Floppy drive does not recognize disk

  • Thread starter Thread starter R Morris
  • Start date Start date
R

R Morris

After upgrading from win 98 2nd edition to XP home
edition, the computer recognizes the floppy "A" drive but
when I try to access it I get a pop up window that
says "please insert a disk into drive A. I have
uninstalled and reinstalled the drive, I have searched
for an updated driver. But I do not know who the
manufacturer is. Under properties it says Manufacturer:
Standard floppy disk drives. Device status: This device
is working properly. I have gone thru the steps in
troubleshooting and it cannot solve my problem.
Any suggestions? I really need to get to some
information on this disk soon. Thanks.
 
Hi,

Have you tried to clean the floppy drive head?
Or if it is too old, buy a new one, it's cheap.

Peter
 
It's not the drive head... I have the same problem with me
a:/ drive and my zip e:/ drive... There is some problem
with a recent update from windows... I've seen a few
suggestions here, but nto sure if the suggestions are for
the correct problem.. If anyone has some suggestions
please post them.
 
XP Service Pack 1 hoses CD-ROM and floppy-disk access

By Brian Livingston

Microsoft's launch of its new Windows Server 2003 line is just taking place
as I write this, and my readers are starting to send fascinating tips about
its secrets. But while I'm compiling a new batch of articles on that
subject, the most interesting gotcha I've heard of this week involves
Windows XP with Service Pack 1 installed.

Jeffery Davidson, manager of information systems for the ATP Oil & Gas
Corporation, sent in the following well-documented tale. Have a listen:

· "Last week, my company purchased two new Panasonic Toughbook
laptops for some of our field personnel. I configured them with Windows XP
and Office XP, made sure that all of the patches and drivers were installed,
including XP Service Pack 1a, added all of the third-party software they
needed, and sent them out to the users.

"The users both came back yesterday and complained that they couldn't get
the floppy drives to work. After duplicating the problem, I spoke to
Panasonic's tech support, who told me that this was a problem with the SP1
installation. He referred me to Microsoft's Knowledge Base article 811839 --
'An I/O Device Error May Occur When You Access the Floppy Disk Drive in
Windows XP Service Pack 1.'

"Apparently, the problem is caused by Windows dynamically changing the
computer processor power state to a deeper idle state (from the C2 state to
the C3 state).

"To fix the problem. the article referred me to another KB article,
811840 -- 'How to Change the PromoteLimit Value for the Transition from C2
to C3 Power States.' This fix involved editing two strings of four bytes in
six binary keys in the registry, increasing the time that must elapse from
100 milliseconds to 500 milliseconds before Windows XP promotes the
processor from a C2 to a C3 power state.

"When I changed the registry, the two laptops were able to access their
floppy drives successfully.

"All well and good. Here's where I started to get concerned. Late last week,
one user who had a Compaq EVO D510 desktop machine suddenly started
experiencing severe endless loop crashes. Unable to repair the problem, I
decided to wipe the drive and reinstall Windows XP.

Initially, I was unable to restore the system from Compaq's restore disks.
The technical support folks at Compaq decided the problem was a bad restore
disk. I was able to manually install XP, and then manually install the
hardware drives from the corrupt disk.

"After the installation, I again installed ancillary programs and downloaded
patches, including XP Service Pack 1a. After SP1 was installed, I began to
experience problems with the CD-ROM drive intermittently not reading data
from the different CD-ROMs I was trying to install from.

"The error message I would get was 'An I/O error has occurred while
installing a file. This is usually caused by bad installation media or a
corrupt installation file.' I could either abort or retry. However, retrying
did nothing but repeat the error message.

"I decided to search the Microsoft knowledge base for 'I/O Errors' and
promptly saw the same KB articles I used yesterday to fix the laptops. I
decided to try the same thing on this desktop, even though I hadn't
experienced problems with the floppy drive.

"Surprisingly enough, it worked. But that's what bothers me. Why is XP SP1
causing these problems with different kinds of I/O operations? This has now
occurred on three out of the 60-odd machines I'm responsible for, so it's
widespread enough to want Microsoft to come up with a better solution than
manually editing several binary strings in the registry. For that matter,
I'd tell them myself, but they don't have a great feedback system, as you
probably know."
 
There seems to be a lot of goofy, similar-sounding problems with XP
and floppies out there.
On mine, it prompts me to format an already formatted disk; if I try
to format a disk, the info in the dialog box is empty and won't *let*
me format.
Whatever's going on, I'm wondering if it affects other things too --
any external harddrive I connect to the machine via USB is seen as
Drive A, and again prompts for formatting.
I can't tell if its SP1 related as mentioned in another post in this
thread -- I did a clean install followed almost immediately with an
SP1 download.
 
Back
Top