Step 4 of 4- A better explanation of the options - I have soem feedback

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  • shoulders
    Junior Member
    • Jul 2025
    • 2

    #1

    Step 4 of 4- A better explanation of the options - I have soem feedback

    Hi

    I am a novice user and the information on these options are a bit limited and I think should be expaned
    • Mount as removable media: It should be added here that this effectively sets the "Removable Media Bit" (RMB) as is a king to a USB drive or SD Flash media.
    • Read-only: this has good explanations
    • Use existing write cache files (.osfdelta): this has good explanations
    • Drive emulation: More information on the difference between the two modes and how they interact with the OS and why would you select logical over physical emualtion when you are mounting a drive image.
    • Drive Type: The information here is very limited. Auto is obvious but how does it pick, i have read it will pick HDD if it finds a partition table. if your image is an ISO it is straight forward either the auto works or you manually pcik the CD/DVD-ROM option. My main issue here is the difference between HDD and Floppy. Does Floppy actuall mean "Super Floppy" where the drive does not have a partition table? Perhaps if this is the case rename it from Floppy to "Super Floppy" as people understand what this is ofr even "Floppy/Super Floppy"
    • Drive Letter: this has good explanations
    Thanks for the software and hopefully my feedback will help, and if anyone can clear any of these up for me I will add it to my notes.

    shoulders.
  • David (PassMark)
    Administrator
    • Jan 2003
    • 11027

    #2
    Drive emulation: More information on the difference between the two modes and how they interact with the OS and why would you select logical over physical emualtion when you are mounting a drive image.
    For most people it will make no difference.

    A physical disk refers to the actual hardware device used for storage. This could be a hard disk drive (HDD), solid-state drive (SSD), or other storage media. But in this case we emulate the hardware. The physical disk still needs a volume, or volumes, to to useful in Windows however.

    So in either case you get a volume. But with the physical disk option you also get an emulated physical disk. For most software this doesn't matter. But there are a few software packages (like partition managers) that expect to find a physical disk.

    Drive Type
    A HDD will be picked in preference to a floppy disk.

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