A Windows Vista forum. Vista Banter

Welcome to Vista Banter.

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to ask questions and reply to others posts, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support.

Go Back   Home » Vista Banter forum » Microsoft Windows Vista » Hardware and Windows Vista
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

Hardware and Windows Vista Hardware issues in relation to Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices)

Cannot write to drive "Media is write protected"



 
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)  
Old May 5th 08, 04:29 AM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices
bogus83
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3
Default Cannot write to drive "Media is write protected"


Hi all,

This seems to be a new development, and I'm stumped. I've got three
internal hard drives- one housing Vista Ultimate x64, one housing Ubuntu
8.04 x64, and one being used for storage for both OS's. Up until
recently they've cooperated nicely. Now, the storage drive (drive E:\)
will not let me write to it. I cannot rename, delete, cut, or write any
new files to any part of that drive. That's troublesome, since that's
where I send all of my downloads to! Even earlier in this session of
windows it was working nicely, I was able to download a torrent of the
recent Ubuntu 8.04 release (legal and distributed from ubuntu.com). I
started a session of Assassin's Creed (a game), and now that I've quit
that, I cannot write to the drive. Specifically, the error is:

"The disk is write protected. Remove the write protection or use
another disk."

I've tried changing the security settings to allow USERS, or even just
Administrators, full control of the drive, to no avail. I cannot modify
the security settings. When I try, I get:

"An error occurred while applying security information to

E:\xyzpath\123filename

The media is write protected."

I can assure you that I've not enabled any type of write protection.
Any ideas? I'd really like to have this working again as otherwise I'm
extremely limited on storage space. Thanks in advance!

Bogus


--
bogus83
  #2 (permalink)  
Old May 5th 08, 04:53 AM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices
bogus83
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3
Default Cannot write to drive "Media is write protected"


Hi again. Sorry to post a question and then answer it myself, but I saw
the question come up in a few other places and thought I'd post the
solution I found here, in case anyone else came looking. Checkdisk did
not do the trick. I had to use Diskpart.

From a cmd prompt, I ran "diskpart". I selected the drive, and then
the volume, then ran "Attributes volume clear readonly". Immediately I
was able to set security permissions and am currently downloading my new
Ubuntu disc at 900kb/s.

Note: I have not yet rebooted, so I'm not sure if this solution will
persist, or if the problem will randomly occur again. I am using SP1
also, in case anyone is interested.


--
bogus83
  #3 (permalink)  
Old May 30th 08, 01:47 AM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices
bogus83
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3
Default Cannot write to drive "Media is write protected"


Hi all. In case anyone was curious, it DID happen again, totally at
random. Not sure what's causing it, but the same fix as before worked
again.


--
bogus83
  #4 (permalink)  
Old June 1st 08, 07:58 PM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices
jaxstraww[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2
Default Cannot write to drive "Media is write protected"


Same deal here. Starting to bother me big time. I downloaded Ubuntu 8.04
release but didn't do anything with it? Just the ISO.


--
jaxstraww
  #5 (permalink)  
Old June 17th 08, 10:51 PM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices
LINZ70
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1
Default Cannot write to drive "Media is write protected"



"jaxstraww" wrote:


Same deal here. Starting to bother me big time. I downloaded Ubuntu 8.04
release but didn't do anything with it? Just the ISO.


--
jaxstraww


I'm also having this problem. I have a partition on my hard drive that I
can no longer set permissions for. How do I fix this?

  #6 (permalink)  
Old June 24th 08, 06:11 AM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices
evano
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1
Default Cannot write to drive "Media is write protected"


I'm not sure if this will help, but I found this thread while I was
searching for a solution to the "write-protected" issue, and now that it
seems to be fixed I figured I'd let you know how I worked it out.

The drive that gave me the message was a USB 500Gb external which I
moved from my old XP box when I installed Vista HPx64 on a brand new
machine. After a lot of Googling, I tried 'the diskpart method bogus83
suggested'
(http://forums.techarena.in/showpost....6&postcount=2). It
seemed to work, but just a couple of seconds later, my antivirus ('Avira
AntiVir'
(http://www.free-av.de/en/download/1/...tivirus.ht ml)
-- free and excellent) popped up a warning that it had found a boot
sector virus in that drive called 'Sinowal.A'
(http://blogs.technet.com/antimalware...a-report.aspx).
I told it to delete the virus, but it couldn't and that's when *the AV
program write-protected the drive*. Aha!

I tried to get rid of the virus by following the instructions at 'this
Microsoft site' (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/927392) and it probably
would have worked except that those tools only fix the MBR on the system
drive which has Vista -- not on any other drives. Then I found this
tool, 'MBRFix' (http://www.sysint.no/nedlasting/mbrfix.htm) which is a
98Kb file that runs from the command line. So here's how I did it:


- Download *MBRFix.exe* to your User folder
- Boot the computer into a fresh session
- Go to -Start | All Programs | Accessories-
- Right-click on *Command Prompt*
- Choose -"Run as administrator"-
- Choose -"Allow"- from the UAC popup box (if you haven't turned it
off)
- At the *C:\Users\{your name}\* prompt, type
*MBRFix /drive {drive number} fixmbr /yes*
- Repeat the command for however many drives are infected/write
protected
- Restart and check your antivirus or see if you are still unable to
write to the drive


If it was the virus, you should allow your anti-virus program and a
good spyware program or two to run through a full system scan. It's been
a couple of days, and (fingers crossed) it seems to be fixed! Hope this
helps someone.


--
evano
------------------------------------------------------------------------
evano's Profile: http://forums.techarena.in/member.php?u=51971
View this thread: http://forums.techarena.in/showthread.php?t=961967

http://forums.techarena.in

  #7 (permalink)  
Old July 17th 08, 02:17 PM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices
jukka77
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3
Default Cannot write to drive "Media is write protected"


Hi, same problem here...
I performed the "diskpart" solution from bogus83, but after the
restart, grub did not get past stage 1.5 (seems to be in a loop, as no
error message).

Anyone an idea of what has gone wrong? I did run a virus-check (Norton
360) before restarting, and no problems were found.

My configuration is:

Ubuntu 8.04 on 250GB Maxtor (grub installed here)
Vista Ultimate X64 on (Software) Raid 0 (2 x WD Raptor 37GB)
Asus P5B Deluxe Wi-Fi
Intel E6600


--
jukka77
  #8 (permalink)  
Old July 17th 08, 09:30 PM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices
jukka77
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3
Default Cannot write to drive "Media is write protected"


I (think) I have solved my issue:
after having restored my MBR using the Vista DVD, I updated the jmicron
(SATA/RAID controller drivers), and so far have not seen the problem
return.

I'm keeping my fingers crossed that that was the cause...


--
jukka77
  #9 (permalink)  
Old July 23rd 08, 10:36 PM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices
Siegfried Glaser
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1
Default Cannot write to drive "Media is write protected"

"bogus83" wrote:


Hi again. Sorry to post a question and then answer it myself, but I saw
the question come up in a few other places and thought I'd post the
solution I found here, in case anyone else came looking. Checkdisk did
not do the trick. I had to use Diskpart.

From a cmd prompt, I ran "diskpart". I selected the drive, and then
the volume, then ran "Attributes volume clear readonly". Immediately I
was able to set security permissions and am currently downloading my new
Ubuntu disc at 900kb/s.

Note: I have not yet rebooted, so I'm not sure if this solution will
persist, or if the problem will randomly occur again. I am using SP1
also, in case anyone is interested.


--
bogus83



Thanks to "bogus83" for sharing the solution using diskpart.
Worked like a charm.

On my Vista x64 machine the problem occured after I tried to copy all files
from a drive named "Medien 1" to a folder, also named "Medien 1", on a
different drive. I received an error, telling me something along the lines of
"the target folder is a subfolder of the source folder".
After shaking my head in resignation I renamed the target folder and tried
again. Seeing that the process would take longer than expected, I canceled
the operation, leaving the task for the following day. When I started my
computer the next day to try again, I received the mentioned error message.

Coincidence? Maybe. Annoying? Definitely!
  #10 (permalink)  
Old August 6th 08, 02:32 PM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices
SEA
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1
Default Cannot write to drive "Media is write protected"

I have similar issue. 2 harddrives, Vista 64 is on 2nd, Windows XP on 1st.
And No any RAID, also updated drivers.
Nothing helps - it occurs time ti time, and reboot always helps.
I searched with google, it turned out that many people complain about it and
they all have different configuration, so there is no any pattern (except 2
or more HDs). So it is Vista bug and any remedy is temporary until MS fix
it...

"jukka77" wrote:


I (think) I have solved my issue:
after having restored my MBR using the Vista DVD, I updated the jmicron
(SATA/RAID controller drivers), and so far have not seen the problem
return.

I'm keeping my fingers crossed that that was the cause...


--
jukka77

 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



All times are GMT. The time now is 02:32 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.0.0 RC6
Copyright ©2004-2024 Vista Banter.
The comments are property of their posters.