Hi and welcome.
I am not sure if you noticed the thread describing my efforts last weekend, but it seems like I probably ran into the same problem.
http://forum.thinkpads.com/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=112670 My Win2K install cd recognized the card, though, and the first time I tried, the install seemed to go fine. But the laptop refused to boot from it. I don't know much about your i-series, except that it's the older notebook with a 10.4" screen, right?
I was convinced this had to do with the master/slave jumper settings, but after reading rkawakami's links here (Thanks a lot!), I realized that the issue might be that the adapter/CF card unit is seen as a removable drive, and that there are issues connected to booting from removable drives on older hardware. After all, it seems to work fine in the X40, as described by Neil. I used a Kingston Ultimate 266X card, which is described to automatically change ID, but in my case it didn't work. Which card did you try?
So after reading the Thinkwiki page, there are two advices that in my eyes stands out:
Thinkwiki wrote:Most CompactFlash cards by default identify themselves as removable media instead of fixed disk. Which is fine for Linux, but not for Windows.
If you have to use a CF card that has the type bits set to Removable and want to install Windows XP you can work around it as follows:
- -Use Linux to partition the drive with a FAT32 partition (you can boot from one of the LiveCD/LiveUSB distributions for this), and set the partition bootable.
- -Start the install of Windows, during install you will be given the opportunity to migrate to NTFS
- -After the install is finished you will need to install the Hitachi microdrive disk drivers (google for XPfildrvr1224.zip), which will mask the removable bits and should allow suspend and other operations that fail on a removable drive to work.
And if that doesn't work, it might be an option to invest in a different CF card:
Thinkwiki wrote:Transcend 133X/266X/300X
These cards are known to identify themselves as fixed disk via CF-IDE adapters without any manual intervention, and is of good value, and speed (for 266X/300X).
Although the Transcend cards with an acceptable size that I found on eBay were 133x and 400x. 133x will probably be too slow, and I'm not sure if the 400x ones share the capabilities described above, as 400x isn't mentioned. (Any experiences, anyone?)
I will do some experimenting here when I'm done with some house projects. I will report back, feel free to do the same, Thinkpaduser72.
God luck!