< SD Clean
(Step 10 should say "If FAT32 was not an option in step 9", not 4. Not sure how that happened.) |
(Step 10 should say "If FAT32 was not an option in step 9", not 4. Not sure how that happened.) |
(No difference)
|
Latest revision as of 18:09, 13 June 2024
This is an add-on section for completely recreating an SD card's filesystem using diskpart and Disk Management. This should only be done if formatting does not fix your issue or is not possible for some reason.
This page is for Windows users only. If you are not on Windows, see the Mac and/or Linux pages instead.
Instructions
Before beginning these steps, copy all of your SD card's contents to a folder on your computer. |
- Launch
diskpart
by searching fordiskpart
in the Windows search bar - Once diskpart is active in the new Command Prompt window, type
list disk
- Find your SD card in the list of disks (hint: look for the size of your card), then type
select disk #
, where # is the disk number of your SD cardDisk 0 will always be your main windows drive, so you'd select any disk after it. - Type
list disk
again. You should now see a * next to your SD card - Once you are absolutely sure that you have selected the right disk, type
clean
, then typeconvert mbr
- Close the diskpart window, and search for
diskmgmt.msc
in the windows search bar - Once the disk management window loads, you should be able to see your SD card as a black 'unallocated' area in the bottom part of the window. You may have to scroll down the bottom part of the window to see it
- Right click on the black unallocated area and select
new simple volume
- Click through all the prompts until the one about formatting - in that prompt, select "FAT32" or "exFAT" as the file system
- If FAT32 was not an option in step 9, Reformat the SD card to FAT32.
- Copy your data back onto your SD card.