Here's some help. I just spent a week figuring this one out. If you're using DOS 4.01 (probably some others too), it already knows about COM3 &4. Most BIOS's only scan for COM1 &2 though. You can test this by trying to open COM3 at the DOS prompt--if you get 'illegal device' then fix will work. The ROM BIOS checks for comm ports and if found puts their I/O addresses at absolute memory location 0x400 (400h, or 40:0). If you set locations 0x404 & 0x406 to the I/O addresses of your COM3 & 4 port (normally 0x3E8 & 0x2E8) then try to open the COM port as a file to see if that fixes it. By 'open file' I mean try 'copy x com3' where x is a small text file. After the fix you may not get 'illegal device' but another error message caused by the retry default of the com port--this is not a problem for windows though. What I did was to write a tiny assembly language program to stuff these values into low memory during the Autoexec. I you like I could upload it. I also found that programs other than terminal which directly access the comm ports (e.g. ProComm) worked, but dropped characters in doing downloads in the background at 2400 BAUD. Once COM3 &4 were logged in, apparently windows does some buffering of its own. Good luck, Rod Allen