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My A: drive is actually being seen by the system as B: drive and vice-versa
Explanation: You have two floppy disks in the system. One of them is supposed to be
A: and the other B:, but they show up within the system as reversed--A: is B: and B: is
A:. Both drives still work, however.
Diagnosis: On a new system the usual culprit is configuring the drives incorrectly.
On an existing one, it is far more likely that the drives were just set up incorrectly.
Recommendation:
- Make sure that you connected the cable
properly to the two drives. The drive to be A: goes at the end of the cable, and the drive
to be B: stays in the middle of the table.
- Watch out for the "Floppy
Disk Swap" BIOS setting, which intentionally flips A: and B:, to allow you to
switch the two drives without opening the case. Of course if this BIOS setting is enabled
when you don't want it to be, then the A: and B: drives will be reversed.
- Windows NT does not properly recognize the floppy swap setting. If you use it then NT
may simply ignore it and cause your A: and B: drives to not be reversed when you
want them to be.
- Make sure that both disks are set
up properly in the BIOS setup program.
- Less likely, but still possible, is a problem with the floppy disk or the floppy disk
controller. Troubleshoot them here and here respectively.
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