Pismo does not boot after replacing hard drive

We have had an old Pismo for several years now. Two or so years ago we decided to replace the stock 6GB hard drive, which was getting full, with a new 60GB drive. We cloned the old drive via target disk mode, popped in the new drive, copied the data back (again via target disk mode), and were surprised when we were met with the flashing question mark/system folder icon. Sort of left it at that and forgot about it.
I stumbled upon the Pismo again today and decided to see if I couldn't get it working. After going through a few "why won't this even turn on" sessions (the machine hadn't been powered on in a few years, so pulling the internal battery and resetting the PMU fixed that), I popped the old drive back in and the machine booted just fine. Cloned the original drive (again) using Carbon Copy Cloner via target disk mode to a disk image on my MacBook. Powered it down, put the new (60GB) drive back in the Pismo, cloned the disk image back to the new drive. The data's there, because I can browse it in target disk mode, but I can't boot off the new hard drive. I can't boot off my Tiger install DVD either - the DVD drive spins up and tries to access the disc, but won't boot. I'm going to try and get my hands on the CD version of Tiger to see if there's a difference using that.
Disk Utility on the MacBook says there's nothing wrong with the Pismo's hard drive, but I'm not convinced that's the case. I'd heard about Pismos being picky with certain types of hard drives, is this true? If not, what other issues might be leading to this behavior?

Is this perhaps an artifact of the drive being formatted via target disk mode on my MacBook
I suspect that the problem lies somewhere in that situation. I suggest that you boot from the install disk as I suggested previously and reformat the HDD and reinstall the OS.
Formatting, Partitioning Erasing a Hard Disk Drive
Warning! This procedure will destroy all data on your Hard Disk Drive. Be sure you have an up-to-date, tested backup of at least your Users folder and any third party applications you do not want to re-install before attempting this procedure.
• Boot the MacBook Firewire Target Disk Mode.
• Insert install disk into MacBook's optical drive.
• Connect computers via firewire cable
• Option Boot Pismo.
• Select Install Disk for startup and click on the straight arrow.
• Select language
• Go to the Utilities menu (Tiger and later) Installer menu (Panther & earlier) and launch Disk Utility.
• Select your HDD (manufacturer ID) in left side bar.
• Select Partition tab in main panel. (You are about to create a single partition volume.)
• Click on Options button
• Select Apple Partition Map (PPC Macs)
• Click OK
• Select number of partitions in pull-down menu above Volume diagram.
(Note 1: One partition is normally preferable for an internal HDD.)
• Type in name in Name field (usually Macintosh HD)
• Select Volume Format as Mac OS Extended (Journaled)
• Click Apply/Partition button at bottom of panel.
• Select Erase tab
• Select the sub-volume (indented) under Manufacturer ID (usually Macintosh HD).
• Check to be sure your Volume Name and Volume Format are correct.
• Click Erase button
• Quit Disk Utility.
Open installer and begin installation process.
cornelius

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