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External Drive (USB) Not Recognized



 
 
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  #1  
Old March 11th 10, 02:33 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
WSR
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 16
Default External Drive (USB) Not Recognized

I have XP SP3 and have attached an external drive via a USB cord.

While the system tray shows "New Device has been added to your system", when
I go to My Computer all that I see is the C:\ drive. No external drive.

Any recommendations before I get a new drive?

Thanks

(B^)-]=[


Ads
  #2  
Old March 11th 10, 04:44 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Jose
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,140
Default External Drive (USB) Not Recognized

On Mar 11, 9:33*am, "WSR" wrote:
I have XP SP3 and have attached an external drive via a USB cord.

While the system tray shows "New Device has been added to your system", when
I go to My Computer all that I see is the C:\ drive. No external drive.

Any recommendations before I get a new drive?

Thanks

(B^)-]=[


Is it a LaCie Quadra or the Iomega Presige.
  #3  
Old March 11th 10, 04:44 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Jose
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,140
Default External Drive (USB) Not Recognized

On Mar 11, 9:33*am, "WSR" wrote:
I have XP SP3 and have attached an external drive via a USB cord.

While the system tray shows "New Device has been added to your system", when
I go to My Computer all that I see is the C:\ drive. No external drive.

Any recommendations before I get a new drive?

Thanks

(B^)-]=[


Is it a LaCie Quadra or the Iomega Presige.
  #4  
Old March 11th 10, 05:08 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Unknown
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6,007
Default External Drive (USB) Not Recognized

Did you reboot with the new drive attached?
"WSR" wrote in message
...
I have XP SP3 and have attached an external drive via a USB cord.

While the system tray shows "New Device has been added to your system",
when I go to My Computer all that I see is the C:\ drive. No external
drive.

Any recommendations before I get a new drive?

Thanks

(B^)-]=[



  #5  
Old March 11th 10, 05:08 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Unknown
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6,007
Default External Drive (USB) Not Recognized

Did you reboot with the new drive attached?
"WSR" wrote in message
...
I have XP SP3 and have attached an external drive via a USB cord.

While the system tray shows "New Device has been added to your system",
when I go to My Computer all that I see is the C:\ drive. No external
drive.

Any recommendations before I get a new drive?

Thanks

(B^)-]=[



  #6  
Old March 11th 10, 06:54 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
WSR
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 16
Default External Drive (USB) Not Recognized

It is a Western Digital and I have rebooted with it attached.

Not sure why the System tray recognizes it but the computer does not...


"Unknown" wrote in message
...
Did you reboot with the new drive attached?
"WSR" wrote in message
...
I have XP SP3 and have attached an external drive via a USB cord.

While the system tray shows "New Device has been added to your system",
when I go to My Computer all that I see is the C:\ drive. No external
drive.

Any recommendations before I get a new drive?

Thanks

(B^)-]=[





  #7  
Old March 11th 10, 06:54 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
WSR
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 16
Default External Drive (USB) Not Recognized

It is a Western Digital and I have rebooted with it attached.

Not sure why the System tray recognizes it but the computer does not...


"Unknown" wrote in message
...
Did you reboot with the new drive attached?
"WSR" wrote in message
...
I have XP SP3 and have attached an external drive via a USB cord.

While the system tray shows "New Device has been added to your system",
when I go to My Computer all that I see is the C:\ drive. No external
drive.

Any recommendations before I get a new drive?

Thanks

(B^)-]=[





  #8  
Old March 11th 10, 08:13 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
LVTravel[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 52
Default External Drive (USB) Not Recognized



"WSR" wrote in message
...
It is a Western Digital and I have rebooted with it attached.

Not sure why the System tray recognizes it but the computer does not...


"Unknown" wrote in message
...
Did you reboot with the new drive attached?
"WSR" wrote in message
...
I have XP SP3 and have attached an external drive via a USB cord.

While the system tray shows "New Device has been added to your system",
when I go to My Computer all that I see is the C:\ drive. No external
drive.

Any recommendations before I get a new drive?

Thanks

(B^)-]=[






Right click on My Computer, Left click on Manage, Disk Management. In the
bottom right of the window that opens you should see all drives attached to
your computer. Disk 0 is normally the computer's Drive C and any other
partitions on it and it should have that or those drive letter/s there.

CD-ROM 0 will probably be the CD/DVD drive if one is attached and
functional.

Any other drives attached even without a drive letter will be showing. Do
you see any drive listed that may be your USB drive? Right click on the
Disk X (where X is it's number) and then left click on Properties to
identify the drive. Under the General tab it will show the drive type and
USB device.

Once found, if no drive letter is showing it may not have been formatted.
Right click on the right hand area and then click Format or Initialize
(depending on what is offered.) Once the drive has been formatted it should
be recognized by the system and assigned a drive letter. If formatting,
chose NTFS as the style of format (unless this drive will be used on an
older Win 9X type of computer as NTFS is more reliable and fault tolerant.


Another common issue (and you don't mention, but I don't believe this is
your issue) is that when hooked to a network with mapped drives on the
computer, the Disk Management system does not seem to recognize that the
drives are mapped and they "hide" the USB drives that may share the same
drive letter. The fix for that would be to map the network drive letters
higher in the alphabet. I start at Z and work backward for all my mapped
drives.

Hope this helps, let us know.

  #9  
Old March 11th 10, 08:13 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
LVTravel[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 52
Default External Drive (USB) Not Recognized



"WSR" wrote in message
...
It is a Western Digital and I have rebooted with it attached.

Not sure why the System tray recognizes it but the computer does not...


"Unknown" wrote in message
...
Did you reboot with the new drive attached?
"WSR" wrote in message
...
I have XP SP3 and have attached an external drive via a USB cord.

While the system tray shows "New Device has been added to your system",
when I go to My Computer all that I see is the C:\ drive. No external
drive.

Any recommendations before I get a new drive?

Thanks

(B^)-]=[






Right click on My Computer, Left click on Manage, Disk Management. In the
bottom right of the window that opens you should see all drives attached to
your computer. Disk 0 is normally the computer's Drive C and any other
partitions on it and it should have that or those drive letter/s there.

CD-ROM 0 will probably be the CD/DVD drive if one is attached and
functional.

Any other drives attached even without a drive letter will be showing. Do
you see any drive listed that may be your USB drive? Right click on the
Disk X (where X is it's number) and then left click on Properties to
identify the drive. Under the General tab it will show the drive type and
USB device.

Once found, if no drive letter is showing it may not have been formatted.
Right click on the right hand area and then click Format or Initialize
(depending on what is offered.) Once the drive has been formatted it should
be recognized by the system and assigned a drive letter. If formatting,
chose NTFS as the style of format (unless this drive will be used on an
older Win 9X type of computer as NTFS is more reliable and fault tolerant.


Another common issue (and you don't mention, but I don't believe this is
your issue) is that when hooked to a network with mapped drives on the
computer, the Disk Management system does not seem to recognize that the
drives are mapped and they "hide" the USB drives that may share the same
drive letter. The fix for that would be to map the network drive letters
higher in the alphabet. I start at Z and work backward for all my mapped
drives.

Hope this helps, let us know.

  #10  
Old March 11th 10, 09:18 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
who[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 18
Default External Drive (USB) Not Recognized

Right click on the right hand area and then click Format or Initialize
(depending on what is offered.) Once the drive has been formatted ...

99% of the time that users connect a flash drive to their computer it's
because there's something _on_ that flash drive that they want to view or to
copy to their computer.

They definitely do NOT want to format it.

In the old days on another platform there was a utility that force mounted
an external drive. MTDMF Is there such a utility for Windows?


  #11  
Old March 11th 10, 09:18 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
who[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 18
Default External Drive (USB) Not Recognized

Right click on the right hand area and then click Format or Initialize
(depending on what is offered.) Once the drive has been formatted ...

99% of the time that users connect a flash drive to their computer it's
because there's something _on_ that flash drive that they want to view or to
copy to their computer.

They definitely do NOT want to format it.

In the old days on another platform there was a utility that force mounted
an external drive. MTDMF Is there such a utility for Windows?


  #12  
Old March 11th 10, 10:31 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Jose
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,140
Default External Drive (USB) Not Recognized

On Mar 11, 1:54*pm, "WSR" wrote:
It is a Western Digital and I have rebooted with it attached.

Not sure why the System tray recognizes it but the computer does not...

"Unknown" wrote in message

...



Did you reboot with the new drive attached?
"WSR" wrote in message
...
I have XP SP3 and have attached an external drive via a USB cord.


While the system tray shows "New Device has been added to your system",
when I go to My Computer all that I see is the C:\ drive. No external
drive.


Any recommendations before I get a new drive?


Thanks


(B^)-]=[


Ah-ha. Is it a Western Digital My Book Studio Edition 2TB?

Is the drive brand new, if not to you knowledge has it ever worked
and are you able to try it in another computer?
  #13  
Old March 11th 10, 10:31 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Jose
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,140
Default External Drive (USB) Not Recognized

On Mar 11, 1:54*pm, "WSR" wrote:
It is a Western Digital and I have rebooted with it attached.

Not sure why the System tray recognizes it but the computer does not...

"Unknown" wrote in message

...



Did you reboot with the new drive attached?
"WSR" wrote in message
...
I have XP SP3 and have attached an external drive via a USB cord.


While the system tray shows "New Device has been added to your system",
when I go to My Computer all that I see is the C:\ drive. No external
drive.


Any recommendations before I get a new drive?


Thanks


(B^)-]=[


Ah-ha. Is it a Western Digital My Book Studio Edition 2TB?

Is the drive brand new, if not to you knowledge has it ever worked
and are you able to try it in another computer?
  #14  
Old March 12th 10, 06:44 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
WSR[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5
Default External Drive (USB) Not Recognized

Thanks so much for your advice.

Unfortunately no go. No external drive recognized just the C: and the CD/DVD
drive.

My external drive I believe has gone to back-up heaven.

Thanks again for you specific advice.

(B^)-]=[

"LVTravel" wrote in message
...


"WSR" wrote in message
...
It is a Western Digital and I have rebooted with it attached.

Not sure why the System tray recognizes it but the computer does not...


"Unknown" wrote in message
...
Did you reboot with the new drive attached?
"WSR" wrote in message
...
I have XP SP3 and have attached an external drive via a USB cord.

While the system tray shows "New Device has been added to your system",
when I go to My Computer all that I see is the C:\ drive. No external
drive.

Any recommendations before I get a new drive?

Thanks

(B^)-]=[






Right click on My Computer, Left click on Manage, Disk Management. In the
bottom right of the window that opens you should see all drives attached
to your computer. Disk 0 is normally the computer's Drive C and any other
partitions on it and it should have that or those drive letter/s there.

CD-ROM 0 will probably be the CD/DVD drive if one is attached and
functional.

Any other drives attached even without a drive letter will be showing. Do
you see any drive listed that may be your USB drive? Right click on the
Disk X (where X is it's number) and then left click on Properties to
identify the drive. Under the General tab it will show the drive type and
USB device.

Once found, if no drive letter is showing it may not have been formatted.
Right click on the right hand area and then click Format or Initialize
(depending on what is offered.) Once the drive has been formatted it
should be recognized by the system and assigned a drive letter. If
formatting, chose NTFS as the style of format (unless this drive will be
used on an older Win 9X type of computer as NTFS is more reliable and
fault tolerant.


Another common issue (and you don't mention, but I don't believe this is
your issue) is that when hooked to a network with mapped drives on the
computer, the Disk Management system does not seem to recognize that the
drives are mapped and they "hide" the USB drives that may share the same
drive letter. The fix for that would be to map the network drive letters
higher in the alphabet. I start at Z and work backward for all my mapped
drives.

Hope this helps, let us know.



  #15  
Old March 12th 10, 06:44 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
WSR[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5
Default External Drive (USB) Not Recognized

Thanks so much for your advice.

Unfortunately no go. No external drive recognized just the C: and the CD/DVD
drive.

My external drive I believe has gone to back-up heaven.

Thanks again for you specific advice.

(B^)-]=[

"LVTravel" wrote in message
...


"WSR" wrote in message
...
It is a Western Digital and I have rebooted with it attached.

Not sure why the System tray recognizes it but the computer does not...


"Unknown" wrote in message
...
Did you reboot with the new drive attached?
"WSR" wrote in message
...
I have XP SP3 and have attached an external drive via a USB cord.

While the system tray shows "New Device has been added to your system",
when I go to My Computer all that I see is the C:\ drive. No external
drive.

Any recommendations before I get a new drive?

Thanks

(B^)-]=[






Right click on My Computer, Left click on Manage, Disk Management. In the
bottom right of the window that opens you should see all drives attached
to your computer. Disk 0 is normally the computer's Drive C and any other
partitions on it and it should have that or those drive letter/s there.

CD-ROM 0 will probably be the CD/DVD drive if one is attached and
functional.

Any other drives attached even without a drive letter will be showing. Do
you see any drive listed that may be your USB drive? Right click on the
Disk X (where X is it's number) and then left click on Properties to
identify the drive. Under the General tab it will show the drive type and
USB device.

Once found, if no drive letter is showing it may not have been formatted.
Right click on the right hand area and then click Format or Initialize
(depending on what is offered.) Once the drive has been formatted it
should be recognized by the system and assigned a drive letter. If
formatting, chose NTFS as the style of format (unless this drive will be
used on an older Win 9X type of computer as NTFS is more reliable and
fault tolerant.


Another common issue (and you don't mention, but I don't believe this is
your issue) is that when hooked to a network with mapped drives on the
computer, the Disk Management system does not seem to recognize that the
drives are mapped and they "hide" the USB drives that may share the same
drive letter. The fix for that would be to map the network drive letters
higher in the alphabet. I start at Z and work backward for all my mapped
drives.

Hope this helps, let us know.



 




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