Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!cornell!rochester!rit!ultb!clf3678 From: clf3678@ultb.UUCP (C.L. Freemesser) Newsgroups: comp.sys.atari.st Subject: Re: Problem with TOS recognizing media changes Summary: Big problems in little Chinon Keywords: Time to get a new drive Message-ID: <493@ultb.UUCP> Date: 23 Mar 89 20:06:13 GMT References: <8903231500.AA08372@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU> Reply-To: clf3678@ultb.UUCP (C.L. Freemesser (709ITP)) Organization: Rochester Institute of Technology, Information Systems Lines: 30 The problem you are having with your drive is not uncommon. I am assuming you have the Chinon drive in your STFM (it has the eject button underneath the disk slot). First off, Chinon drives are the pits. Recent ST's have had HUGE problems with these drives. Atari wisely stopped using them and went to Sony drives. The actual problem is that the disk-eject device the drive has, which tells the computer that a new disk has been inserted), has failed. It is a very common problem. It can be fixed, but the easiest way to fix this is to replace the drive with a GOOD mech. The drive will probably fail on you soon. If your computer is still under warrantee, get a new drive. If it is the same model number (Chinon AA or something like that) as the one you have now, then you will be doing alot of replacing. The drives are just no damn good. If you want to get adventursome, put in your own mech. I suggest the following: Toshiba ND-354 Epson SMD-180 (discontinued model) Epson SMD-280/480 (I believe the 480 is made by Sony, and is what Atari now uses) Teac FD-135-01-U (something like that, this is what I use) You will have to do some hacking of the case (the face plates are different), but you will have a MUCH better drive. =cf=