technology that is supposed to allow you to connect any one or two ATA devices - say a hard drive alone or a hard drive and a CD drive - on a single ribbon IDE cable and you do not have to concern yourself with master and slave settings - this is all is done for you automatically. But all the technology - hard drive, ribbon cable, and CD - must cooperate.
But it is apparently not really quite that simple in practice.
Seems like a solution in search of a problem - most of us can handle slave and master jumpers well enough as they are.
I have a WD 80 GB /8 MB cache 7200 RPM IDE hard drive.
I have just jumpered it to "cable select" when running it alone on the cable.
When with another drive, I either set both to "cable select," or one to master and one to slave - I have seen both configurations recommended. I cannot tell any difference in these configurations, and I suspect that it may not really matter.
It all seems to be pretty forgiving.
If you want official specifics you might wander around the Western Digital support site at:
http://support.wdc.com/Or just Google "Western Digital Cable Select."
I just did so and came up with:
http://www.segcomp.com/WD1200BB.htmlWhich seems to aded the fourth possibility of "neutral" jumpering - my head is spinning - something I do not recollect seeing mentioned when I set up my drive (a different WD drive model).
Final thoughts - Western Digitals do indeed have nonstandard nonuniversal instructions for set-up compared to other drives. Their efforts at simplifying jumper settings seem to have just complicated the whole matter. I would just go with the instructions you have with your particular drive and not worry about it. If that does not work - you might try try "cable select." If that does not work, you might try "master."
If there is a problem at that point, something else is likely going wrong. For example, you might want to make sure you are using an 80-wire IDE cable, not the 40-wire cable that may have come with earlier Macs. Disc drivers may also be an issue.
And, of course -
Don't forget to back-up.
Regards,
Epaminondas