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Enabling And Troubleshooting DMA Mode in Windows

DMA (Direct Memory Access) mode is a high performance mode for transferring data to an from hard drives, optical drives, and other devices attached to an ATA controller. DMA mode allows a computer processor to transfer large pieces of data with very little software overhead, which reduces CPU usage. The alternative transfer mode is called PIO, which is slower and requires more CPU usage. Your hard drives should be operating in DMA mode automatically. However, often times CD/DVD-Rom and burner drives default to PIO mode. If you notice an extreme slow down when reading or burning optical disks, or if you get buffer under-run errors frequently when burning CD/DVDs, your drive is probably operating in PIO mode. Here is how to change it, and what to do if you encounter it:


To enable DMA mode:

  1. Open the Windows Control Panel, then select “System”.
  2. In Windows XP, select the “Hardware” tab in the window that opens. Then click “Device Manager.” In Vista, select “Device Manager” from the list on the left in the window that opens.
  3. In the window that opens, find “IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers” and click the plus sign next to it.
  4. Double-click on “Primary IDE Channel.”
  5. In the window that opens, click the “Advanced Settings” tab.
  6. For both “Device 0″ and Device 1”, set the “Transfer Mode” to “DMA if available”.
  7. The “Current Transfer Mode” line will tell you what mode each device is currently in. If after following these steps and rebooting, PIO mode is still in use, please see the troubleshooting tips below.
  8. Press “OK.”
  9. Double click on “Secondary IDE Channel” and repeat steps 5 through 8.
  10. Close the “Device Manager” window and reboot your computer.

If you followed the steps above and a device still refuses to switch to DMA mode:

If you have an SATA (serial ATA) drive/controller, select the “Serial ATA Controller” item in steps 4 and 9. The other steps will be similar, if not the same. In most cases, the SATA controllers are smart enough to figure DMA mode out on their own. Changing settings here is only recommended if you really know what you are doing.

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