Ya neche ne nemogu ponyat.
Postayano poluchau vot etu error v "Event Viewer" => System
The device, \Device\Ide\IdePort1, did not respond within the timeout period.
Kak tolko ya cladu disk v Cdrom u menya krisa freeze na neskolko secund a potom vse opuat OK.
Na Angliskom:
that "timeout error" only occurs on the CDROM drive and only when it is trying to log in a new disc. What happens is that everything seems to freeze for a couple of seconds (which it does, since the CPU utilization is at 100%), while the CDROM drive is logging in the disc. If this "freeze" occurs, so does the timeout error. This error gets logged in the NT event log, and since you're using a Win9x flavor (if memory serves me right) you won't see this error. Also, it seems to occur mainly when there has been no activity for some time on the secondary IDE port (to which both drives are connected). There's usually only one timeout error per occurance, unless the drive has problems logging in the disc, at which point there may be several. If enough timeout errors occur and you're using the default MS atapi.sys driver, Windows will promptly bump down the transfer rate to PIO4 at best.
Spasibo za pomosh
Postayano poluchau vot etu error v "Event Viewer" => System
The device, \Device\Ide\IdePort1, did not respond within the timeout period.
Kak tolko ya cladu disk v Cdrom u menya krisa freeze na neskolko secund a potom vse opuat OK.
Na Angliskom:
that "timeout error" only occurs on the CDROM drive and only when it is trying to log in a new disc. What happens is that everything seems to freeze for a couple of seconds (which it does, since the CPU utilization is at 100%), while the CDROM drive is logging in the disc. If this "freeze" occurs, so does the timeout error. This error gets logged in the NT event log, and since you're using a Win9x flavor (if memory serves me right) you won't see this error. Also, it seems to occur mainly when there has been no activity for some time on the secondary IDE port (to which both drives are connected). There's usually only one timeout error per occurance, unless the drive has problems logging in the disc, at which point there may be several. If enough timeout errors occur and you're using the default MS atapi.sys driver, Windows will promptly bump down the transfer rate to PIO4 at best.
Spasibo za pomosh