Well, if you see the Fedora loading screen, that generally means that the dual-boot has succeeded but there is something wrong with your configuration so it doesn't boot.
EasyBCD cannot control what happens with Fedora after it hands off the boot process.
However, it sounds like Fedora is getting mixed up with your assortment of IDE and SATA drives (highly not recommended, most OSes (vista excluded) cannot handle that too well!) and somewhere in the boot process it tries to access the wrong drive.
EasyBCD cannot control what happens with Fedora after it hands off the boot process.
However, it sounds like Fedora is getting mixed up with your assortment of IDE and SATA drives (highly not recommended, most OSes (vista excluded) cannot handle that too well!) and somewhere in the boot process it tries to access the wrong drive.