Driver Sound Phoenix Awardbios V6 00pg

As negligible as your System Specs are!! I can still point you to your exact driver download (amazingly) Please go here: and click on the black box, that says ' Start Detection' (You must be using Internet Explorer to see this button) Once you are taken to all your drivers page, look through them to find Audio or Sound; and then download and install the package.

You may also want to download all your drivers too. For your convenience the page will also show you what computer you have, which you might want to update your with.

Driver Sound Phoenix Awardbios V6 00pg

I've all drivers installed and tried everything but no sound I hear. The one noticeable thing is my time also remains the same every time I open my computer. Audio header; CD-IN. Back Panel I/O. Studiologic Cmk 149 Manual Muscle. PS/2 keyboard; PS/2 mouse; 4 USB 2.0 ports; 1 VGA port; 1 RJ45 (LAN); 1 RS-232 port (COM); 1 parallel port (LPT); Audio connectors (line-out, line-in, mic-in). 4MBit Flash EEPROM (PLCC32); Phoenix - AwardBIOS v6.00PG; Supports Plug-and-Play (PNP); Supports Advanced.

(I'd suggest it would be wise to do this, before posting any more support questions too).

Hi, Rather than searching the forums for other people's solutions, I would rather just post about my own specific issue that I've been having with my DVD-ROM drive. I noticed this about 2 days ago. I went to run a disc.

So I pressed the DVD drive button and the tray came out like normal. The green light comes on when I open the tray, and it appears to be reading the disc, but nothing happens. The drive won't show up in My Computer and it won't show up in Device Manager. There's only a section for 'IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers'. There is no CD/DVD drive section.

The drive shows up normally when I check my BIOS settings. I tried the simple Microsoft registry fix by deleting the 'Upperfilter'. I tried running the system hardware troubleshooter. It seems like the computer knows the drive is there, it just won't launch the disc or show up in Device Manager. I tried examining the plugs and cables to make sure they were not loose. Everything looks fine in the PC itself. There's only 2 cables going from that drive: one goes to power, and one is a ribbon that goes to the 'IDE1' outlet.

I pulled it out and plugged it back in. Would this have anything to do with virtual drives? I use Daemon Tools to mount images sometimes and I think that may have messed something up with my actual disc drive. I run Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit (6.1, Build 7601) Intel Core 2 Quad CPU Q6600 @ 2.4Ghz 3072Mb of Memory BIOS: Phoenix - AwardBIOS v6.00PG System Manufacturer: OEM System Model: OEM All help appreciated.

In control panel under administration - computer administration - disc (tool ) or handling does the drive show up there There is no 'Administration' heading in Control Panel. I could only find Control Panel>System Security>Administrative Tools, but I don't see my DVD drive showing up anywhere. The only thing I can find that remotely relates to this drive is in 'Device Manager' under the 'IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers' heading. It reads like this: >IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers ->ATA Channel 0 ->ATA Channel 0 ->ATA Channel 1 ->ATA Channel 1 ->Intel(R) ICH9 Family 2 port Serial ATA Storage Controller 1 - 2921 ->Intel(R) ICH9 Family 2 port Serial ATA Storage Controller 2 - 2926 Would that have anything to do with the DVD-rom drive? The ATA Channels are related to SATA and PATA devices such as hard drives and optical disk drives.

This goes into a bit more detail - I have had trouble with a virtual drive messing up the CD/DVD drives before and uninstalling it solved the problem. It looks as though you have already tried this though. If you can isolate which ATA channel the drive is connected to you could try uninstalling it.

Before you do that you could try right clicking on the various ATA channels and click on 'Scan for hardware changes'. The ATA Channels are related to SATA and PATA devices such as hard drives and optical disk drives. This goes into a bit more detail - I have had trouble with a virtual drive messing up the CD/DVD drives before and uninstalling it solved the problem. It looks as though you have already tried this though. If you can isolate which ATA channel the drive is connected to you could try uninstalling it. Before you do that you could try right clicking on the various ATA channels and click on 'Scan for hardware changes'.

Yesterday, I tried everything I could. I uninstalled my Daemon Tools Lite widget. I went to Device Manager to the 'IDE' section and uninstalled 'ATA Channel 1' and the 'ATA Storage Controllers'. Windows immediately began scanning for drivers and successfully installed them.

Rebooted computer. DVD-ROM drive is still not appearing. I checked the cable from the drive. It's just one ribbon cable that plugs into the port labeled 'IDE1'. My two actual hard drives are plugged into the 'SATA1' and 'SATA2' ports. Those are working properly. The BIOS detects the DVD-ROM drive, but Windows does not.

I'm going to try to delete Daemon Tools again, and PowerISO, even though I never use PowerISO. I still haven't figured out how to get my dvd-rom drive to work.

I've tried the most suggested solution which is to delete the upper and lower filters in regedit. That doesn't fix my problem.

My dvd-rom drive shows up in the BIOS, but does not show up in Device Manager, Disk Management or My Computer. Any other suggestions would be highly appreciated. The DVD-ROM drive light lights up properly and I can hear the drive engaging a disk when I put it in, but Windows doesn't read the drive. If it makes any difference, the drive will close itself automatically after about 1-2 seconds after I press the open button. Mine wasn't showing on 'my computer' nor in device manager but it could be seen in BIOS.

So I used three solutions in a row so I don't know which one is the actual solution or maybe all three are, but I GOT MY DVD ROM WORKING! Press the Windows logo key + R to open the Run box. Type regedit in the Run box, then press Enter. If you are prompted for an administrator password or for a confirmation, type the password, or click Allow In the navigation pane, locate the following registry subkey: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE SYSTEM CurrentControlSet Services atapi Right-click atapi, point to New, then click Key.

Type Controller0, and then press Enter. Right-click Controller0, point to New, and then click DWORD(32-bit) Value. Type EnumDevice1, and then press Enter.

Right-click EnumDevice1, click Modify. Type 1 in the Value data box, and then click OK. Exit Registry Editor. Restart the computer. Go to and download fixit. It was unable find the problem but, just go through it. - Click Start, click All Programs, click Accessories, right-click Command Prompt, and then click Run as administrator.

- At the command prompt, type the following six commands in the order in which they are presented. Press ENTER after each command.

This was driving me crazy. It didn't show up in windows, and not in the control panel either. I couldn't boot from it either. The cd-rom drive would show up in the BIOS as 'ATAPI CD-ROM', but it wouldn't boot from it. I tried out a few things. Checked the cables, and installed daemon tools, searched for new hardware but it still didn't show up in the device manager. I was running out of options, but decided to give it one last go even though it didn't make much sense.

I tried out the solution CrrWllr posted as STEP 1, and that did the trick. After rebooting, the cd-drive was working again in windows. I tried to reboot and boot from the cd-drive, but that still didn't work. Decided to go into the BIOS and check if anything had changed, and weirdly enough I was now able to select a specific CD-ROM that corresponded to my cd-rom drive (which wasn't available before). Exiting the BIOS I was now able to boot from it again.

It makes NO sort of sense that a registry edit would make the drive appear in the BIOS again, but that's what I did and that's what happened. Step 1 worked for me thank you. Mine wasn't showing on 'my computer' nor in device manager but it could be seen in BIOS.

So I used three solutions in a row so I don't know which one is the actual solution or maybe all three are, but I GOT MY DVD ROM WORKING! Press the Windows logo key + R to open the Run box. Type regedit in the Run box, then press Enter.

If you are prompted for an administrator password or for a confirmation, type the password, or click Allow In the navigation pane, locate the following registry subkey: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE SYSTEM CurrentControlSet Services atapi Right-click atapi, point to New, then click Key. Type Controller0, and then press Enter. Right-click Controller0, point to New, and then click DWORD(32-bit) Value. Type EnumDevice1, and then press Enter. Right-click EnumDevice1, click Modify.

Type 1 in the Value data box, and then click OK. Exit Registry Editor. Fsx Pfpx Not Cracked Steam.

Restart the computer. Mine wasn't showing on 'my computer' nor in device manager but it could be seen in BIOS. So I used three solutions in a row so I don't know which one is the actual solution or maybe all three are, but I GOT MY DVD ROM WORKING! Press the Windows logo key + R to open the Run box. Type regedit in the Run box, then press Enter. If you are prompted for an administrator password or for a confirmation, type the password, or click Allow In the navigation pane, locate the following registry subkey: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE SYSTEM CurrentControlSet Services atapi Right-click atapi, point to New, then click Key. Type Controller0, and then press Enter.

Right-click Controller0, point to New, and then click DWORD(32-bit) Value. Type EnumDevice1, and then press Enter. Right-click EnumDevice1, click Modify. Type 1 in the Value data box, and then click OK.

Exit Registry Editor. Restart the computer. Go to and download fixit. It was unable find the problem but, just go through it. - Click Start, click All Programs, click Accessories, right-click Command Prompt, and then click Run as administrator. - At the command prompt, type the following six commands in the order in which they are presented. Press ENTER after each command.

Step 1 worked for me as well. I am using a HP p6220 running Windows 10. Press the Windows logo key + R to open the Run box. Type regedit in the Run box, then press Enter. If you are prompted for an administrator password or for a confirmation, type the password, or click Allow In the navigation pane, locate the following registry subkey: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE SYSTEM CurrentControlSet Services atapi Right-click atapi, point to New, then click Key.

Type Controller0, and then press Enter. Right-click Controller0, point to New, and then click DWORD(32-bit) Value. Type EnumDevice1, and then press Enter. Right-click EnumDevice1, click Modify.

Type 1 in the Value data box, and then click OK. Exit Registry Editor.

Restart the computer. Before you do anything drastic in Windows 7, go to Windows Explorer. Highlight 'Computer' in the directory tree pane. Click on 'Tools' and select 'Folder Options'.

Make sure that the option to 'Show All Folders' is CHECKED under the 'General' tab. In a new full install of Win7 x64, this option was not checked and I could not see my three optical drives in the directory tree pane until I inserted an optical disc in a drive, even though the drives would show up in the Device Manager and elsewhere in Windows.

This option is under the 'General' tab and OUTSIDE of the usual 'View' options tab and can be easily missed. Of course, you may also have to DESELECT other options under the 'View' tab, like 'Hide Empty Drives' in order to see your optical drives all the time in Windows Explorer. Mine wasn't showing on 'my computer' nor in device manager but it could be seen in BIOS. So I used three solutions in a row so I don't know which one is the actual solution or maybe all three are, but I GOT MY DVD ROM WORKING! Press the Windows logo key + R to open the Run box. Type regedit in the Run box, then press Enter.

If you are prompted for an administrator password or for a confirmation, type the password, or click Allow In the navigation pane, locate the following registry subkey: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE SYSTEM CurrentControlSet Services atapi Right-click atapi, point to New, then click Key. Type Controller0, and then press Enter.

Right-click Controller0, point to New, and then click DWORD(32-bit) Value. Type EnumDevice1, and then press Enter. Right-click EnumDevice1, click Modify. Type 1 in the Value data box, and then click OK. Exit Registry Editor.

Restart the computer. Go to and download fixit.

It was unable find the problem but, just go through it. - Click Start, click All Programs, click Accessories, right-click Command Prompt, and then click Run as administrator. - At the command prompt, type the following six commands in the order in which they are presented. Press ENTER after each command. Mine wasn't showing on 'my computer' nor in device manager but it could be seen in BIOS. So I used three solutions in a row so I don't know which one is the actual solution or maybe all three are, but I GOT MY DVD ROM WORKING! Press the Windows logo key + R to open the Run box.

Type regedit in the Run box, then press Enter. If you are prompted for an administrator password or for a confirmation, type the password, or click Allow In the navigation pane, locate the following registry subkey: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE SYSTEM CurrentControlSet Services atapi Right-click atapi, point to New, then click Key. Type Controller0, and then press Enter.

Right-click Controller0, point to New, and then click DWORD(32-bit) Value. Type EnumDevice1, and then press Enter. Right-click EnumDevice1, click Modify. Type 1 in the Value data box, and then click OK.

Exit Registry Editor. Restart the computer. Go to and download fixit. It was unable find the problem but, just go through it.

- Click Start, click All Programs, click Accessories, right-click Command Prompt, and then click Run as administrator. - At the command prompt, type the following six commands in the order in which they are presented. Press ENTER after each command. Yes Daemon tools messes up things in My computer.

But the drive should appear other place. Uninstall and the drive should be right back in My Computer 1) I run MrFixIt several times and it cannot resolve the issue. 2) I have checked the registry for Upper or Lower limits and found none to delete. 3) I have ade sure my device manager view included hidden devices and that didn't help. 4) I uninstalled the IDE and ATAPI controllers from device manager and rebooted to get then to reset, but that didn't help.

5) I have tried to go back to the oldest restore point, but that didn't help. 6) I have removed the drive and re-seated it and rebooted and that didn't work. 7) I replaced the drive with a brand new drive of the same model and that didn't work.