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Answer» My system crashed when I rebooted I discovered that I had lost my DVD/CD-ROM drive. Device manager showed yellow exclamation points saying there was a problem with my primary and secondary IDE Controller (FIFO) It was suggested that I should remove the PCI IDE controller then let windows reinstall it. I did it did but I still have the yellow exclamation points and the same message. I checked the BIOS it sees it, DOS sees it however Windows does not What do I do? The system is: Windows 98SE 4.10.2222a Intel DG845GVSR MB with Intel Celeron 2g chip Custom-built machine two hd 1 WD 20G 1 MAXTOR 80G Regularly run Adaware,Sbot S&D have AVG 7.5 anti virus I have a Original WINDOWS 98SE CD Re-install your motherboard drivers.Minor problem. The drivers are on a CD-ROM. and I don't have a CD-ROM driveTravel to bootdisk.com and DLoad a Win98SE bootdisk...get the one with CD_Rom support . Extract it to a clean floppy and boot up with the floppy in. After start at the A: prompt type D: and hit Enter ...you should now have a working CDRom. Type dir /p and hit Enter...this will show the contents of the CD. Look for setup.exe...if its there type setup and hit Enter...the install should now run.1) don' t need to down load one got one 2) when you say at "A" prompt type "D" I assume you want me to CHANGE directory to "D" ? If so I my case it's E cause I have 2 hdYes that's what i meant...2 HDD's weren't mentioned which is why we always say lots of info is never too much. E: and Enter should get you there...have the driver CD in.OK...will do sorry I forgot to mention that.....will let you know resultsHere is a update. The CD-ROM that came with the board is APPARENTLY for windows,as there is no setup.exec on but you have a autorun. but the somewhat good news is I went to INTEL's website and I think I found the correct file here is the file name for the readme. Could you look and tell me if this is the right one? http://downloadmirror.intel.com/4841/ENG/readme.txtIf that driver matches your MBoard model that is the one you need.If that does not work try this
Missing DVD CD DRIVES in xp an vista have a look at
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/314060
or this
a software patch from here can solve the problem sometimes, it was aimed at windows XP, but the problem is still there in Vista unfortunately go to this WEB page
http://www.dougknox.com/xp/scripts_desc/xp_cd_dvd_fix.htm
and Download
XP_CD-DVD-Fix.zip
and save this file to your hard drive. NAVIGATE to where you saved it and double click the file to extract the contents. Locate the EXE file you extracted and double click it. A confirmation dialog will appear when the script is done. You may need to reboot for the change to take effect.
This utility is only intended for Windows XP. You may need Administrator level access to use this utility. If you do not have Administrator level access, the program will say it is finished, but will not have made any changes.
this is another way you have to open regedit and change this key click start, then enter regedit
first back up the entire registry.
then look for this key
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Class\{4D36E965-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318}
I am sorry but if the key is not there you will have to create it, then you will see the drive again,
Apparently it seems that this is an age old fix for even XP systems. If you venture to the registry key above by doing the following steps:
Click on the start menu.
If this is a Vista machine in the search box type in “regedit” without the quotation marks.
Maximize the HKLM and then go ahead and browse until you reach the key listed above.
In the right panel you’ll see something along the lines of “UpperFilter” and “LowerFilter” you want to click on each “filter” key and hit delete. Click yes when it asks to confirm if you wish to delete the key. Restart Windows.
http://www.dougknox.com/xp/scripts_desc/xp_cd_dvd_fix.htm
Restore CD/DVD Drives to Explorer
XP_CD-DVD-Fix.zip
Usage: Download XP_CD-DVD-Fix.zip and save this file to your hard drive. Navigate to where you saved it and double click the file to extract the contents. Locate the EXE file you extracted and double click it. A confirmation dialog will appear when the script is done. You may need to reboot for the change to take effect.
This utility is only intended for Windows® XP. You may need Administrator level access to use this utility. If you do not have Administrator level access, the program will say it is finished, but will not have made any changes.
Based on CDGONE.REG
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Class\{4D36E965-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318}
Apparently it seems that this is an age old fix for even XP systems. If you venture to the registry key above by doing the following steps:
1. Click on the start menu. 2. If this is a Vista machine in the search box type in “regedit” without the quotation marks. 3. Maximize the HKLM and then go ahead and browse until you reach the key listed above. 4. In the right panel you’ll see something along the lines of “UpperFilter” and “LowerFilter” you want to click on each “filter” key and hit delete. Click yes when it asks to confirm if you wish to delete the key. 5. Restart Windows. 6. Let me know if this works.
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