Epson Equity 486DX2/50 PLUS User Manual - Page 83

Reassigning the Diskette Drives

Page 83 highlights

Reassigning the Diskette Drives If your system has two diskette drives, they are connected inside your computer so that the top drive is A and the bottom drive is B. Because drive A is the boot drive, whenever you want to load the operating system or a bootable program from a diskette, you must insert the diskette into drive A. If both of your drives are the same type-3Winch, 1.44MB capacity, for example-you never need to reassign the drives. If your two drives are different types, however, you may need to change the drive letter assignments so you can boot the computer from drive B. For example, you may have a 5V4-inch program disk which you need to use to boot the computer. Or you may have an application program that requires you to leave the 5?&inch key disk in drive A while you run the program. For these situations, you can reverse the drive assignments to make the top drive B and the bottom drive A. There are two ways to do this: tl Insert the diskette in drive B and turn on the computer. The drive automatically becomes drive A. Cl Run the AFDD program to reassign the drive. See "Using the AFDD Program," below, for instructions. Your assignments remain in effect until you press the RESET button or turn off the computer, or until you reassign the drives to their original assignments. The reassignment remains in effect if you reset the computer from your hard disk by entering the (F] [y] [E) command. Enhancing System Operations 4 - 7

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Reassigning the Diskette Drives
If your system has two diskette drives, they are connected
inside your computer so that the top drive is A and the bottom
drive is B. Because drive A is
the
boot drive, whenever you want
to load the operating system or a bootable program from a
diskette, you must insert the diskette into drive A.
If both of your drives are the same
type-3Winch,
1.44MB
capacity, for example-you never need to reassign the drives. If
your two drives are different types, however, you may need to
change the drive letter assignments so you can boot the
computer from drive B. For example, you may have a
5V4-inch
program disk which you need to use to boot the computer. Or
you may have an application program that requires you to
leave the
5?&inch
key disk in drive A while you run the
program.
For these situations, you can reverse the drive assignments to
make the top drive B and the bottom drive A. There are two
ways to do this:
tl
Insert the diskette in drive B and turn
on
the computer.
The drive automatically becomes drive A.
Cl
Run the AFDD program to reassign the drive. See “Using
the AFDD Program,” below, for instructions.
Your assignments remain in effect until you press the
RESET
button or turn off the computer, or until you reassign the drives
to their original assignments. The reassignment remains in
effect if you reset the computer from your hard disk by
entering the
(F]
[y]
[E)
command.
Enhancing System Operations
4-7