tolomeo:
Hmm, I don't know, I have tried a setup similar as you described and it seems to work fine for me:
I'll have to investigate this further,... maybe I'll send you a test version later today or tomorrow...
Does v45 work fine, does it see the wbfs partition properly?
Is the partition recognized properly by pc wbfs managers?
What about running :
wbfs_file W: ls
does that work ok?
edit:
Wait, this looks strange, you are saying that the second partition is really wbfs, but it used to work before?
Exactly with which old version does it work with?
Because versions prior to 45 did not support logical wbfs partitions, yet your second ntfs partition is logical (L#5)
Unless by second partition you mean P#2 which is the EXTENDED partition container for logical partitions?
Ok, I can see that if an extended partition was previously formatted as wbfs it would not work now any more, but that is a really bad configuration to have, how were you able to format an extended partition to wbfs?
cfg loader will not let you, even the original waninkoko does not allow you to do that, on windows, you can't assign a drive letter to an extended partition, so what did you use, if that was the case?
Anyway if that really is the case then I highly recommend to change the P#2 partition type to anything but extended. Unfortunately there are not many tools that allow you to do that easily. linux fdisk can do it, and i think gnu parted might be able to do that as well...
edit2: actually i think old versions including waninkoko will let you format an extended partition, which is bad, but i will probably have to fix it so that it can be selected anyway, since i guess you're not the only one with such a setup.