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Sep 23 2001, 11:32 AM
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#1
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Group: Members Posts: 4 Joined: 23-September 01 Member No.: 395 |
I've got a problem that I hope [b:08e4fd0609]SOMEONE[/b:08e4fd0609] can help me with. My floppy drive under WinME was locking my system whenever I tried to access it. And I mean a total system lock, no mouse or anything. I was hoping that a fesh install of WinXP when I got it would fix the problem. Unfortunately, no go.
The reason I'm having trouble tracking down the problem is that when I try and access a disk: [list=1] [*]In a normal start, the system locks [*]Using msconfig.exe and disabling everything in the selective start, the system locks [*]In Safe Mode, it reads the drive fine [*]Booting from a floppy, it accesses the disk just fine [/list=1] Does anyone have any ideas of what the problem could be? :confused Thanks in advance. |
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Sep 23 2001, 12:16 PM
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#2
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The MSFN Banana Group: Patrons Posts: 6507 Joined: 17-August 01 From: England, UK Member No.: 3 OS: none
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If you tried both fresh installs of WinME and WinXP, and you still get a complete system lock-up when accessing the floppy drive, then it sounds like a hardware problem. Bad IDE cable probably?
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Sep 23 2001, 01:25 PM
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#3
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Group: Members Posts: 4 Joined: 23-September 01 Member No.: 395 |
That's a possibility I hadn't tried. Geez, you'd think after working with these buggers for over 20 years, I'd have thought of that. I'll give it a try.:bash
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Sep 23 2001, 02:23 PM
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#4
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Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 663 Joined: 18-August 01 Member No.: 20 |
When you are getting frustrated out of your mind, then it is easy to forget stuff that is right in front of your face. LOL
Rick |
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| Guest_LouCypher_* |
Sep 23 2001, 08:24 PM
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#5
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Guests |
Bad IDE cable on a floppy drive? Not unless he's got a SuperDisk or something.. It sounds like he may have a bad cable or the drive connected to the wrong connector. It has to be connected AFTER the twisted section for drive A:, unless you've got floppy swap enabled in the BIOS. The system would boot fine but Windows will look for A: in the wrong location. I suspect it would also give an error under Device Manager as well if it ever booted into Normal Mode. Get a new floppy cable and connect it AFTER the twist and see if it helps.
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Sep 23 2001, 09:32 PM
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#6
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Group: Members Posts: 4 Joined: 23-September 01 Member No.: 395 |
I figured he probably meant floppy cable.Oddly enough, Windows reports the floppy drive as working just fine. It's only when you try to access a disk that the lock happens.I've tried a different floppy drive to no avail, but the cable had completely slipped my mind. Fortunately, I live in a house with 3 systems, so it's no problem... acquiring another cable.
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Sep 24 2001, 04:10 AM
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#7
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I am root, obey my authority! Group: Patrons Posts: 3139 Joined: 18-August 01 From: New Jersey Member No.: 12
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Well hold on one min guys....When you go to acsess the drive do you get any light or activity on the drive while its locked up. If you do then this has nothin to do with the cable. As far as I have ever seen if you have tried two fresh OS installes and your getting activity on the drive when try to acsess it, then its the drive. They cost 15 bucks go get a new one. [b:48cad05970]Now-[/b:48cad05970] If your not getting any activaty and its locking up then I would have to refer to posted replys above.
-Chris |
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Sep 24 2001, 08:39 AM
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#8
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Group: Members Posts: 4 Joined: 23-September 01 Member No.: 395 |
I get the light, but it's not the drive. That was my first thought, but I've swapped the drive with another one in the house. If it were the drive, then the problem should have transferred over to the other system. But the drive that I know is working still locks up my system. The one that I was getting the lock ups on works fine in the other system.
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Sep 24 2001, 05:15 PM
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#9
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Group: Members Posts: 5 Joined: 19-September 01 Member No.: 384 |
Think u all are forgeting something.
The drive boots in dos + it works in safe mode! So drive & cable are ok. It's a windows problem. Wrong drivers or some conflict. |
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Sep 24 2001, 09:32 PM
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#10
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Advanced Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 324 Joined: 7-September 01 Member No.: 294 |
hehe, mabey you you should read the details before you post:D
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Jan 27 2008, 03:10 PM
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#11
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 17 Joined: 7-May 07 Member No.: 138399 OS: XP Pro x86
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My solution is yanking out the fdd cable and tell the BIOS to disable the drive totally. Most modern BIOS's boot to USB flash drive. The 256m or even 128m are dirt cheap. If you need a disc, make a bootable CD. FDD's are OLD and unreliable (both drives and disks), why fight it?
My 2 cents worth. Sakui |
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Jan 27 2008, 04:10 PM
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#12
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Systems Annihilist ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 353 Joined: 14-September 05 From: Terra, Sol Member No.: 72994 OS: none
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Think u all are forgeting something. Agreed... check for Conflicts (IRQ, DMA, etc). New hardware added recently maybe? Check that BIOS and REAL hardware settings. Windows only uses what it's told to, ya know... One-by-one, you'll find the culprit. The drive boots in dos + it works in safe mode! So drive & cable are ok. It's a windows problem. Wrong drivers or some conflict. |
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Jan 28 2008, 03:22 AM
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#13
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One Man Army ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 829 Joined: 27-August 07 Member No.: 152562 OS: XP Pro x86
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My solution is yanking out the fdd cable and tell the BIOS to disable the drive totally. Most modern BIOS's boot to USB flash drive. The 256m or even 128m are dirt cheap. If you need a disc, make a bootable CD. FDD's are OLD and unreliable (both drives and disks), why fight it? My 2 cents worth. Sakui Ehm, this thread is over 6 years (!) old... |
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| Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 20th November 2008 - 06:27 AM |