Can't get Vista 64-bit to format Boot Camp partition

Okay. I went through all the normal steps, I checked back here, read as many threads as I could, and still nothing has worked. The core problem is that after I use boot camp to partition my drive, I boot into the Vista DVD, it sees the partition, I use the Format button to format it to NTSF, it does, then it says "Windows cannot find a suitable volume for installation".
Here's my setup:
Mac Pro 2.8 GHz 8 core, 10 GB RAM, 8800GT card.
3 internal HDs, 2 500 GB drives for my system, apps and media stuff, and 1 250 GB drive just for Windows.
Vista Ultimate 64-bit (yes, a real store-bought copy) Note that this is an OEM copy that's 64-bit ONLY, as opposed to the retail version that has 32-bit and 64-bit on the same DVD.
Here's what I've tried:
- Zeroed out all data on the Win drive, formatted as OS X extended, used Boot Camp to partition for Windows
- Formatted drive as OS X extended, then used Boot Camp to partition it into a 5 GB OS X volume and a ~230 GB Win volume
- Used Boot Camp to partition it as a single Windows volume
- Used Boot Camp to partition it as a single Windows volume, then tried to install Vista onto it without formatting it to NTSF
- In the Vista installer, tried deleting the main partition, creating a new one, then formatting it
- In the Vista installer, tried deleting both partitions (including the 200 GB EFI one that Boot Camp creates) and recreating them
In every one of these cases, after Vista formatted the partition it would not allow me to install Vista onto it, saying it couldn't find a suitable volume for installation.
I noticed that when Boot Camp does it's thing to your drive, it's supposed to create a partition named BOOTCAMP. In my case, it failed to do that when I told Boot Camp to create a single Windows partition on the drive. Instead, the drive would simply disappear from my desktop. It would then show up in the Vista installer, but it had no name. It just said Drive 1 Partition.
However, when I used Boot Camp to partition the drive into a 5 GB OS X volume and a ~230 GB Windows volume, it did create the BOOTCAMP volume and mounted it on the desktop, in addition to the 5 GB Untitled OS X volume. And in the Vista installer it did show up named BOOTCAMP, however formatting it had the same results as all my other attempts.
So after doing this for over 5 hours today, I don't know what the problem is. Nothing I've done, either in Boot Camp or in the Vista installer, is letting me install Vista onto the volume. Vista is simply refusing to install onto my drive no matter how it's been erased, partitioned or formatted. I don't know if this is a problem with the Boot Camp drivers, or with Vista. Maybe it's something to do with this Mac, it's pretty new just got it last week, there's a lot of variables here. The Mac is 100% perfect in all other ways though.
Any suggestions?

It worked! The only way I could get it to work was to pull out both my 500 GB drives so that the boot camp drive was the only one left. And even though the drive wasn't named BOOTCAMP Vista finally installed onto it. So it looks like the bug is just in Vista's installer - specifically that it appears to ignore the fact that you've selected the correct partition to install onto, and it gets confused if you have multiple HDDs installed.
Once Vista installed everything else went fine. I put my drives back in, updated Vista, installed the Boot Camp drivers and it's peachy now. Thanks again for the help.

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