F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Hard drive failed.

Hard drive failed.

Hard drive failed.

M
MESEZ
Member
188
03-04-2025, 04:22 AM
#1
I believe the flash drive might have been damaged. It isn’t appearing in File Explorer and formatting it in Disk Management triggers an error. I attempted to use diskpart but it didn’t resolve the issue. You could try forcing a format to FAT32, exFAT, or NTFS—just let me know which format you want.
M
MESEZ
03-04-2025, 04:22 AM #1

I believe the flash drive might have been damaged. It isn’t appearing in File Explorer and formatting it in Disk Management triggers an error. I attempted to use diskpart but it didn’t resolve the issue. You could try forcing a format to FAT32, exFAT, or NTFS—just let me know which format you want.

K
216
03-04-2025, 10:50 AM
#2
It looks like the USB drive is completely unusable, possibly read-only. There’s no repair possible at this point. It might have been damaged or lost its read access. A new drive would be a better option. Cheap flash drives can be replaced easily.
K
KingdomClasher
03-04-2025, 10:50 AM #2

It looks like the USB drive is completely unusable, possibly read-only. There’s no repair possible at this point. It might have been damaged or lost its read access. A new drive would be a better option. Cheap flash drives can be replaced easily.

S
Sqwalish
Member
155
03-11-2025, 03:34 PM
#3
You executed the Clean Command in Diskpart. In Disk Management, the flash drive should now appear as Unallocated Space. Click right-click it and select creating a new Simple Volume. Upon success, format it and assign a drive letter. If this doesn’t work, the drive is marked as Failed and needs replacement. Flash drives are known for instability and frequent failures; they’re not recommended for long-term storage.
S
Sqwalish
03-11-2025, 03:34 PM #3

You executed the Clean Command in Diskpart. In Disk Management, the flash drive should now appear as Unallocated Space. Click right-click it and select creating a new Simple Volume. Upon success, format it and assign a drive letter. If this doesn’t work, the drive is marked as Failed and needs replacement. Flash drives are known for instability and frequent failures; they’re not recommended for long-term storage.

G
GoMigs
Senior Member
614
03-13-2025, 10:35 PM
#4
I experienced the same issue with an SD card yesterday. Any attempts to fix it in Windows failed, but I managed to set up a new partition table and partitioned it using Linux. Windows now recognizes it properly.
G
GoMigs
03-13-2025, 10:35 PM #4

I experienced the same issue with an SD card yesterday. Any attempts to fix it in Windows failed, but I managed to set up a new partition table and partitioned it using Linux. Windows now recognizes it properly.