- #All in one hdd docking station format disk driver
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- #All in one hdd docking station format disk windows
The disk was factory-formatted in an incompatible manner Once the disk is correctly identified in the Device Manager,Ģ.
#All in one hdd docking station format disk driver
In the second case, a proprietary driver needs to be installed fromĮither a CD supplied with the disk or downloaded from the manufacturer's website.
#All in one hdd docking station format disk windows
In the first case, Windows has correctly identified the disk. Under the Disk drives branch or under Unknown devices. To check, open up Device Manager and check whether the new disks are visible In some rare cases, the new disk requires a proprietary driver and cannot work
When a new disk fails to show up in Windows Explorer, there can be two reasons : So in the end, I would have to assume I could have also done this with the Kingwin dock and I was just too inept in my decisions. I undocked and redocked it, it then showed up as if I plugged in a USB device. Once this was done it showed up in windows explorer. I then deleted each partition and formatted the entire drive, giving it a drive letter also. So I have to assume I am all good now.ģTB WD: When I plugged in the 3TB WD I opened the disk management utility to find that it has 3 partitions (I am not sure what they are of). I then undocked it and redocked it and it showed up just as if I plugged in a USB drive. Once I assigned it a drive letter it showed up in explorer. I then chose to "change drive letter and paths". I then chose to format it to NTFS and did not select a drive letter. Upon opening the tool it told me that the disk space was unrecognized and needed to be formatted (I don't think that is the right term) to MBR or GPT, I chose GPT.Īfter I selected GPT the drive still showed as unallocated. So it does look like the WD is recognized but it does not show up as a drive in windows explorer.ĮDIT3: 1TB WD: I first plugged in the new 1TB WD drive and opened up the disk management tool. The C: and D: drives are my internal HDDs.Īnd here is what is shown when the 500 GB Seagate is docked So I might assume it is an issue with Western Digital or my current hardware setup.?ĮDIT2: Here is what the device manager shows when a WD HDD is docked with the Nexstar. I guess I could go buy another dock/USB-SATA device and try again or maybe the device is not the issue? I talked with the microcenter rep for a while and he said that he has used this specific Nexstar to hook up many types of drives (for what that's worth). I am not sure what the next steps should be now. Both the Seagate and Samsung drives work with the new Nexstar and both of the 2TB and new 1TB Western Digitals will not show up in Windows. To keep it short, I am having the exact same issues. The only idea that I can gather, and it was just a "faint" random forum post (and I don't think this makes sense, but I can't convince myself either way) is that the Western Digitals think that they are "Master" drives and will not respond to puny slave requests to allow them to be read or written to.ĮDIT: Over the weekend I returned the Kingwin dock along with the 4TB Western Digital and bought a Nexstar Model CB-SATAU3-6 and a 1TB Western Digital Black HDD. I have tried multiple times to get them to show up and made sure they were seated correctly. Both the Samsung and Seagate work show up and I have used them both to transfer data. My issue is that neither of the Western Digital drives will show up when in the dock.
The other drives that I had prior are a 128GB Samsung SSD, a 500GB Seagate Laptop HDD, and another 3TB Western Digital Green HDD.
At the same time I bought a brand new Western Digital WD NAS Red 4TB HDD.