2.11 Voyager invalidates my hard drive! Why? If a crash occurs while Voyager is writing to the disk-cache, the partition may be corrupted, causing an invalidation. Besides examining questions 2.2 and 2.3 to alieviate the crashing problems, there are certain precautions you can take to avoid invalidations: 1) Redirect Voyager's cache to RAM: or a recoverable drive such as RAD: or SD0:. This way, if the machine crashes, you will not lose the cache. You *will* lose the cache if the machine is switched off or you store it in RAM, of course. RAD and SD0 are names of RAM disks that don't get purged when the machine is warm-booted. 2) Put the cache on a small partition. Putting the cache on a small partition, say 10MB or so, will ensure that any invalidations are corrected swiftly. AmigaOS appears to validate small partitions MUCH faster than large ones. This small-partition approach has the added advantage that you can format the parition and lose very little. 3) Disable the cache altogether. Some people don't mind losing the cache, so how "persistant" you want it is the issue. If you want a very persistant cache, write it to the hard drive. If you want a somewhat persistant cache that will last until the machine is shut off, write it to RAD or SD0. If you don't care if the cache remains from one session to the next, put it in RAM or turn it off. Some people have installed AFS -- an alternative file system for Amiga hard drives. This file system does not invalidate the hard drive when it crashes, but has been known to cause other problems. A demo version is available on Aminet.