It makes no sense to me that it is a necessity to have a physical cd/dvd drive installed to use DTools mounting. I had to reinstall (physically) my dvdrom, choose default cdrom.sys drivers and then dtools could mount and make drive letters on it's own. Problem solved because I removed my dvdrom and replaced with an bay that allows inserting another sata notebook drive in the slot. There IS NO drive letter for dtools scsi drives or any dvd/cdroms drives for that matter. Well, there are no software apps like virus or firewalls going on here. I'm sure something was probably just deleted from the registry and the keys are gone to allow the mount point creation or driver or something, but I can't pinpoint it. So, I can't mount any images and it appears that the virtual mount point created in the install process is gone and I can't get it to reappear or reinstall with DTools install or SPTD install. I have also disabled driver enforcement in Windows start-up and that doesn't help I get error code 8 or a message that says "Insufficient resources to create target connection" If I manually mount, drag and drop, use image manager, widget, etc. In the older versions of DTools Lite I used to use before you had the option to create a new virtual mount point, so it would create a new drive letter, but that option isn't here in Ultra. If I run the SPTD install again, it shows that it was never installed. I have installed SPTD 1.87圆4, but when I reboot it still seems it isn't there. I have removed the program, reinstalled, tried DTools Lite as well. It isn't there as a device in device manager. I can no longer see the virtual CD-ROM drive that was usually there in Windows Explorer as a drive letter. I can no longer mount any images of any type. I am now getting an error (error code 8) as in the title of my post: Using Windows 7 Ultimate SP1 64-Bit, English, with Chinese PRC Locale
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