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Please help! very strange problem with lg gce-8525b

PostPosted: Sun Sep 19, 2004 5:37 pm
by nvukelic
After a brief period (15 mins) of working properly (after turning on or restarting computer), my cd-rw stops reading cd-s in windows explorer. It shows an empty folder window or asks me to insert a disk. It doesn't even spin the disk. It works good in nero (burning and copying) always! It is connected as secondary master, primary slave is DVD-ROM. OS is Windows XP Pro. No one ever heard for this kind a problem, please help! Anyone!

PostPosted: Mon Sep 20, 2004 11:13 am
by kotrtim
It shows an empty folder window or asks me to insert a disk

quite normal, sometimes this heppens

It doesn't even spin the disk

I've never heard of this before, its normal if the CD spins but explorer fail to read.......
CD not spinning , are you sure?
how do you know, some drives are really quiet![/code]

anyway, you can simply unplug you LG and connect it to a system that can read CDs properly to check
if other system can read CDs with the same drive, that means something must be wrong with explorer orr ASPI, SPTI?????? i don't know
then, format and reinstall windows

PostPosted: Tue Sep 21, 2004 6:21 pm
by nvukelic
Strange! Situation changed! The problem is in my computer, obviously, because, when I changed drive letters (CD-RW was E:, now is F:. and DVD-ROM was F:, no is E:), DVD-ROM stopped responding! It asks me to insert the disk in the drive (although it is already in) and when I restart the system it turns to normal, but only for a while. The same problem I had with cd-rw when it was E:! What a hell is happening!?

PostPosted: Wed Sep 22, 2004 1:41 am
by TheWizard
Strange indeed. Would you be against reinstalling Windows? After a fresh copy of Windows is installed, stick with the drive letters that Windows assigns.

As kotrtim asked, did you install any funky ASPI drivers? If so, you might want to revert to the default Windows drivers.

PostPosted: Wed Sep 22, 2004 9:39 am
by nvukelic
Now I changed drive letters to G: and F: (I skiped E: which was problematic) and everything works fine! Can enyone explain this to me?!

PostPosted: Wed Sep 22, 2004 5:51 pm
by MediumRare
You may want to check in the drive manager (?? I have a German edition of XP, so I'm not sure what the English name is) to see if the letter E is assigned to another drive or partition.

G

PostPosted: Thu Sep 23, 2004 12:24 am
by dodecahedron
i don't think that's possible.
if E was assigned to something else, he couldn't have assigned it to the CD drive. windows won't let you.

PostPosted: Thu Sep 23, 2004 9:31 am
by pranav81
dodecahedron is right.If E was assigned to any other drive before,Windows will not allow him to use that letter for any other drive,unless it is made free.


::Pranav::

PostPosted: Thu Sep 23, 2004 5:02 pm
by MediumRare
dodecahedron wrote:i don't think that's possible.
if E was assigned to something else, he couldn't have assigned it to the CD drive. windows won't let you.

I suppose this is true for physical drives. But I have managed to assign a drive letter twice:
- assign a letter to a network share
- use the drive manager to assign a different letter to my DVD-drive
The device manager issued a warning, but did use that letter!! Assigning them in the opposite order didn't work. They were both assigned, the network share seemed to have priority (at least in the explorer).

However, the computer rebooted shortly after I did this. I don't really want to repeat this experiment- I'm not sure if the doubly defined drive was the cause either (I interrupted an operation on another optical drive, and that has often caused lockups or other problems in the past).

G