FantasyAcquiesce Posted November 28, 2022 Posted November 28, 2022 (edited) Hello, I've been a bit lost with USB 3.0 lately. In this case, I had to downgrade my Windows 10 installation to Windows 8.1 on my Dell Inspiron 20 Model 3044 because Windows 10 was too crash-happy and struggled with basic tasks. On Windows 10, I could access my Sandisk 256gb USB 3.0 flash drive but Windows 8 prompts me that I must format the flash drive just like Windows XP would... How do I get this working? Intel's website only holds a 64 bit version of the USB 3.0 driver? Is there a way I can get the driver from a Windows 10 installation? Attempting to use Mint Linux in this case does not solve the issue either: the Linux OS cannot see the flash drive. Edited November 28, 2022 by FantasyAcquiesce
D.Draker Posted November 28, 2022 Posted November 28, 2022 3 hours ago, FantasyAcquiesce said: Windows 8.1 COMPATIBLE WITH: Windows 8.1 32 bit Windows 8.1 64 bit https://drivers.softpedia.com/get/MOTHERBOARD/Intel/ASRock-Z170-Extreme7plus-Intel-USB-30-Driver-10042-for-Windows-81.shtml
FantasyAcquiesce Posted November 30, 2022 Author Posted November 30, 2022 (edited) On 11/28/2022 at 6:23 AM, D.Draker said: COMPATIBLE WITH: Windows 8.1 32 bit Windows 8.1 64 bit https://drivers.softpedia.com/get/MOTHERBOARD/Intel/ASRock-Z170-Extreme7plus-Intel-USB-30-Driver-10042-for-Windows-81.shtml This driver's executable does not work. It states I do not have the system requirements. Edited November 30, 2022 by FantasyAcquiesce
D.Draker Posted November 30, 2022 Posted November 30, 2022 (edited) On 11/30/2022 at 6:27 AM, FantasyAcquiesce said: This driver's executable does not work. It states I do not have the system requirements. Then it must me something wrong with your system. Because win 8.1 must have them by default ! win 8.1 has its native USB3.0 drivers. This is the official statement from Intel. https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/support/articles/000005537/software/chipset-software.html Windows* 8, Windows* 8.1, and Windows® 10 have a native in-box USB 3.0 or USB 3.1 driver. Intel isn't releasing a specific Intel® USB 3.0 or USB 3.1 eXtensible Host Controller Driver for Windows 8, 8.1, or 10. Those I gave you, are only meant to upgrade the existing/native win 8.1 drivers. Edited December 2, 2022 by D.Draker put slash instead of comma. 1
FantasyAcquiesce Posted November 30, 2022 Author Posted November 30, 2022 Hmmm...I wonder why. Maybe it is because I am using Windows 8.1 Embedded (my system is low-end and even weaker than a duo 2 T7200) , but I doubt that version of Windows 8.1 would be much different compared to stock versions.
D.Draker Posted November 30, 2022 Posted November 30, 2022 3 hours ago, FantasyAcquiesce said: Hmmm...I wonder why. Well. I want to help you, let's try . Was it a clean installation ? Embedded or not - doesn't matter, all editions have the driver out-of-the-box. Not need to configure.
FantasyAcquiesce Posted December 1, 2022 Author Posted December 1, 2022 (edited) 14 hours ago, D.Draker said: Well. I want to help you, let's try . Was it a clean installation ? Embedded or not - doesn't matter, all editions have the driver out-of-the-box. Not need to configure. I guess I might be out of luck then. All my USB 2.0 hardware with Windows 8.1, 7, Vista, and XP all read the USB 3.0 (3.2?) flash drive as something that needs to be formatted... Is accessing a USB 3.x device on non-Windows 10 devices and simply recycling an old laptop for modern purposes too much to ask for? ;O; Edited December 1, 2022 by FantasyAcquiesce
jumper Posted December 1, 2022 Posted December 1, 2022 On 11/28/2022 at 5:31 AM, FantasyAcquiesce said: Windows 8 prompts me that I must format the flash drive There's your answer: It can read the drive, just doesn't support the existing format. What file system is on the drive now?
jaclaz Posted December 1, 2022 Posted December 1, 2022 (edited) Maybe the issue is connected with the different way USB "Mass Storage" devices are handled in Windows 10 (as compared to previous Windows, i.e. multiple partitions visible as opposed to single partition)? Is that stick partitioned or not (direct volume or "superfloppy")? And if it is partitioned, is it MBR or GPT "style"? AFAIK USB 3.0 devices are (transparently) compatible with USB 2.0 ports, they will only be slower in data transfer. jaclaz Edited December 1, 2022 by jaclaz
D.Draker Posted December 2, 2022 Posted December 2, 2022 I once had such type of error. In the end, it was a dying stick with multiple error blocks. Could you try another device ?
j7n Posted December 2, 2022 Posted December 2, 2022 Access the the USB disk with a hex editor like WinHex and see if you can interpret its contents. If so, then you can image it and recover the files.
FantasyAcquiesce Posted December 5, 2022 Author Posted December 5, 2022 (edited) Thank you all for the replies! On 12/2/2022 at 9:33 AM, D.Draker said: I once had such type of error. In the end, it was a dying stick with multiple error blocks. Could you try another device ? On 12/1/2022 at 8:32 AM, jaclaz said: Maybe the issue is connected with the different way USB "Mass Storage" devices are handled in Windows 10 (as compared to previous Windows, i.e. multiple partitions visible as opposed to single partition)? Is that stick partitioned or not (direct volume or "superfloppy")? And if it is partitioned, is it MBR or GPT "style"? AFAIK USB 3.0 devices are (transparently) compatible with USB 2.0 ports, they will only be slower in data transfer. jaclaz I found out I still had an old USB 3.0 flash drive and...that is backwards compatible with Windows XP, Vista, etc.. I think the issue here is my modern sandisk flash drive holds the newer USB 3.2 version rather than just plain ol' USB 3.0 despite the label. Windows confirms it's a USB 3.2 gen 1 device. Hmmm, I am definitely not sure of its partitioning. I would assume MBR because it's Windows' default? Not sure if this is relevant but I do recall formatting this hard disk on Linux a while back. Not a single computer could even recognize the flash drive anymore besides Linux, then I reformatted it and it fixed things back at the time (could use flash drive on modern PCs). Edited December 5, 2022 by FantasyAcquiesce
UCyborg Posted December 5, 2022 Posted December 5, 2022 I recently bought a SanDisk 128 GB flash drive, it came formatted with FAT32 file system, with SanDiskMemoryZone.apk (Android app) + PDF about it in the root directory. I reformatted it to exFAT on Windows 10 through Explorer, works fine on Windows XP besides all newer OS. Since you have Linux, maybe you can show us some information from GParted or some other utility, both device information and partition layout, perhaps we can spot something fishy.
FantasyAcquiesce Posted December 14, 2022 Author Posted December 14, 2022 Update. I've gotten access to a device that could hold all the files on the flash drive then formatted it. It now works with Windows XP machines and the rest Hmmm, but this is still worth questioning what Linux (I think Mint Linux) had done to my flash drive to render it unusable on any machine older than Windows 10. It's quite unexpected.
tekkaman Posted January 10, 2023 Posted January 10, 2023 I use Linux as well and one time I formatted a usb drive on Linux and for some reason it wouldn't work on a windows system even though it was ntfs. To fix it I had format it again. You can use HP USB format tool. It's very useful. https://hp-usb-disk-storage-format-tool.en.softonic.com/download
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