Originally posted by: moonsite
In Device Manager, right click on the CD or DVD-rom and go to Properties. Click on the Driver tab and click on rollback driver to use the previous driver. If that doesn't work, click on update driver and look for windows driver.
Originally posted by: mechBgon
It's the ATA controllers, not the drives, that are needing their drivers changed here. First, just try running the nVidia Unified Driver Package again and answer No to the SW IDE Driver prompt this time.
Originally posted by: barham92078
Thanks for the link
I'm running it now. Fast question: when am I going to see this message: "answer No to the SW IDE Driver prompt this time"? Should I install everything? What does the nVidia package do?
Originally posted by: mechBgon
The package shows a list of the drivers that it provides for the motherboard, including the motherboard's AGP bus, memory controllers, audio (where applicable, depends on the board), IDE controllers, USB and Firewire where applicable, if memory serves me correctly. Anyway, you get the idea... this is a driver package for the motherboard's own functionality. Just decline the SW IDE driver if you think it's the issue, and let's see if that fixes your invisible-drive problem or not![]()
Originally posted by: mechBgon
Yes, install the motherboard drivers. Also try testing with just one optical drive at a time, in case one of them has simply died. The burner's jumpered as Master and the reader's jumpered as Slave, you've tried that arrangement already?
Originally posted by: mechBgon
Try going into Control Panel > Administrative Tools > Computer Management, then in the Computer Management window, go down to Storage > Disk Management and see if the drives are listed there. If so, right-click them and assign them drive letters if it'll let you.
