New internal hard drive in my imac - troubles installing Mac OS

I just had to replace my imac's internal drive because it died. I bought an 500gb Western Digital Caviar Blue OEM WD5000AAKS. I installed it just fine, and I reformatted it by going to utilities and erasing the drive and setting it to mac os extended journaled. After reformatting it the computer recognized the drive.
So now when I go to install the mac OS (I can't remember what vers. it is but I know it's at least 10.4) it starts the installation process but it is very sluggish. The first time, after about 20 min., it told me to retry the installation because something had gone wrong. I retried it, but it ran across another error and couldn't complete the installation. This time it gave me the option to view and save a log of the error. I looked at it but it meant nothing to me because I'm not familiar with the techie stuff.
One thing that i can point to is that the new hard drive is 300mbps (or 3) and my old one was 150 (1.5). I was reading about the jumper settings and i saw that I'm supposed to set my new HD's jumper a certain way, but I don't even know what the jumper is. Though i believe it is that series of 8 pins on the side of the new hard drive. Anyway, what am i supposed to do with those pins?
any help at all would be amazing

From accelerateyourmac:
Reader Comments: Computer: iMac G5 running OS X 10.5.2+
Replacement HD: WD5000AAKS
A week and a half ago I replaced the dying 160 GB HD that came with my iMac G5 (non-iSight) with a new Western Digital 500 GB WD5000AAKS, about $105 from Newegg. The drive is OEM and came with absolutely nothing but the drive itself, but mounting hardware and cables from the Mac worked perfectly, and HD replacement instructions on Apple website had beautifully detailed photos and clear instructions.+
+In short order I booted from the Leopard install disk, formatted (erased) the new drive, which was immediately recognized, and installed the OS. Leopard proved its worth, as it was very easy to restore the system from Time Machine. Of course, it restored the OS files that had been corrupted by the old HD, so I had to reinstall the OS, archiving the system settings so everything worked the way I wanted it to.+
+New drive is quieter, faster, and cooler -- fan never runs, where it ran constantly with the old drive, perhaps a symptom of its impending demise. Despite constant heavy use since installation, I've encountered no compatibility problems attributable to the HD. And with over 3X the capacity of the original drive, and at this bargain price, the new drive is hard to beat.
I wish I could say the same!!! This guy has the same computer as I do and bought tthe same hard drive. His review is a major reason why I chose the HD that I did.

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    3.  Is there any additional driver or special software that I have to install for a hybrid solid state drive?
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