Let's make this clear...
The modded driver ESDI_506.PDR:
http://www.msfn.org/board/?showtopic=78592compatible with Hard Drives (HD) larger than 137 GB is used by Windows 9x [95/98/ME] only if the hard drive(s) is/are (E)IDE/(U)ATA/(U)DMA [PATA] and only if the hard drive(s) is/are connected to the motherboard chipset (E)IDE controller(s) interface(s).
The mobo chipset + mobo (E)IDE controller(s) must be 48-bit LBA compliant = they must support HDs > 137 GB.
Otherwise, if the (E)/IDE/(U)ATA/(U)DMA [PATA] or SRAM USB [fake HD] drive(s) is/are connected to any other drive controller/interface, like SCSI, RAID, SATA, USB, FireWire etc, the modded ESDI_506.PDR driver does *not* apply.
If using VIA [or any other non-Intel] motherboard chipsets, these usually install their own HD drivers, which [all newer versions] should be compatible with HDs > 137 GB. In such cases ESDI_506.PDR is *not* used.
Glossary:
http://www.mdgx.com/glossary.htmATA = Advanced Technology Attachment (ANSI standard for Integrated Drive Electronics).
EIDE = Enhanced Integrated Device Electronics (Hard Disk Drive interface).
IDE = Integrated Device (Drive) Electronics (Hard Disk Drive interface).
ATAPI = Advanced Technology Attachment Packet Interface.
DMA = Direct Memory Access.
U-ATA = Ultra Advanced Technology Attachment (EIDE/ATA disk controller/drive).
UDMA = Ultra Direct Memory Access (EIDE/ATA disk controller/drive).
Ultra ATA = Ultra Advanced Technology Attachment (EIDE/ATA disk controller/drive).
Ultra DMA = Ultra Direct Memory Access (EIDE drive controller).
SATA = Serial Advanced Technology Attachment Hard Disk Drive standard (Western Digital).
PATA = Parallel Advanced Technology Attachment Hard Disk Drive standard.
RAID = Redundant Array of Inexpensive (Independent) Disks.
SCSI = Small Computers System Interface Hard Disk Drive standard.
SRAM = Static Random Access Memory.
USB = Universal Serial Bus standard.
VIA = VIA Technologies (Taiwanese computer hardware manufacturer).
When in doubt, there's always Wikipedia:
http://www.wikipedia.org/HTH [Hope This Helps]