Floppy caching?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Bill Leary
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Bill Leary

I put in a 3.5" 1.44M floppy and view it's directory (usually via a command
line, but also with explorer).

Now, eject the disk and put in another one.

I get the same directory. This despite considerable activity by the drive
(light goes on, head moves around).

How do I get this thing to read the actual drive rather than what appears to
be it's cached version?

- Bill
 
Bill Leary said:
I put in a 3.5" 1.44M floppy and view it's directory (usually via a command
line, but also with explorer).

Now, eject the disk and put in another one.

I get the same directory. This despite considerable activity by the drive
(light goes on, head moves around).

How do I get this thing to read the actual drive rather than what appears
to be it's cached version?

Most likely a defective drive. There is a switch in the drive that tells the
computer that the disk has been changed. Try blowing the drive out with some
compressed air.
 
Noozer said:
Most likely a defective drive. There is a switch in the drive that tells
the computer that the disk has been changed. Try blowing the drive out
with some compressed air.

Tried that.

Now, here's something interesting.

When I access the same drive from within a Virtual PC session, it DOES
update correctly. Even while it's NOT updating in Vista.

- Bill
 
I remember there being compatibility problems with floppy drives when XP
first came out. Some of the older drives that people had were not up to the
current drive standards which XP used. It is likely occurring yet again. I
have replaced 3 floppy drives in the past few months for customers.

With a quality floppy drive from Sony, NEC or Samsung) I haven't seen this
problem. They are CHEAP, less that $10 from www.newegg.com.

--


Regards,

Richard Urban MVP
Microsoft Windows Shell/User
 
Richard Urban said:
I remember there being compatibility problems with floppy drives when XP
first came out. Some of the older drives that people had were not up to the
current drive standards which XP used. It is likely occurring yet again. I
have replaced 3 floppy drives in the past few months for customers.

With a quality floppy drive from Sony, NEC or Samsung) I haven't seen this
problem. They are CHEAP, less that $10 from www.newegg.com.

What I was thinking as well. It's cheap enough to just try another one, and
the one that's in there now is a no-name.

- Bill
 
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