SATA drivers aren't motherboard-specific exactly but chipset specific. If your new motherboard had the same (or similar) SATA controller as the previous one then your old driver should have worked. Assuming you ended up buying the A8N-E board you mentioned in your other thread then you've gone from probably a Silicon Image chip of some kind (most likely a 3112 like what I have) to the integrated nForce4 SATA. If you're lucky, there'll be a floppy included with your mobo that contains the SATA driver for Windows setup but if you're not, you'll have to download the nVidia nForce4 driver kit, crack it open with Winzip or something, locate the text-mode SATA driver and stick that on a floppy.
Another option is to do what I did and integrate the SATA drivers into the normal Windows Setup. This is probably the best way to go as it eliminates the need to mess around with floppies and external drivers etc. There are numerous ways to do this, the way I did it was to edit the main setup .INF file directly to make the driver available in text-mode setup and then creating an unattended installation file to install the complete driver post-installation according to various guides in this thread:
http://www.nforcershq.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=8892Another, simpler, method is to use a program like nLite:
http://www.nliteos.com/Also, upgrading a motherboard without reinstalling Windows is a bad idea, don't do it
