Hi guys,
I have a computer that is experiencing some problems with two CD-type drives. One of the drives is a DvD drive (Pioneer 105) and the other is a CD burner. Both drives act as regular CD-ROMs fine (they read data); but the DvD drive doesn't play DvDs and the CD burner doesn't burn CD-Rs or RWs (which is what it is designed for). Inparticular, whenever a DvD disk is placed into the DvD drive the disk spins up (indicated by the green light on the front of the drive) but then it spits the disk out without attempting to play it. Considering that both drives are each having a problem I was wondering if they have a common cause.
In attempting to fix the problem I successfully flashed my BIOS. My assumtion is that the ATA/ATAPI drivers get updated as well. Is this correct?
When I check the Device Manager all items seems to check out fine. Also, there doesn't seem to be any issues with the VIA Bus MAster IDE Controller.
Am I missing something? Any help would be appreciated!
Thank you!
All great accomplishments were once considered impossible.
I have a computer that is experiencing some problems with two CD-type drives. One of the drives is a DvD drive (Pioneer 105) and the other is a CD burner. Both drives act as regular CD-ROMs fine (they read data); but the DvD drive doesn't play DvDs and the CD burner doesn't burn CD-Rs or RWs (which is what it is designed for). Inparticular, whenever a DvD disk is placed into the DvD drive the disk spins up (indicated by the green light on the front of the drive) but then it spits the disk out without attempting to play it. Considering that both drives are each having a problem I was wondering if they have a common cause.
In attempting to fix the problem I successfully flashed my BIOS. My assumtion is that the ATA/ATAPI drivers get updated as well. Is this correct?
When I check the Device Manager all items seems to check out fine. Also, there doesn't seem to be any issues with the VIA Bus MAster IDE Controller.
Am I missing something? Any help would be appreciated!
Thank you!
All great accomplishments were once considered impossible.