The problem may be with your jumper settings on the drives themselves.
Of course I don't know if you are using IDE or SATA. Let's assume IDE.
Chances are that the jumpers are on CS (cable select). You can set one
to master and the other to slave. This will force your drives to come up
as C: and D: on channel 0.
 
Vic
 

________________________________

From: donald E. Bowen, Jr. [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, August 25, 2010 11:22 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: drive letter assignments hosed in XP



In order to get Window eyes 7.2 properly re installed on my BSN (brand
spanking new)hard drive, a WD 15ears, replacing the Seagate that came up
toast last week.

 

I have the drive installed and WinXP SP3 installed, all hardware
installed, including that ever so useful sound card I install WE.
Perfect.  Ready to move on.  Which includes adding a second internal hd
to serve as internal backup device.  So I shut down, install the other
drive in the box.  The drive is already formatted and contains a few
backup files I'm looking forward to restoring to the new drive.

 

Windows comes back fine.  Only a quick check of Explorer shows the old
backup drive I just installed is now drive C: and the new WD 15ears
which contains the boot record or system files, Windows XP SP3 and all
the software that has been installed up to now, including Window Eyes, ,
is now drive L:

 

I can not change the drive letter assignments back in the Control Panel
Admin Tools computer Management disc Management change the drive letters
because of their being boot volumes.

 

Window eyes is now running sluggishly and I hesitate to move forward
with system restoration before this drive letter assignment issue is
resolved.

 

I believe the solution lies in CMOS settings where boot sequences of
devices is established.  As in, tell the system which volume serial
number to consider the first drive.

 

Of course there is the challenge of the CMOS settings with a screen
reader... grin...

 

My tech who did the part of the job where vision is mandatory feels
Partition Magic is the solution.  I think CMOS holds the key.

 

Help!

 

 

Sincerely,

Donald E. Bowen, Jr.
<http://mysite.verizon.net/reszmkrl/musicforsight/author.html> 

Music for Sight <http://musicforsight.org/> 

 



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