"changed the SATA drive controller from Normal to Compatible"
Out of curiosity, where did you find this in the Dell BIOS? I've got an 8 year old XPS Studio 7100 running Windows 7 Home Premium with BIOS A06 (it's an AMD Phenom II 6 core based motherboard) and the only option I can find regarding SATA config is AHCI or RAID.
I have to research work arounds to this. I wonder if I actually have to put and IDE hard drive in it...
Get into the System Setup screen by pressing the <F2> key right after powering on and seeing the F2 prompt.
Look for SATA Mode in Advanced Chipset Features. According to the manual, you should be given the option to toggle between ATA and RAID (default). Switch to ATA for flashing the Blu-Ray drive. Boot from USB and flash the Blu-Ray drive. Then switch back to RAID (assuming that was the mode it was normally in) before doing a normal system boot.
"changed the SATA drive controller from Normal to Compatible"
Out of curiosity, where did you find this in the Dell BIOS? I've got an 8 year old XPS Studio 7100 running Windows 7 Home Premium with BIOS A06 (it's an AMD Phenom II 6 core based motherboard) and the only option I can find regarding SATA config is AHCI or RAID.
I have to research work arounds to this. I wonder if I actually have to put and IDE hard drive in it...
Get into the System Setup screen by pressing the <F2> key right after powering on and seeing the F2 prompt.
Look for SATA Mode in Advanced Chipset Features. According to the manual, you should be given the option to toggle between ATA and RAID (default). Switch to ATA for flashing the Blu-Ray drive. Boot from USB and flash the Blu-Ray drive. Then switch back to RAID (assuming that was the mode it was normally in) before doing a normal system boot.
I get AHCI or RAID still. I've downloaded older BIOS versions but I'm not sure those're gonna do it. Right now I'm content ripping blu rays which both my drives do fine, actually make that 4 drives now.
alexcoluzzi32 wrote:Wait a tick, drive number 4, purchased just today at Fry's, for $50 after instant promo code, is another WH16NS40 service code 50, manufactured December 2016 and has version 1.02 on it!
That'll work right?
Fuckin' A, I've got 26 minutes to get back down there before they close and see if they have anymore. I'll grab a couple in case anyone needs one.
Hi Alex .. were you able to get an additional drive? If so I can take one if you have one to spare Thanks!
alexcoluzzi32 wrote:Wait a tick, drive number 4, purchased just today at Fry's, for $50 after instant promo code, is another WH16NS40 service code 50, manufactured December 2016 and has version 1.02 on it!
That'll work right?
Fuckin' A, I've got 26 minutes to get back down there before they close and see if they have anymore. I'll grab a couple in case anyone needs one.
Hi Alex .. were you able to get an additional drive? If so I can take one if you have one to spare Thanks!
I'm headed over there again this morning. Today is the greatest day of my life people! With this new (old) drive and the latest key file I popped in Deepwater Horizon and almost lost my shit when I saw it open. It's ripping at a solid 5x which is fine. This fucking rocks!
I'll let you know if I get more. I've got a buddy over there I'll have him go to the stock room and check dates
there are 2 DOSFLASH files attached in the first post. Which one do I use for the ASUS drive? What is the difference between the DOSFLASH_Windows7 & LG_DOSFLASH_LG?
Thanks!
Never Mind .. found the answer .. the windows7 file is for dumping the firmware using windows. sorry to pester the forum
"changed the SATA drive controller from Normal to Compatible"
Out of curiosity, where did you find this in the Dell BIOS? I've got an 8 year old XPS Studio 7100 running Windows 7 Home Premium with BIOS A06 (it's an AMD Phenom II 6 core based motherboard) and the only option I can find regarding SATA config is AHCI or RAID.
I have to research work arounds to this. I wonder if I actually have to put and IDE hard drive in it...
Get into the System Setup screen by pressing the <F2> key right after powering on and seeing the F2 prompt.
Look for SATA Mode in Advanced Chipset Features. According to the manual, you should be given the option to toggle between ATA and RAID (default). Switch to ATA for flashing the Blu-Ray drive. Boot from USB and flash the Blu-Ray drive. Then switch back to RAID (assuming that was the mode it was normally in) before doing a normal system boot.
I get AHCI or RAID still. I've downloaded older BIOS versions but I'm not sure those're gonna do it. Right now I'm content ripping blu rays which both my drives do fine, actually make that 4 drives now.
On the Dell motherboard BIOS, you need to have 2 identical hard drives connected to the SATA port on the motherboard to see the "IDE" setting in the BIOS.
Joe333x wrote:My current system with asus mobo has no IDE option. I do have an ancient HP pc running win xp, would I be able to use that or does in need to be win7?
It doesn't matter what OS is on the PC. You will be creating a bootable USB flash drive as per Teddy's guide and you can do this in either Windows7 or using FreeDOS as posted in the guide. So you are good to go with your ancient PC and boot to the OS of choice using the bootable flash drive
Hi - thanks so much for the guide but the iso link doesn't seem to want to work with rufus anymore. I've downloaded it multiple times and it continues to fail with rufus. It hangs at just before finishing.
Anyone else have this problem? I just got an Asus drive with 3.02 and it can't read discs so I need to roll back.
Joe333x wrote:My current system with asus mobo has no IDE option. I do have an ancient HP pc running win xp, would I be able to use that or does in need to be win7?
It doesn't matter what OS is on the PC. You will be creating a bootable USB flash drive as per Teddy's guide and you can do this in either Windows7 or using FreeDOS as posted in the guide. So you are good to go with your ancient PC and boot to the OS of choice using the bootable flash drive
But if the PC is already 32bit running win xp couldnt I just use that instead of booting the pc from a flash drive? I thought the reason for booting to win7 through usb was because it doesnt work with win10 or 64bit OS.
@Joe333x .. you are probably right .. since it is a 32bit system, you could make it work without the USB drive. Just make sure to connect the drive to SATA Port 0 on your motherboard and set the SATA controller to IDE in the BIOS.
fljoemon wrote:@Joe333x .. you are probably right .. since it is a 32bit system, you could make it work without the USB drive. Just make sure to connect the drive to SATA Port 0 on your motherboard and set the SATA controller to IDE in the BIOS.
Jokes on me, just opened up the case and it actually only has IDE connectors on the mobo so I cant even use it, guess this thing really is ancient in tech terms.
johnygfunk wrote:Hi - thanks so much for the guide but the iso link doesn't seem to want to work with rufus anymore. I've downloaded it multiple times and it continues to fail with rufus. It hangs at just before finishing.
Anyone else have this problem? I just got an Asus drive with 3.02 and it can't read discs so I need to roll back.
I just made a Live Windows7 USB bootable drive using Rufus and the ISO file downloaded from the link provided in the file. When using Rufus, make sure you select ISO and point it to the downloaded ISO file. It did take a while, so be patient and it will finish.