Topic: Master and Slave, no interrogations, sorry :)
Saltah'na
Chinese Canadian, or 75% Commie Bastard.
Member # 33
posted
Yes, this is a question about Masters and Slaves. Well sort of.
This is also a question about Primary and Secondary IDE Hard Drives. Tricked ya, huh?
Anyways, here is the situation: I just got my old computer from my parents, and a new 20 GB removable hard drive and I just tried installing it as the Primary Master. The old hard drive is now the Secondary Master, while the CD-Rom is now the Secondary slave (was Secondary Master). The CD-ROM was working before I installed the new HD, and yes, I adjusted the jumpers to say Slave, and I made sure that it was plugged in properly.
If I remove the Primary master, then the secondary master kicks in, loads up Windows 98 and recognizes the CD-ROM
If I insert the Primary master, it loads up the Win98, then the secondary master becomes the D drive, but wait, the CD-ROM is not recognized. No E Drive, nothing.
I have tried reinstalling Win 98 several times, but to no avail. Can someone help me?
------------------ "My Name is Elmer Fudd, Millionaire. I own a Mansion and a Yacht." Psychiatrist: "Again."
Start-->Run... Type in "msconfig" Go to config.sys and look for a line that says "LASTDRIVE=D" where D could be any letter. Click on that line, and choose Edit. Change the letter to Z. Save it, and then reboot. See if that works.
------------------ "You must give in to tock." - The First One
Charles Capps
We appreciate your concern. It is noted and stupid.
Member # 9
posted
Many CD drives flat out do NOT like being secondary slave. Lastdrive is very unlikely to exist unless your system was upgraded from DOS/Win31...
Try putting both hard drives on the primary channel, then making the CD secondary master. If that fails, put the old/second hard drive as secondary master. One of those configs is likely to work.
------------------ "Babies are squirmy, ugly, dirty, smelly, and noisy. They'd offend all five of my senses if I had any reason to lick one..." -- TSN, 2001.01.11 23:27, PhoenixChat
posted
A few years back we used three removable hard drives at my work. We thought they were the shit, as the technology was relatively new at the time. Within a couple months, though, they all ended up defective. I hope yours fares better.
posted
Why have Windows on both harddrives??? You'd have to watch them like a hawk to be sure both drives have the same resources. Suddenly you start a program and the new drivers to this program is on the other drive. If I would choose, I'd put Win98 and your programs on the non-removable and put the multimedia-files and documents on the removable one.
------------------ Here lies a toppled god, His fall was not a small one. We did but build his pedestal, A narrow and a tall one.
Charles Capps
We appreciate your concern. It is noted and stupid.
Member # 9
posted
Your CD as primary slave should work. SHOULD.
------------------ "Babies are squirmy, ugly, dirty, smelly, and noisy. They'd offend all five of my senses if I had any reason to lick one..." -- TSN, 2001.01.11 23:27, PhoenixChat
[This message has been edited by Charles Capps (edited January 17, 2001).]
posted
Yes, but if there is nothing there it will skip it, like the A:. My system is set up to try the A:, then the E:, then the C:. Only screws things up if I leave something in I shouldn't have.
------------------ "One's ethics are determined by what we do when no one is looking"
Some new BIOSes can change the easily, including recognizing which devices are which (i.e. zip drives, CDs, DVDs, and HDDs)...
------------------ "Babies are squirmy, ugly, dirty, smelly, and noisy. They'd offend all five of my senses if I had any reason to lick one..." -- TSN, 2001.01.11 23:27, PhoenixChat