Sony IDE CD-ROM Drive and 32-Bit Disk Access
ID: Q131188
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The information in this article applies to:
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Microsoft Windows versions 3.1, 3.11
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Microsoft Windows for Workgroups versions 3.1, 3.11
SYMPTOMS
When you start Windows or Windows for Workgroups on a computer with a Sony
CDU 55e IDE CD-ROM drive installed, you may receive a blue screen with the
following error message:
This program tried to access your hard disk in a way that is
incompatible with Window's 32-bit disk-access feature (*wdctrl).
CAUSE
When the Sony CDU 55e IDE CD-ROM drive is installed as a "slave" to the
"master" hard disk and 32-bit disk access is enabled, the CD-ROM drive uses
the same primary IDE channel as the hard disk. The CD-ROM drive shares the
hard disk's cable, interrupt, and port (IRQ 14, 1F0h).
Because this CD-ROM drive does not meet the WD1003 specification, the
master hard disk loses 32-bit disk access capabilities and the WDCTRL
driver does not load.
RESOLUTION
To work around this problem, use either of the following methods:
- Move the CD-ROM drive to a secondary IDE channel on the controller
card. Note that this method requires using separate cables for the
hard disk and CD-ROM drive.
For information about configuring the hardware in your computer,
please consult the hardware documentation or manufacturer.
- Disable 32-bit disk access. To do so, double-click the 386 Enhanced
icon in Control Panel, click the Virtual Memory button, click the
Change button, then clear the 32-Bit Disk Access check box.
MORE INFORMATION
The Sony CDU 55e CD-ROM drive is typically bundled with a Future Domain
16003 IDE controller and is installed on the secondary IDE channel by
default using IRQ 15 and port 170h.
Sony's Setup program puts the ATAPI_CD.SYS driver in the CONFIG.SYS file
and Corel's CORELCDX.EXE CD-ROM extension in the AUTOEXEC.BAT file. The
CD-ROM drive works with either CORELCDX.EXE or MSCDEX.EXE, but both will
fail if the CD-ROM drive is installed as a slave and 32-bit disk access is
enabled.
Using an enhanced IDE controller instead of a standard IDE controller does
not solve the problem under current versions of MS-DOS and Windows. Also,
using third-party 32-bit disk access drivers (such as those from OnTrack,
Western Digital, or MicroHouse) does not solve the problem.
The third-party products discussed in this article are manufactured by
vendors independent of Microsoft; we make no warranty, implied or
otherwise, regarding these products' performance or reliability.
Additional query words:
3.10 3.11
Keywords :
Version : WINDOWS:3.1,3.11
Platform : WINDOWS
Issue type :