On 6/1/07, Doug McGarrett
I suppose I broke the thread, but I have no choice--the Linux machine is apart, and I have to write in Windows.
I put the new writer drive in the machine, but I probably don't have the master/slave thing set right. The original, read-only drive has S L A available, and is jumper-set on A.
The new writable drive has S L A, and also says S is cable select, L is slave, and A is master. It is jumper-set on L.
It also says that C S is cable select
S L is slave
and M A is master
So it looks like it is set up correctly, but, the system does not seem to recognize the new drive.
The cable for the original drive has another connector on it, which I plugged into the new drive.
What now? Do I need some kind of install routine? I thought that the system would automatically recognize new hardware. (SuSE 9.3.)
(BTW--thanx to the folks who pointed me to K3B. I didn't know it was there. Now to get to use it....)
Can you see the drive in the BIOS? If the problem is with the jumpers, you will not see it. Try different positions until you see the drive in the BIOS. -- Svetoslav Milenov (Sunny) Even the most advanced equipment in the hands of the ignorant is just a pile of scrap. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org