HanJammer wrote:I use whatide.com recommended by Kev Parr who's a true english gentleman.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G26cRjrt5Mg
Indeed, a very nice person, imho! 😀
There's one thing to take care of, though. Something that seems to be ignored, over and over again. 😢
The original CHS addressing (on IBM PC) is using a max of 1024 cylinders, 16 haeads, 63 sectors.
- But some BIOSes do count this way.. 0-1023, 0-15, 1-63.
So if whatide or any othe tool says there are "16" cylinders in total, it doesn't automatically mean you have to enter "16", but maybe "15".
So please better be careful here and double check. BIOSes using LBA and/or Large (E-CHS) *may* behave different.
The attachment limits.gif is no longer available
Furthe information: http://web.inter.nl.net/hcc/J.Steunebrink/bioslim.htm
Some other useful things that Wikipedie says:
"The CHS addressing supported in IBM-PC compatible BIOSes code used eight bits for - theoretically up to 256 heads counted
as head 0 up to 255 (FFh). However, a bug in all versions of Microsoft DOS/IBM PC DOS up to and including 7.10 will cause these operating
systems to crash on boot when encountering volumes with 256 heads[2]. Therefore, all compatible BIOSes will use mappings with up to 255
heads (00h..FEh) only, including in virtual 255×63 geometries."
-That infomation might be useful when using LBA or E-CHS/Large..
"CHS addressing with 28 bits (EIDE and ATA-2) permits eight bits for sectors still starting at 1, i.e.,
sectors 1…255, four bits for heads 0…15, and sixteen bits for cylinders 0…65535.[9]"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cylinder-head-sector
user33331 wrote:Haven't tried again the FDISK \ MBR -trick.
Good luck! 😀
But please keep in mind that the switch doesn't work as it seems.
It will only work, if certain conditions are met. Also, the FAT16 (DOS 6.x) an FAT32 (DOS 7.10+) versions of FDISK behave different in detail..
It also is of little help in case of partition problems.´. To quote the author of the site linked below:
"you still need to understand that FDISK /MBR may seldom be a cure for your own MBR problems!
Why? Because it's almost always the Partition Table data itself that has been changed"
Please keep that in mind. I've also attached the relevant part of the text.
More information: https://thestarman.pcministry.com/asm/mbr/FDISK.htm
Also, DOS by itself needs no partitions. It would also work in super floppy "mode"..
Having a partition could be better, though. Programs like disk tools and Win 3.11 might be confused it there's none.
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In what to one race is no time at all, another race can rise and fall..." - The Minstrel
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