Sd card blank or has unsupported filesystem
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noman
-
Feb 10, 2016 at 08:33 AM
R2D2_WD Posts 3606 Registration date Monday September 1, 2014 Status Member Last seen February 20, 2017 - Feb 11, 2016 at 04:08 AM
R2D2_WD Posts 3606 Registration date Monday September 1, 2014 Status Member Last seen February 20, 2017 - Feb 11, 2016 at 04:08 AM
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2 responses
jollym124
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98
Registration date
Wednesday January 21, 2015
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March 28, 2017
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Feb 11, 2016 at 01:47 AM
Feb 11, 2016 at 01:47 AM
This Method worked for me
Put your micro SD into a micro SD adapter
Insert the micro SD adapter into PC or laptop card reader and leave it there.
Restart your pc or laptop.
Check "my computer" and you should see your SD card files (copy all to your PC before you attempt anything else"
it may or may not work in your case. If the data is not important you format it and use again.
Put your micro SD into a micro SD adapter
Insert the micro SD adapter into PC or laptop card reader and leave it there.
Restart your pc or laptop.
Check "my computer" and you should see your SD card files (copy all to your PC before you attempt anything else"
it may or may not work in your case. If the data is not important you format it and use again.
R2D2_WD
Posts
3606
Registration date
Monday September 1, 2014
Status
Member
Last seen
February 20, 2017
155
Feb 11, 2016 at 04:08 AM
Feb 11, 2016 at 04:08 AM
Hi noman,
Could you check if the card is visible in Disk Management? Does it have a proper file format and a drive letter? What device were you using when the problem occurred? If you do not have important data on the card, try formatting it through Disk Management. If you have valuable data, try assigning a letter and using the chkdsk D: /f command from command prompt where you should replace D with the SD card’s letter.
If you have the opportunity, put the card in another device and check again.
Hope this helps
Could you check if the card is visible in Disk Management? Does it have a proper file format and a drive letter? What device were you using when the problem occurred? If you do not have important data on the card, try formatting it through Disk Management. If you have valuable data, try assigning a letter and using the chkdsk D: /f command from command prompt where you should replace D with the SD card’s letter.
If you have the opportunity, put the card in another device and check again.
Hope this helps