Using 2 Partitions on SSD Drive - Snow Leopard & Leopard

We have split our APPLE SSD TS128A into two partitions. We then installed Snow Leopard on one partition and booted from it successfully. Then we inserted our Leopard disc to install Leopard on the other partition. To our surprise the Leopard disc (upon restart) would only produce a grey screen followed by a black screen/power down. If we booted up holding down option we could see the Leopard disc and select it for mounting but we still had the same result.
Next we gave up on a clean Leopard install and cloned a previous Leopard OS from an external hard drive to the second partition of our SSD drive. Using SuperDuper everything copied over successfully but the volume would not boot successfully. Again we got a grey screen followed by a quick black screen / power down.
We are wondering if this a problem with this SSD drive as we have cloned many times in the past from computer to computer and never had a problem like this.
We have also preciously run Leopard on this SSD drive while the drive had only one partition.
Also, yes our Leopard install disc is fine. We have used it on other machines. Also, yes we have enough room on each partition for each OS installation.
We partitioned using GUID and each partition/volume is Mac Extended Journaled

Apple doesn't program any Macs not to allow an earlier version of the OS to be used. However, a Mac cannot not successfully boot from an OS that does not include appropriate drivers for its hardware components, & quite often more recent Macs have upgraded hardware that are not supported by the drivers shipped with older versions of the OS.
For this reason, the OS +installer package+ checks the hardware of the Mac targeted for the OS install & compares it to a list of what it can support. If the Mac isn't on that list, it will refuse to install the OS. For the same reason, if you bypass the installer, like by using a clone of the HD of a different Mac with an older OS version on it, it generally will not successfully boot a Mac with newer hardware.
Note that the hardware differences can & usually do include things other than just the CPU or graphics processor. Check /System/Library/Extensions, which is the home of the drivers (as well as other extensions) & note that things like the System Management Controller (SMC) & various input/output (IO) devices each have drivers that correspond to subsystems typically implemented with different hardware on different Macs.
And to answer a question this might raise: no, generally speaking you can't mix & match drivers from different versions of the OS & expect stable results. This is largely due to the interrelationship between drivers: some have dependencies on others (especially among the IO ones) so a mismatch can cause problems, up to & including kernel panics.

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