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#1 | |
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Dark Mirth
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Yes... I have a question about DMA and it may be silly but... ah well.
Right now I've got a lovely abit kt7 mobo and all's working fine with one exception. I'll explain in a bit. first system spex: Windows XP Pro Abit KT7 (non-raid) Athlon T-bird 850 GF256 DDR 512MB Ram IBM 27GB 7200RPM HD Creative DVD drive Phillips 12x CD burner NOW here's the deal. I've checked all my settings and everything is a go go go for DMA to function 100% when I install all my stuff from scratch all is well. I fire up my PC the first few times and DMA is sweetness galore... BUT funny thing...after a short time my poor creative DVD drive starts to misbehave. Lots of freezing and cracklingwhen accessing Upon checking Device Manager I find that the drive has defaulted to PIO mode... I've got everything to "Use DMA if available" and it USES DMA for about a week, then craps back to PIO. I've tried it in different configurations as slave, master, stand alone master primary, secondary, you name it, but the problem still occours over and over. Does anyone have a clue why this would happen? After removing and reinstalling the drive SOMETIMES DMA will kick back in for a bit, and other times it requires reinstalling my VIA drivers, whereas other times even that doesn't fix it. DMA works fine on the drive under other operating systems so... just wondering... DOES ANYONE HAVE AN IDEA ON WHAT TO DO!?!?!?!?! |
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#2 | |
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Registered User
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It's an XP issue, hopefully it will be fixed in SP1
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Shalom! |
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#3 |
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Dark Mirth
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Call me crazy, but I just decided to give the latest Bus Master miniport drivers a try (they aren't installed with the VIA 4in1 drivers) and everything is dandy... crazy.
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#4 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Motril, Granada, SPAIN
Posts: 278
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This seems a common issue with certain CD-ROM/CD-RW/DVD drives and Windows XP. Here is a *experimental* way I've found to cure it.
1) Go to hardware manager and delete both IDE channels 2) When windows asks you to reboot, do so, but do not let windows to load, just press DEL at system post to enter bios setup. 3) Make sure all your drives are set to AUTO in bios setup (AUTODETECTION). Also make sure DMA/UDMA access is available through bios 4) Before leaving the bios, search for an option called "Update ESCD" "Update configuration data" or something like that. More likely to be found under PnP setup. 5) Save changes and reboot 6) Let windows re-detect both IDE channels again (and attached drives to them). 7) At this point you may need to manually set DMA access for some IDE devices manually under hardware manager. Do so. 8) That's it. With luck and leaving your drives to AUTO in bios, you won't lose your DMA access again.
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AMD Athlon XP 1800+ ASUS A7V333 1GB 266Mhz DDR SDRAM Creative GeForce4 Ti4200 Integrated CMI8738 audio |
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