Update: I have managed to wipe the data (fill with zero) using Minitool Partition Wizard under windows, but now under Windows/Ubuntu the drive is recognized as "read-only". Also, I searched for bad sectors with badblocks -sv -b 512 /dev/sdd, and it returned 0 bad blocks.Īny ideas of how can I make this flash drive usable? Mkfs -t vfat /dev/sdd1 to format to FAT32, but this has no effect. It can recover files from hard drives, external drives ( USB drives, etc.), BD/DVD/CD discs, and memory cards. It's very easy to use, but has many optional advanced features as well. I tried using dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdd bs=512 count=1 to clear all data, then Recuva is the very best free data recovery software tool available, hands down. Step 2 Scan USB Flash Drive to Search Data Recoverit Flash Drive Data Recovery will start a quick scan to search for data. Ultimately, when I try to format (simply format, or delete partition then make a new partition), I get the following errors: Input/output error during write on /dev/sddĮrror fsyncing/closing /dev/sdd: Input/output error Step 1 Select the USB Flash Drive Make sure your USB drive is detected by the computer, select it, and click the ' Start ' button to process. There is no file system available (un-formatted) This is how GParted recognizes the drive:Īnd in the Information tab it is said Unable to detect file system! Possible reasons are I have run GParted as superuser, with the partition not mounted. In Windows I get a Drive is write protected error, so I tried with Ubuntu. But at some point an error had occurred that I didn't noticed and after some time I removed the flash drive without seeing the error. The flash drive had NTFS file system so I thought there will be no problems. I have an 8GB USB 2.0 flash drive (no-name), on which I tried a few days ago to copy a film of about 6GB.
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