Jump to content
Compatible Support Forums
Sign in to follow this  
andysk

Power DVD Problem in Win2000

Recommended Posts

I run PowerDVD version 2.55 in windows 2000 and although it runs normally when i insert a dvd in my dvd drive an error message appears that says "Cannot find wnaspi32.dll" and the DVD won't play.Does anyone know what to do?

Share this post


Link to post

What is your system setup? I can't help you if I don't know what your system is.

 

------------------

Supermicro P6DBE Rev 3.0 Motherboard

Dual Intel Pentium III 850

512 MEGS of ECC RAM

Sound Blaster Live!

Adaptec 29160 SCSI Card

GeForce 2 GTS 64MB

IBM DMVS18N Ultra 160 Hard Drive

Western Digital 20.5GB Hard Drive

Razer Boom Slang 2000 (USB)

Roland Sound Canvis SC-55

3COM 3CR990-TX-97 with 3XP Processor 10/100 PCI Network Interface Card

Plextor Plexwriter 12/4/32

Pioneer 10X DVD-ROM

Sony GDM-F500R Monitor

Share this post


Link to post

goto www.adaptec.com and install the UDFReader drivers, and any other stuff. ASPI (Advanced SCSI Programming Interface) is used to make reading removeable media (not always scsi hardware) easy to use in programs. Powerdvd can't find it. Either copy and expand it from win2000 CD, or download scsi drivers from adaptec (if your drive is SCSI). Most likley its gone missing smile

 

Check powerdvd is using the correct drive, and its being registered properly and DMA is on/off (on via boards when its unchecked its on! and vice-versa), thats device manager/dvd to find DMA.

Share this post


Link to post
Quote:
Originally posted by andysk:
I run PowerDVD version 2.55 in windows 2000 and although it runs normally when i insert a dvd in my dvd drive an error message appears that says "Cannot find wnaspi32.dll" and the DVD won't play.Does anyone know what to do?

My system has:
Pentium 3 at 600/133mhz
256mb ram
voodoo 3 3000 with tvout
dvd pioneer 104s with the region free firmware
soundblaster live

Share this post


Link to post

I had the same problem. Never found out why I didn't have that file though. I just copied it from the DVD-ripper called Decc. (I think it is spelled like that)

Share this post


Link to post
Quote:
Originally posted by andysk:
Quote:
Originally posted by andysk:
I run PowerDVD version 2.55 in windows 2000 and although it runs normally when i insert a dvd in my dvd drive an error message appears that says "Cannot find wnaspi32.dll" and the DVD won't play.Does anyone know what to do?

My system has:
Pentium 3 at 600/133mhz
256mb ram
voodoo 3 3000 with tvout
dvd pioneer 104s with the region free firmware
soundblaster live




You have the same DVD that I have (except mine is 114). They did do a firmware update a few months back. I was verion 1.02 before I went 2.03 (I didn't know about the updates till Diablo II cameout, because it couldn't read the CD). The firmware update can be found at http://www.pioneerusa.com/tec.html#drivers When you try to update your firmware, remember that it will take more than one minute and don't go crazy if it looks like it froze. I thought the samething and was about to press reset when common sense kicked in smile I am also using PowerDVD 2.55 that came with Hercules Prophet II 64MB (It came with 2.5 and I updated to 2.55). After you update your firmware uninstall PowerDVD( including the directory if the uninstall couldn't delete the directory). Also make sure DMA is enabled for your DVD drive (Device Manager IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers). IF this doesn't help, just keep replying here smile


------------------
Supermicro P6DBE Rev 3.0 Motherboard
Dual Intel Pentium III 850
512 MEGS of ECC RAM
Sound Blaster Live!
Adaptec 29160 SCSI Card
GeForce 2 GTS 64MB
IBM DMVS18N Ultra 160 Hard Drive
Western Digital 20.5GB Hard Drive
Razer Boom Slang 2000 (USB)
Roland Sound Canvis SC-55
3COM 3CR990-TX-97 with 3XP Processor 10/100 PCI Network Interface Card
Plextor Plexwriter 12/4/32
Pioneer 10X DVD-ROM
Sony GDM-F500R Monitor

Share this post


Link to post

Please sign in to comment

You will be able to leave a comment after signing in



Sign In Now
Sign in to follow this  

×