Windows 8 does not remember secondary SATA hard drive letter

So, I bought an HP Pavilion with a 1TB HDD with Windows 8 installed. I burned the recovery disks, wiped the 1TB (Seagate) drive and installed a 250GB (WD) drive. I installed the WD as the primary boot and OS, and formatted the Seagate as a basic drive for
storage. I reinstalled from the recovery disks, and the OS went exactly where I wanted it to, but the Seagate doesn't list in the My Computer display. It does appear in the BIOS, and it does appear in Disk Management.
I searched the internet and found the tips about using Disk Management to assign a drive letter to the second drive. SUCCESS! Or so I thought. I can see the second disk in disk management, and can successfully assign a drive letter so that the drive appears
in My Computer; but after any/every reboot, I have to go through the same process over and over and over again. Windows 8 is not "remembering" the drive letter settings for this particular drive.
It doesn't seem like a big deal, but this drive is intended as a shared drive for the "Homegroup" so that everybody can use it as storage. Not everybody in the small office is familiar or comfortable with going through this, so I need the system
to "remember" the disk settings all of the time.
The 1TB Seagate has the following properties:
Disk type - Basic
Partition style - MBR
File system - NTFS
Does anyone have any ideas? Suggestions?
Thank you!

Hi alcisco70,
The drive letter miss after restarting the computer, right?
I would like to suggest you update its driver firstly, and then do the following:
open a command prompt with administrator privileges, then type:
Diskpart
List disk (you will get detail disk info, if you only have one disk, it will show disk 0)
Select disk 0
List volume (you will get detail volume info)
Select volume # (change # to corresponding number)
then enter:
attributes volume clear hidden
After that, restart the computer and reassign the drive letter to that volume. And navigate to the path below:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows Search\VolumeInfoCache
Which lists all the current drive info.  check if there is any conflict.
Karen Hu
TechNet Community Support

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