WWWBoard New Message: Message 1837: Re: Smart Media Card Reader will not install
WWWBoard: Message 1837
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Posted by Steve M. on 12/02/02 at 10:46 PM
Subject: Re: Smart Media Card Reader will not install
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In Reply to: Re: Smart Media Card Reader will not install posted by Steve M. on 12/02/02 at 8:21 PM:
OK fixed my problem. Apparantly the APIX.vxd can become corrupted which sounds like mine had. I searched for APIX.vxd on the WWW and landed a couple of descriptions similar to mine. MS has an article on this at http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=KB;en-us;q299976 Reinstalling my APIX.vxd directly from the Win98 disk per their instructions has fixed it. Thanks, Steve : Bill, : I did everything you outlined below to remove all existing USB devices in order, and install just the card reader. No Luck. : As I was about to heave the card reader in the trash I went back to troubleshootiing the symptom of a driver conflict since I kept : experiencing an operational fault in APIX VXD. Finding this driver was used by my CD burner, I renamed the driver to prevent it from : loading. Rebooted and wala....the card reader that almost became part of my local landfill started working. If I enable the driver I can : recreate the poblem at will, rename to an unreconizable name for the system and the media card reader works. Definately a driver conflict, : now if I want to burn a CD I have to ensure the driver is named correctly, if I want to use the card reader, I have to ensure the driver name is changed : to something unrecognized. I can live with this if there is no other way, at least I have a work around. If you or anyone on this board has run into this : before, the driver is for the Adaptec CD Creator SW. I have not been to their website (yet) to search for new or updated drivers, thats where I am headed : next. The driver that came with my card reader says it is "Generic USB Card Reader" when it loads up. If there is a list of USB generic card read drivers : perhaps there may be one that will work with the CD burner intact. : Thanks, : Steve : : : 1. Note the devices that are sharing the IRQ with the USB host controller. Look in System Information > Hardware resources > IRQs. : : 2. Boot to BIOS setup (press Del, F1, or F10 at initial boot). : : 3. Go to the "Integrated Peripherals" section and disable one or both serial (Com) ports if you are not using them. Disable the LPT port if you use a USB printer. : : 4. Go to the "PnP/PCI" section and enable "PnP OS", "Auto" and "Reset Configuration Data". The last is a momentary switch and will be disabled each time you return here. It releases the BIOS lock on IRQs and lets Windows take over and is VERY important. : : 5. Boot DIRECTLY to Windows Safe Mode (continue booting and press F8 repeatedly to get the boot menu) and unplug any USB devices. Remove all USB software in Add/Remove Programs. Open Device Manager. Remove the USB root hub and host controller *in that order*. Remove all USB drivers. Look for duplicate or erroneous drivers and *remove them all*. Windows will reinstall genuine devices. : : 6. If you have any SB16 emulation drivers, disable them in the hardware profile (do not remove). These are DOS sound drivers and most don't need them. : : 7. Lastly, remove the drivers for the devices sharing the IRQ with the host controller. Windows should reinstall the drivers automatically.
: : At this point you have freed up 2 or 3 IRQs and reset Windows IRQ assignments. You can reboot and reinstall your devices *as per manufacturer's instructions*. : : Bill
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