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Solve : COPYING a Win3.1 CD ROM TO 3 1/2" DISK in WIN 10? |
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Answer» Hi Guys I am new to this forum but have used C_HOPE a few times and didn't know it had a forum etc. every time it tried to read the driver file it came up with not enough memory. How much RAM does your computer have? This message may mean that no matter what means of installation you will have not enough memory as an error. Other thing to be aware of is depending on how you have your autoexec.bat and config.sys files set up you can run into an old problem of base memory being too low which usually can be adjusted to increase the base memory count. The MEM command at DOS prompt will display Base and Extended Memory count. I use to have problems with some software when my available Base Memory was lower than 592k of 640k. http://web.csulb.edu/~murdock/mem.htmlSome things I'm noticing looking over your situation. The first thing I'm noticing is that all the models I can find that could be the described as an "Epson 600 printer" are (relatively) recent models. They do not provide Windows 3.1 drivers; many don't even provide drivers for Windows XP. Given that I highly doubt that the CD-ROM for the printer provides anything that is of any use to your Windows 3.1 system. Second thing is that those models of Epson 600 don't even have connectivity capabilities to connect to an older system, as they only offer connectivity via USB or through your network, and network-connected printers require specialized drivers from the manufacturer to function which as I mentioned isn't likely to be on the CD given the age (or lack thereof) of the printer itself. This is also consistent with your more recent mention that "every time it tried to read the driver file it came up with not enough memory."; in many cases attempting to run executables designed for say Windows XP and later will give a "Program is too big to fit in memory" error. For compatible Drives, by the by, you don't need a CD-ROM drive; you can use a CD Burner drive or even a DVD drive. Hi BC... My search for a Epson 600 that supported Windows 3.1 found an Epson Stylus 600 color ... My guess is that this is probably their model as for there are no others found on google in relation to Windows 3.1 support for "Epson 600". https://epson.com/Support/Printers/Single-Function-Inkjet-Printers/Epson-Stylus-Series/Epson-Stylus-Color-600/s/SPT_C200001 Quote Looking online for the driver i see its 1.98MB, if this is the driver for your printer its too big for a single floppy unless you can span it between floppies or compress it somehow to 1.44MB https://epson.com/Support/Printers/Single-Function-Inkjet-Printers/Epson-Stylus-Series/Epson-Stylus-Color-600/s/SPT_C200001?review-filter=Windows+3.1 This printer has LPT1 ( Parallel port ) connectivity which Win 3.1 would support. Specs here: https://files.support.epson.com/pdf/sc600_/sc600_sl.pdf Quote For compatible Drives, by the by, you don't need a CD-ROM drive; you can use a CD Burner drive or even a DVD drive.Some newer drives work legacy backwards to old systems like this but i ran into problems about 14 years ago with modern IDE optical drives not happy with older systems, however when pairing up an older date code drive with my 386 SX 40Mhz running Win 3.11 then all was well. The newer drives worked fine on my Windows XP system at the time and it wasn't an oops with the Master/Slave/CS jumper setting. Oh OK, that's good. The Epson search results give a list of models but they don't give much information without actually going to every page and there are quite a few models, so all the ones I looked at were in the 2010+ range. Obviously because of that it has the appropriate interfaces for older systems. Regarding Drive compatibility, My understanding is that the limiting factor is the interface (PATA in this case) and system support for ATAPI. As long as that checks out, the drive should work fine with proper drivers. Personally I've not had any problems using OAKCDROM.SYS for all the PATA CD-ROM drives I own (as long as the system has an IDE Host Controller, of course!). Quite useful for transferring DATA to older non-USB systems with DVD-RWs. I seem to r emember reading KB articles discussing support issues with some of the included generic drivers on various Windows Boot diskettes, though. |
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