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Click to expand.Drivers, if needed, would come from the manufacturer of the floppy drive. You don't give enough to provide a thoughtful answer, just wild guesses. What happens when you plug it in?
This package supports the following driver models:NEC USB Floppy.
How do you know 'drivers are missing?' What is the status in Device Manager? Any errors in the Event Viewer? What brand of drive? What motherboard? Does the system see it on bootup, prior to Windows starting (watch the POST messages scroll by.) Here's one person's solution to a similar problem. I have no idea whether it applies to your situation or if it really works at all, or if it's safe.
Click to expand.Does it give some indication that it _needs_ a driver? When we plug a USB floppy into our (XP) machine, nothing happens (well, I think we briefly get a new hardware found popup), but suddenly explorer (Win + E) has an A: drive. (I'd have expected the same to be true of 7.) -- J. Drivers, if needed, would come from the manufacturer of the floppy drive. You don't give enough to provide a thoughtful answer, just wild guesses. What happens when you plug it in?
How do you know 'drivers are missing?' What is the status in Device Manager? Any errors in the Event Viewer? What brand of drive?
What motherboard? How to download hacks for minecraft. Does the system see it on bootup, prior to Windows starting (watch the POST messages scroll by.) Here's one person's solution to a similar problem.
I have no idea whether it applies to your situation or if it really works at all, or if it's safe. Click to expand.OK Nil, here it is. It happened by accident. I bought a brand new floppy disk drive, dirt cheap, no brand, and from EBay. When I tried to get it going I discovered missing drivers - none after Win2K. It is very well built, had a USB plug, and cost very little, so my loss isn't huge. A miniature floppy was provided with it and that's where I discovered the max driver was for the Win2K OS.
My Win2K box is down now but I hope to be able to use the disk drive after it is up and running. Click to expand.When you plug in the USB device, do you hear the dah-ding sound representing 'new USB device discovered' event?
If the USB device is recognized (something you didn't mention), what do you see or what happens when you select the device in Windows Explorer? Just WHEN are you trying to use the USB floppy drive? If you intend to use it before the OS has actually loaded to provide the USB support for removable storage media, like using it when prompted to hit F6 at the start of setup to later add more mass storage devices that need drivers, you may not yet have the USB support needed. For Windows XP, you can add USB drives ().
You could fake out your friends with this fake USB floppy drive (which is actually still a USB flash drive): (yuck yuck yuck) Was there a reason you chose to keep secret the make and model of the external USB-attached floppy drive? When you 'acquired' the drive, why did you also not not 'acquire' the software disc that came with it?
If you think you need a driver, the obvious source would be the device manufacturer's own web site since they wrote the driver, if there is one. Can't help you with navigating their site since you never identified the make and model of the USB floppy drive. Some of the discs you obtain for a particular manufacturer look to cover many makes of device. The Nippon USB-DL-Flppy download at their driver page () covers Teac, IBM, Mitsumi, eBest, Sunday, NEC, and YE models. The CD that comes with the Nippon device, labelled 'USB Portable Diskette Drive - CD-ROM for Driver' looks like the same one shown for the Sabrent device. ByteCC looks to burn their own to include their manual. Click to expand.Actually, I discovered something similar.
Click to expand.Drivers, if needed, would come from the manufacturer of the floppy drive. You don\'t give enough to provide a thoughtful answer, just wild guesses. What happens when you plug it in?
This package supports the following driver models:NEC USB Floppy.
How do you know \'drivers are missing?\' What is the status in Device Manager? Any errors in the Event Viewer? What brand of drive? What motherboard? Does the system see it on bootup, prior to Windows starting (watch the POST messages scroll by.) Here\'s one person\'s solution to a similar problem. I have no idea whether it applies to your situation or if it really works at all, or if it\'s safe.
Click to expand.Does it give some indication that it _needs_ a driver? When we plug a USB floppy into our (XP) machine, nothing happens (well, I think we briefly get a new hardware found popup), but suddenly explorer (Win + E) has an A: drive. (I\'d have expected the same to be true of 7.) -- J. Drivers, if needed, would come from the manufacturer of the floppy drive. You don\'t give enough to provide a thoughtful answer, just wild guesses. What happens when you plug it in?
How do you know \'drivers are missing?\' What is the status in Device Manager? Any errors in the Event Viewer? What brand of drive?
What motherboard? How to download hacks for minecraft. Does the system see it on bootup, prior to Windows starting (watch the POST messages scroll by.) Here\'s one person\'s solution to a similar problem.
I have no idea whether it applies to your situation or if it really works at all, or if it\'s safe. Click to expand.OK Nil, here it is. It happened by accident. I bought a brand new floppy disk drive, dirt cheap, no brand, and from EBay. When I tried to get it going I discovered missing drivers - none after Win2K. It is very well built, had a USB plug, and cost very little, so my loss isn\'t huge. A miniature floppy was provided with it and that\'s where I discovered the max driver was for the Win2K OS.
My Win2K box is down now but I hope to be able to use the disk drive after it is up and running. Click to expand.When you plug in the USB device, do you hear the dah-ding sound representing \'new USB device discovered\' event?
If the USB device is recognized (something you didn\'t mention), what do you see or what happens when you select the device in Windows Explorer? Just WHEN are you trying to use the USB floppy drive? If you intend to use it before the OS has actually loaded to provide the USB support for removable storage media, like using it when prompted to hit F6 at the start of setup to later add more mass storage devices that need drivers, you may not yet have the USB support needed. For Windows XP, you can add USB drives ().
You could fake out your friends with this fake USB floppy drive (which is actually still a USB flash drive): (yuck yuck yuck) Was there a reason you chose to keep secret the make and model of the external USB-attached floppy drive? When you \'acquired\' the drive, why did you also not not \'acquire\' the software disc that came with it?
If you think you need a driver, the obvious source would be the device manufacturer\'s own web site since they wrote the driver, if there is one. Can\'t help you with navigating their site since you never identified the make and model of the USB floppy drive. Some of the discs you obtain for a particular manufacturer look to cover many makes of device. The Nippon USB-DL-Flppy download at their driver page () covers Teac, IBM, Mitsumi, eBest, Sunday, NEC, and YE models. The CD that comes with the Nippon device, labelled \'USB Portable Diskette Drive - CD-ROM for Driver\' looks like the same one shown for the Sabrent device. ByteCC looks to burn their own to include their manual. Click to expand.Actually, I discovered something similar.
...'>Nec Usb Floppy Driver(18.02.2019)Click to expand.Drivers, if needed, would come from the manufacturer of the floppy drive. You don\'t give enough to provide a thoughtful answer, just wild guesses. What happens when you plug it in?
This package supports the following driver models:NEC USB Floppy.
How do you know \'drivers are missing?\' What is the status in Device Manager? Any errors in the Event Viewer? What brand of drive? What motherboard? Does the system see it on bootup, prior to Windows starting (watch the POST messages scroll by.) Here\'s one person\'s solution to a similar problem. I have no idea whether it applies to your situation or if it really works at all, or if it\'s safe.
Click to expand.Does it give some indication that it _needs_ a driver? When we plug a USB floppy into our (XP) machine, nothing happens (well, I think we briefly get a new hardware found popup), but suddenly explorer (Win + E) has an A: drive. (I\'d have expected the same to be true of 7.) -- J. Drivers, if needed, would come from the manufacturer of the floppy drive. You don\'t give enough to provide a thoughtful answer, just wild guesses. What happens when you plug it in?
How do you know \'drivers are missing?\' What is the status in Device Manager? Any errors in the Event Viewer? What brand of drive?
What motherboard? How to download hacks for minecraft. Does the system see it on bootup, prior to Windows starting (watch the POST messages scroll by.) Here\'s one person\'s solution to a similar problem.
I have no idea whether it applies to your situation or if it really works at all, or if it\'s safe. Click to expand.OK Nil, here it is. It happened by accident. I bought a brand new floppy disk drive, dirt cheap, no brand, and from EBay. When I tried to get it going I discovered missing drivers - none after Win2K. It is very well built, had a USB plug, and cost very little, so my loss isn\'t huge. A miniature floppy was provided with it and that\'s where I discovered the max driver was for the Win2K OS.
My Win2K box is down now but I hope to be able to use the disk drive after it is up and running. Click to expand.When you plug in the USB device, do you hear the dah-ding sound representing \'new USB device discovered\' event?
If the USB device is recognized (something you didn\'t mention), what do you see or what happens when you select the device in Windows Explorer? Just WHEN are you trying to use the USB floppy drive? If you intend to use it before the OS has actually loaded to provide the USB support for removable storage media, like using it when prompted to hit F6 at the start of setup to later add more mass storage devices that need drivers, you may not yet have the USB support needed. For Windows XP, you can add USB drives ().
You could fake out your friends with this fake USB floppy drive (which is actually still a USB flash drive): (yuck yuck yuck) Was there a reason you chose to keep secret the make and model of the external USB-attached floppy drive? When you \'acquired\' the drive, why did you also not not \'acquire\' the software disc that came with it?
If you think you need a driver, the obvious source would be the device manufacturer\'s own web site since they wrote the driver, if there is one. Can\'t help you with navigating their site since you never identified the make and model of the USB floppy drive. Some of the discs you obtain for a particular manufacturer look to cover many makes of device. The Nippon USB-DL-Flppy download at their driver page () covers Teac, IBM, Mitsumi, eBest, Sunday, NEC, and YE models. The CD that comes with the Nippon device, labelled \'USB Portable Diskette Drive - CD-ROM for Driver\' looks like the same one shown for the Sabrent device. ByteCC looks to burn their own to include their manual. Click to expand.Actually, I discovered something similar.
...'>Nec Usb Floppy Driver(18.02.2019)