hi guys, out of nowhere my sd card reader just stopped working, and it wont recognize any sd cards that i put it, it simply doesnt see it in the slot. i tried a factory reset and all that and nothing. is there any suggestions?
An SD card reader is usually a USB device that you put in a laptop or a desktop computer to work with the files on an SD card. If that is what is not working, chances are it is toast. Most of them are poorly made, but, the bright side is that they are very cheap to replace.
Theres also one behind/under the battery...
I have seen many posts about this. I have heard of at least one that worked after a few bat pulls and letting it sit there for a while but i also know a lot of people had to get a new phone under warranty
Sent from my HTC Vision using XDA App
Hello,
i need some little help here :/
Due a small setback my phone was dropped...
the battery jumped and when i turned it on everything worked in instead of the SD card.
I cleaned the contacts, i put another SD card and nothing worked...
The phone is running well instead the SD card that simple dont guive me any sinal...
It needs to go to reparation or i can do something?
Thanks in advance
MatZ69 said:
Hello,
i need some little help here :/
Due a small setback my phone was dropped...
the battery jumped and when i turned it on everything worked in instead of the SD card.
I cleaned the contacts, i put another SD card and nothing worked...
The phone is running well instead the SD card that simple dont guive me any sinal...
It needs to go to reparation or i can do something?
Thanks in advance
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I had this issue. Is it showing unavailable?
Sent from my GT540 using XDA App
to me the sd card simply don't give any signal, the phone its always asking for it, with it inside.
It's the SD Card connector broked?
MatZ69 said:
to me the sd card simply don't give any signal, the phone its always asking for it, with it inside.
It's the SD Card connector broked?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Get your nail just below the holder itself and move it slightly upwards (a screwdriver helps) BE CAREFUL! I ACCEPT NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR ANY PROBLEM!
Sent from my D255 using XDA App
Quinny899 said:
Get your nail just below the holder itself and move it slightly upwards (a screwdriver helps) BE CAREFUL! I ACCEPT NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR ANY PROBLEM!
Sent from my D255 using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I tried with my nail to rise the contacts just a little and nothing, its like i dont have any sd card inserted... lol :/
hi,just tried my new 32gb sandisk & it wont stay on,i plugged it in & it says i can safely remove & when i mount it it appears as 29gb and then vanishes again,ive erased the card but still wont stay & also restarted phone ??? any ideas ? is the card a duff ?
bloody hell now my old card is doing the samething & all my data,music & videos etc are not showing ?
none of my cards will stay mounted & ive factory reset also,they just appear & disappear 16gb & my new 32gb sandisk ?
notification keeps coming up to safely remove sd card
There is a little switch that clicks down when you put the back down. Be sure the back cover of your phone is all the way one or it won’t mount.
Also once you change cards your old card will not work in your phone again (data wise).
The phone seems to marry to the card then forget the old card. I learned that the hard way when I put a smaller card in while I rooted my phone (all I did was format the other card at that point). Then I put my main card back in all my games had to be reinstalled.
You can copy all the data files from one card to the other and the phone will recognize both properly
Sent from my XPlay using XDA App.
Not that I know of. Like I said it forgot my SD after putting a new one in and formatting it. So i'm guessing one at a time.
ncaissie said:
Be sure the back cover of your phone is all the way on
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
slide your finger pressing firmly at the edges of the back cover all around
thanks for the info folks,i didnt know the bloody cover had to be on to get the micro sd working
kenf2210 said:
thanks for the info folks,i didnt know the bloody cover had to be on to get the micro sd working
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ah, it's actually more convenient because it allows you to change sd cards without restarting your phone.
Sent from my XPlay using XDA App.
kenf2210 said:
thanks for the info folks,i didnt know the bloody cover had to be on to get the micro sd working
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Same, had the same issues at first, and this was the solution.
That feature is there so hotswapping your memory card won't cause data corruption.
Sent from my R800
Well i bought a Droid X yesterday for my dad for 60 bucks phone works great just the backlight is dead. The Problem i am having is my micro sd card does not read i have formatted it in fat32 and still a no go. I have no clue what i am doing wrong. The SD card does read in my Xoom and my bionic so i know its not the sd card. and the chips in my phone and tablet does not work in the droid x.
SD Card remount
I had a problem, and have fixed the same problem for many friends, where my SD card could not be read. My first recommended fix is:
Goto Settings > Storage > Unmount SD Card
Then simply remount the SD Card once the unmount has completed.
If this does not work let me know and we'll try something else.
well i just found out one of the pins for the sd card is shot so the phone is shot. Is there anyway i can save the phone or is it just trash now.
I really don't like TouchWiz at all, so, when the first ICS sources became available, I started porting AOSP to our device.
There are still some major and many minor bugs, but ROM seems to be stable and usable.
Please look for buglist below, so you can decide, do you need to flash it or not.
I'll try to fix those bugs as soon as possible, so please, don't ask when something will be fixed, I really don't know for what. I'd like wast more for Louis Vuitton Luggage
Description: This is clean and clear ICS (4.0.3) without any modifications. This is not CM, just AOSP. It may be used with tablet or with phone UI.
Take out the SD card and put it in another phone and when something pops up, you press ok then when its done, you put it back in your phone at it should work fine
jakson0100 said:
Take out the SD card and put it in another phone and when something pops up, you press ok then when its done, you put it back in your phone at it should work fine
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
still a no go i have swaped around 5 sd cards.
razielleonhart said:
still a no go i have swaped around 5 sd cards.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you've swapped around several microSD cards in your phone and none of them work, your phone is the problem. It more than likely has a dead card reader.
The only fix for this is to get a new phone.
Sent from my Transformer TF101 using Tapatalk
infazzdar said:
If you've swapped around several microSD cards in your phone and none of them work, your phone is the problem. It more than likely has a dead card reader.
The only fix for this is to get a new phone.
Sent from my Transformer TF101 using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ok thanks people if i cant use the sd slot i am going to kill this phone
This guide/how-to will show you how to fix your non-functional microSD card.
Things you need:-Broken microSD
-Blackberry (tested with a Curve)
That's it!
How I came across this fix and some backstory:Your microSD card might not really be broken. Just follow these easy steps to fix your "broken" microSD. The other day, I tried to flash a ROM from my external SD. In recovery, it said that there was no external SD mounted. I knew that wasn't true, so I took a deeper look in. I also tried to manually mount the SD card in the settings menu. I tried changing my ROM, trying putting the microSD into different devices, but no matter what I did, the microSD couldn't be read. I even considered returning to stock.
I was on Amazon, already looking at some new UHS-1 Sandisk cards. I figured I needed a faster and bigger card anyways. That was when I noticed a Blackberry Curve next to me. I hadn't tried putting the microSD in it yet, so I said to myself, "What do I have to lose? It's already not working. It can only make it better." I put in the microSD and voila! The BlackBerry recognized the card and asked if I wanted to format it. I hit yes and the BB formated the microSD with no issues. I put my microSD back in my T-Mobile Galaxy S2, and guess what? The phone recognized it! Another plus is the fact that with the BlackBerry format, there was only one folder. Normally, when you format a card in a phone, there are A LOT of folders. I just deleted the BlackBerry folder so basically, I had a completely empty card.
Formal Instructions on how to fix your microSD:1. Put your not-functional microSD into a BlackBerry.
2. The BlackBerry should ask to format the card. Hit yes.
4. Connect your microSD to a computer. Open it up.
5. Delete the folder called "BlackBerry" (optional).
6. Your microSD card should now work fine.
If this thread helped revive your broken microSD and saved you money by not buying a new card, please click the thanks button.
Can't u just format it on a pc?
Sent from my LG-P999 using xda premium
fadownjoo said:
Can't u just format it on a pc?
Sent from my LG-P999 using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It might not show up. My microSD only showed up in the BB. This is just if nothing can read the card.
Oh hai man XD
Sent from my Baconator Over-9000
Tezlastorme said:
Oh hai man XD
Sent from my Baconator Over-9000
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hey storm !
Sent from my SGH-T989 using xda premium
android88 said:
This guide/how-to will show you how to fix your non-functional microSD card.
Things you need:-Broken microSD
-Blackberry (tested with a Curve)
That's it!
How I came across this fix and some backstory:Your microSD card might not really be broken. Just follow these easy steps to fix your "broken" microSD. The other day, I tried to flash a ROM from my external SD. In recovery, it said that there was no external SD mounted. I knew that wasn't true, so I took a deeper look in. I also tried to manually mount the SD card in the settings menu. I tried changing my ROM, trying putting the microSD into different devices, but no matter what I did, the microSD couldn't be read. I even considered returning to stock.
I was on Amazon, already looking at some new UHS-1 Sandisk cards. I figured I needed a faster and bigger card anyways. That was when I noticed a Blackberry Curve next to me. I hadn't tried putting the microSD in it yet, so I said to myself, "What do I have to lose? It's already not working. It can only make it better." I put in the microSD and voila! The BlackBerry recognized the card and asked if I wanted to format it. I hit yes and the BB formated the microSD with no issues. I put my microSD back in my T-Mobile Galaxy S2, and guess what? The phone recognized it! Another plus is the fact that with the BlackBerry format, there was only one folder. Normally, when you format a card in a phone, there are A LOT of folders. I just deleted the BlackBerry folder so basically, I had a completely empty card.
Formal Instructions on how to fix your microSD:1. Put your not-functional microSD into a BlackBerry.
2. The BlackBerry should ask to format the card. Hit yes.
4. Connect your microSD to a computer. Open it up.
5. Delete the folder called "BlackBerry" (optional).
6. Your microSD card should now work fine.
If this thread helped revive your broken microSD and saved you money by not buying a new card, please click the thanks button.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm sorry but does not work for my Sandisk 8GB formatted by curve 8520 =(
bckd00r said:
I'm sorry but does not work for my Sandisk 8GB formatted by curve 8520 =(
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I tried it on a Curve 8520 as well and it worked fine.
bckd00r said:
I'm sorry but does not work for my Sandisk 8GB formatted by curve 8520 =(
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This solution not for all cards If you card is password locked - it can help to format. If card totally dead - solution not applicable.
ildaris said:
This solution not for all cards If you card is password locked - it can help to format. If card totally dead - solution not applicable.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My card wasn't being read by anything besides the Blackberry.
.
Cool tip
Thanks this worked. I had an old card to and it wouldn't read in my epic 4g touch and it really worked tx.
Sent from my SPH-D710 using xda premium
stereo386 said:
Thanks this worked. I had an old card to and it wouldn't read in my epic 4g touch and it really worked tx.
Sent from my SPH-D710 using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's good .
android88 said:
This guide/how-to will show you how to fix your non-functional microSD card.
Things you need:-Broken microSD
-Blackberry (tested with a Curve)
That's it!
How I came across this fix and some backstory:Your microSD card might not really be broken. Just follow these easy steps to fix your "broken" microSD. The other day, I tried to flash a ROM from my external SD. In recovery, it said that there was no external SD mounted. I knew that wasn't true, so I took a deeper look in. I also tried to manually mount the SD card in the settings menu. I tried changing my ROM, trying putting the microSD into different devices, but no matter what I did, the microSD couldn't be read. I even considered returning to stock.
I was on Amazon, already looking at some new UHS-1 Sandisk cards. I figured I needed a faster and bigger card anyways. That was when I noticed a Blackberry Curve next to me. I hadn't tried putting the microSD in it yet, so I said to myself, "What do I have to lose? It's already not working. It can only make it better." I put in the microSD and voila! The BlackBerry recognized the card and asked if I wanted to format it. I hit yes and the BB formated the microSD with no issues. I put my microSD back in my T-Mobile Galaxy S2, and guess what? The phone recognized it! Another plus is the fact that with the BlackBerry format, there was only one folder. Normally, when you format a card in a phone, there are A LOT of folders. I just deleted the BlackBerry folder so basically, I had a completely empty card.
Formal Instructions on how to fix your microSD:1. Put your not-functional microSD into a BlackBerry.
2. The BlackBerry should ask to format the card. Hit yes.
4. Connect your microSD to a computer. Open it up.
5. Delete the folder called "BlackBerry" (optional).
6. Your microSD card should now work fine.
If this thread helped revive your broken microSD and saved you money by not buying a new card, please click the thanks button.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks man, was considering to buy a new one :beer:
Sent from my LG-E400 using xda premium
If you get *really* desperate, have stuff on it that can't be replaced, and have a few days to burn, you can also try to rip the bits from it using an Arduino (or any other microcontroller).
The easy part is pointing at address=0 and sequentially reading it a bit at a time, byte by byte, via SPI. The *hard* part is interpreting it as a filesystem. I know code exists for FAT32, but I'm not so confident about ext2/3/4 or NTFS. For those, you might have to come up with a way to get the raw data into a form DD can recognize.
The point is, a microSD card is pretty hard to physically destroy. It's one of the few devices we have left that can be low-level read by fairly simple means (in theory, you could probably read it with a 3v DC power source, a SPST toggle switch, two momentary buttons, a LED & resistor, a soldering iron, and some wire... one button for MOSI, one button for SCK, and the LED for MISO. Flip the switch to transition ~SS from high to low to reset the latch, and press away. Ok, maybe debounce it, too...
It wouldn't do you much good that way, but it's an example of just how easy it IS to rip raw bits from a microSD card. No real timing requirements (AFAIK, microSD timing is entirely static). Apparently, this is kind of how the first home computers worked, too...
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I747 using Tapatalk 2
bitbang3r said:
If you get *really* desperate, have stuff on it that can't be replaced, and have a few days to burn, you can also try to rip the bits from it using an Arduino (or any other microcontroller).
The easy part is pointing at address=0 and sequentially reading it a bit at a time, byte by byte, via SPI. The *hard* part is interpreting it as a filesystem. I know code exists for FAT32, but I'm not so confident about ext2/3/4 or NTFS. For those, you might have to come up with a way to get the raw data into a form DD can recognize.
The point is, a microSD card is pretty hard to physically destroy. It's one of the few devices we have left that can be low-level read by fairly simple means (in theory, you could probably read it with a 3v DC power source, a SPST toggle switch, two momentary buttons, a LED & resistor, a soldering iron, and some wire... one button for MOSI, one button for SCK, and the LED for MISO. Flip the switch to transition ~SS from high to low to reset the latch, and press away. Ok, maybe debounce it, too...
It wouldn't do you much good that way, but it's an example of just how easy it IS to rip raw bits from a microSD card. No real timing requirements (AFAIK, microSD timing is entirely static). Apparently, this is kind of how the first home computers worked, too...
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I747 using Tapatalk 2
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I didn't really understand all of that but it sounds like it would work, lol.
StraTzHD said:
Thanks man, was considering to buy a new one :beer:
Sent from my LG-E400 using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nice . I'm glad it worked.
Galan,233-7550 ancnsel
android88 said:
This guide/how-to will show you how to fix your non-functional microSD card.
Things you need:-Broken microSD
-Blackberry (tested with a Curve)
That's it!
How I came across this fix and some backstory:Your microSD card might not really be broken. Just follow these easy steps to fix your "broken" microSD. The other day, I tried to flash a ROM from my external SD. In recovery, it said that there was no external SD mounted. I knew that wasn't true, so I took a deeper look in. I also tried to manually mount the SD card in the settings menu. I tried changing my ROM, trying putting the microSD into different devices, but no matter what I did, the microSD couldn't be read. I even considered returning to stock.
I was on Amazon, already looking at some new UHS-1 Sandisk cards. I figured I needed a faster and bigger card anyways. That was when I noticed a Blackberry Curve next to me. I hadn't tried putting the microSD in it yet, so I said to myself, "What do I have to lose? It's already not working. It can only make it better." I put in the microSD and voila! The BlackBerry recognized the card and asked if I wanted to format it. I hit yes and the BB formated the microSD with no issues. I put my microSD back in my T-Mobile Galaxy S2, and guess what? The phone recognized it! Another plus is the fact that with the BlackBerry format, there was only one folder. Normally, when you format a card in a phone, there are A LOT of folders. I just deleted the BlackBerry folder so basically, I had a completely empty card.
Formal Instructions on how to fix your microSD:1. Put your not-functional microSD into a BlackBerry.
2. The BlackBerry should ask to format the card. Hit yes.
4. Connect your microSD to a computer. Open it up.
5. Delete the folder called "BlackBerry" (optional).
6. Your microSD card should now work fine.
If this thread helped revive your broken microSD and saved you money by not buying a new card, please click the thanks button.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
hi sir.. how about if one doesn't have a blackberry?? what should they do?
kanor_ said:
hi sir.. how about if one doesn't have a blackberry?? what should they do?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't know. This only applies to people who have a BlackBerry. I guess you could try sticking your microSD in different devices and see if something pops up asking you to format your card.
kanor_ said:
hi sir.. how about if one doesn't have a blackberry?? what should they do?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
android88 said:
I don't know. This only applies to people who have a BlackBerry. I guess you could try sticking your microSD in different devices and see if something pops up asking you to format your card.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well you could borrow someone else's blackberry. Just kidding!
Has anyone found out why only blackberry? Do they have a different algorithm to read flash memory?
Sent from my Micromax A110
BabuMoshaaye said:
Well you could borrow someone else's blackberry. Just kidding!
Has anyone found out why only blackberry? Do they have a different algorithm to read flash memory?
Sent from my Micromax A110
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
More to the point how about doing some basic fact-finding first and finding out what errors the kernel on the device is reporting when it tries to mount the sdcard, then steps can be taken to solve the real problem rather than relying on magic and what some people might term as beginners luck! A good place to start is
Code:
adb shell dmesg