Although the device is only a few weeks old it is failing already.
The Left channel has ceased operation.
watlers world wrote:Bret, are the old chipsets too slow for audio devices?
The USB "3D sound" works well on pentium 3 and 4 machines.
I can play *.mod files at 48khz. http://turkeys4me.byethost4.com/USBAUDIO.zip
On both pentium and pentium MMX chipsets there are short packet errors.
Reset/Enumeration Stage 90 (and Stage 60)
Nothing detected but a PC speaker "beep!"
watlers world wrote:
Virtual_Davey, please describe your computer setup in greater detail.
AUTOEXEC.BAT
USBUHCI.COM
PCUSBI64.EXE
USNDTSR.EXE
Install the windows driver from control panel Or
add the driver to the windows SYSTEM folder and update SYSTEM.INI
[drivers]
wave=usbaudio.dll
watlers world wrote:USBUHCI.COM is in Bret's USB driver package.
Do you have other USB devices working yet?
Make sure to install the newest version http://turkeys4me.byethost4.com/Usbaud2.zip
When you download and unzip Usbaud2.zip, PCUSBI64.EXE and USNDTSR.EXE should be in the /TSR folder.
Bret wrote:There can be only one piece of software controlling each USB host. If the BIOS is controlling a particular USB host, USBUHCI can't be controlling it. It sounds like your flash drive is being controlled by the BIOS. So, when you install USBUHCI, it does take over control of the USB host and anything attached to it (including the flash drive) will stop working. Your flash drive should work again if you install both USBUHCI and USBDRIVE.
But, there's something else going on here. The USBDEVIC screen shows you have only one USB host with two ports, but you seem to say that you can have a flash drive and two joysticks plugged into it all at the same time. It's not possible to have three devices plugged into two ports.
Try running USBHOSTS to see how many USB host controllers you actually have. If you have more than two USB ports, you must have more than one USB host. USBUHCI by default only installs for the first host controller it finds (Index 0) unless you give it a command-line option to do something else. You can also install multiple copies of USBUHCI, one for each USB host you have. Watler installs eight copies of it since he has eight hosts (Indexes 0-7). You only need to install USBUHCI for the USB hosts you want USBUHCI to control, and leave the BIOS controlling the rest of them. For example, if you want to leave the BIOS controlling your flash drive and let USBUHCI control the joysticks, you need to make sure you install USBUHCI only for the USB hosts/ports you want it to control and plug things into the correct ports. That is, plug the flash drive into one of the ports controlled by the BIOS and the joysticks into the ports controlled by USBUHCI.
Run USBHOSTS as the next step to troubleshooting. USBHOSTS can also show you which ports of each host have things attached to them (it can't tell you exactly what kind of device is attached to each port, but it can show you that something is attached).
CD C:\DRIVERS\BRET
USBUHCI /INDEX 0
USBUHCI /INDEX 1
USBUHCI /INDEX 2
USBUHCI /INDEX 3
CD C:\TSR\TSR
PCIUSB64.EXE
USNDTSR.EXE
CD C:\DRIVERS\BRET
USBDRIVE
watlers world wrote:That batch file looks good.
Do you keep all your TSR files in a folder called TSR?
If I recall properly, USBUHCI version 1.1 works with Windows Enhanced Mode but
USBUHCI 1.4 only works with Windows Standard Mode. (WIN/S)
Although I had 16 USB ports, I also had an x58 chipset with a 750watt power unit.
I wonder how much power your computer has devoted to the USB ports.
Most of my USB devices said that they used about a half an amp.
watlers world wrote:Yikes!
You can remove or comment out my TSR and Windows drivers till you can determine if everything else is error free.
It might help if you told which DOS games work and which don't.
A few DOS games require EMM386.
First errors first.
Please post or attach your config.sys and autoexec.bat for Bret to read.
You are very good with those screen shots.
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