Hi!
In theory, when you boot from a CD containing a virtual boot floppy image, the BIOS is supposed to move your real floppy drive to the next drive letter, so it should be B: When you use a MEMDISK bootable ramdisk, I expect similar effects. In case of the BIOS method, we could add a tool which leaves boot image mode and returns drive letters to normal, but of course this will have side effects by "taking out" the boot floppy (image) while you might still need files from it. If it is a problem for you that the real floppy moves to B:, you could also work with DOS commands to reassign letters, but I suspect similar problems as with leaving boot image mode, so I would recommend to stick to B: for real floppy until you can boot FreeDOS from an actual fixed drive or from an actual floppy. Another method would be to use a bootable harddisk image on the boot CD, so the real fixed disk gets moved to D: etc. and the real floppy stays at A: all the time. Which boot images use which style of boot image depends on which of our images you use (we also have USB thumb drive boot images) and which boot menu option you select :-) Regards, Eric _______________________________________________ Freedos-user mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user
