Bob Goodwin wrote: > Physically swapping the two data connectors might have made > it work it seems since that would have made the "grub drive" > /dev/sda? Probably not. Grub would have started looking on what it thought was the "second" disk (by that point the WinXP disk) for a kernel and initrd, if not for the second stage of Grub itself. If you could have got Grub to load and to boot Fedora, then Fedora would have quite happily worked out where its partitions were. I'm pretty sure that Windows XP would have been unhappy, too. NT-based OSes (like XP) have a number of ways of referring to their disks, and don't like it if any of them change. The usual symptom is an unbootable system. If you want a belts-and-braces setup, you might want to look at getting the NT boot loader to boot Fedora. http://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/How_to_setup_boot_loaders#Copying_the_boot_sector is a fairly clear set of instructions. (Please be careful with the dd command!) That way, you should be able to get into Fedora whichever boot loader starts. Hope this helps, James. -- E-mail: james@ | [Training spam filters] is somewhat like house-training aprilcottage.co.uk | a puppy: it's a painful process, involving contact with | unpleasant materials, and with a messy failure mode. | And, somewhere in the process, something you care about | is likely to get chewed up. -- Jonathan Corbet, lwn.net