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-   -   what is wrong with my 16gb Adata micro card (http://forum.ppcgeeks.com/showthread.php?t=74736)

strickly_ppc670 07-14-2009 12:21 PM

what is wrong with my 16gb Adata micro card
 
Basicly quit working today.

1- tried Sandisk 8 gb - no problem( 2gbs-used)
2- tried the 16 gb in a reader( 11gbs -used) reads fine
3- tried the 16 gb in the phone, wont recognize it- but the
USB "disk drive" notices the card..

Tried the Energy and Calkulin ROMs- same issue reader the 16gb card.

---------BOTH OF THESE ROMS ROCK!-----------

Thanks in Advance

Imaginos 07-14-2009 12:26 PM

Re: what is wrong with my 16gb Adata micro card
 
This isn't the kind of upgrade this forum is for. Check this Sticky: http://forum.ppcgeeks.com/showthread.php?t=65925

apristel 07-14-2009 12:55 PM

Re: what is wrong with my 16gb Adata micro card
 
does the card work in the computer? reformat it.

captblaze 07-14-2009 01:41 PM

Re: what is wrong with my 16gb Adata micro card
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by apristel (Post 1034880)
does the card work in the computer? reformat it.

make sure you format as FAT32

apristel 07-14-2009 01:54 PM

Re: what is wrong with my 16gb Adata micro card
 
Regular fat works also.

Mutiny32 07-14-2009 03:35 PM

Re: what is wrong with my 16gb Adata micro card
 
FAT will work up to 2TB (8 with 32KB Clusters)

Try a reformat.

Darkjedi 07-14-2009 03:42 PM

Re: what is wrong with my 16gb Adata micro card
 
Keep in mind that FAT file structure can only support file's up to 4GB in size. I purposely formatted a 8GB USB key in NTFS format so that I could hold full size 4.7 and 8.5GB DVD isos on my key drive.

Mutiny32 07-14-2009 04:43 PM

Re: what is wrong with my 16gb Adata micro card
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by darkjedi007 (Post 1035212)
Keep in mind that FAT file structure can only support file's up to 4GB in size. I purposely formatted a 8GB USB key in NTFS format so that I could hold full size 4.7 and 8.5GB DVD isos on my key drive.

DO NOT format and keep flash device using NTFS. It will drastically reduce the life of the drive/media. NTFS is a journaled File System.

Darkjedi 07-14-2009 04:50 PM

Re: what is wrong with my 16gb Adata micro card
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Mutiny32 (Post 1035356)
DO NOT format and keep flash device using NTFS. It will drastically reduce the life of the drive/media. NTFS is a journaled File System.

Modern flash devices can sustain tens of thousands of write/erase cycles nowadays and the lifecycle of flash drives are several years at best. By the time the sectors are worn out, devices 10 times larger will be equally cheap. I doubt WM can even read NTFS file systems anyway. As long as you utilize the safely remove devices function, NTFS is an effective way to transport large files.

exFAT is apparently a new filesystem that was created along with Windows Vista, but it seems to have limited implementation so far. It allows for larger file sizes like NTFS, but none of the disadvantages like caching and more intensive read/write.

Mutiny32 07-14-2009 07:50 PM

Re: what is wrong with my 16gb Adata micro card
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by darkjedi007 (Post 1035390)
Modern flash devices can sustain tens of thousands of write/erase cycles nowadays and the lifecycle of flash drives are several years at best. By the time the sectors are worn out, devices 10 times larger will be equally cheap. I doubt WM can even read NTFS file systems anyway. As long as you utilize the safely remove devices function, NTFS is an effective way to transport large files.

exFAT is apparently a new filesystem that was created along with Windows Vista, but it seems to have limited implementation so far. It allows for larger file sizes like NTFS, but none of the disadvantages like caching and more intensive read/write.

exFAT was created in part because NTFS' impact on NAND flash memory. The reason NTFS is bad for flash is because of increased I/O operations caused by the journaling feature in NTFS. While SSDs can handle NTFS and similar File Systems, the quality of the flash chips in removable drives and cards is much, much lower and are not designed for read/write operations that file systems designed for disks call for. On top of that, block sizes can also affect the life of a flash drive, as it can only be written in whole blocks. If you create a FS with a larger block size using NTFS, you are only asking for drastically reduced life.


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