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. |
|
Hardware and Windows Vista Hardware issues in relation to Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices) |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
WD MyBook 250 Gb external HD
Is this or is this not supported in Vista? Anyone know? It worked fine in
XP, and it shows up in Device Manager, but I can't get a drive letter!! Thanks in advance Andy |
|
|||
WD MyBook 250 Gb external HD
"Andy G" wrote in message ... Is this or is this not supported in Vista? Anyone know? It worked fine in XP, and it shows up in Device Manager, but I can't get a drive letter!! Thanks in advance Andy Mine worked fine on Win98, XP, and is working daily for a year or more in Vista. Try right clicking "computer" and selecting "manage" and then Disk Management. You should be able to see the drive by name, and by right clicking it assign a letter to it. Please note, it won't likely be the same letter the other systems applied to it. It will probably be around K L M or so. If Vista doesn't see it, boot again into your bios setup, and make sure the bios sees it. It is probably there alright, and working fine but has no drive letter, if Device Manager can see it. Assign the letter in Disk Manager. Good luck. |
|
|||
WD MyBook 250 Gb external HD
Yeah, I tried to do all that and, to recap, it shows up in
Device Manager, which lists it as working properly. However, there is no sign of it in Explorer or in Computer. When I look in Admin Tools under Disk Management, it is shown as Disk 1, but with no drive letter. If I select it and right click and choose "Change Drive Letter and Paths", I get an error message saying: "The operation failed to complete because the Disk Management console view is not up to date. Refresh the view using the Refresh Task. If the problem persists close the Disk Management console, then restart Disk Management, or restart the computer." As you will guess, neither refreshing nor restarting makes any difference. What on earth do I do to perform this apparently simple operation? Andy "Wandering" wrote in message ... "Andy G" wrote in message ... Is this or is this not supported in Vista? Anyone know? It worked fine in XP, and it shows up in Device Manager, but I can't get a drive letter!! Thanks in advance Andy Mine worked fine on Win98, XP, and is working daily for a year or more in Vista. Try right clicking "computer" and selecting "manage" and then Disk Management. You should be able to see the drive by name, and by right clicking it assign a letter to it. Please note, it won't likely be the same letter the other systems applied to it. It will probably be around K L M or so. If Vista doesn't see it, boot again into your bios setup, and make sure the bios sees it. It is probably there alright, and working fine but has no drive letter, if Device Manager can see it. Assign the letter in Disk Manager. Good luck. |
|
|||
WD MyBook 250 Gb external HD
WD drives are supported on Vista - they all use the inbox class driver for
drive access (there is a HID button driver for some of their models which you don't necessarily have to install - but can. It is located on WDs website). Can you use diskpart to mount the drive and assign a drive letter? I have had a similar experience with a drive that was dying. Does the drive still work on other systems? "Andy G" wrote in message ... Yeah, I tried to do all that and, to recap, it shows up in Device Manager, which lists it as working properly. However, there is no sign of it in Explorer or in Computer. When I look in Admin Tools under Disk Management, it is shown as Disk 1, but with no drive letter. If I select it and right click and choose "Change Drive Letter and Paths", I get an error message saying: "The operation failed to complete because the Disk Management console view is not up to date. Refresh the view using the Refresh Task. If the problem persists close the Disk Management console, then restart Disk Management, or restart the computer." As you will guess, neither refreshing nor restarting makes any difference. What on earth do I do to perform this apparently simple operation? Andy "Wandering" wrote in message ... "Andy G" wrote in message ... Is this or is this not supported in Vista? Anyone know? It worked fine in XP, and it shows up in Device Manager, but I can't get a drive letter!! Thanks in advance Andy Mine worked fine on Win98, XP, and is working daily for a year or more in Vista. Try right clicking "computer" and selecting "manage" and then Disk Management. You should be able to see the drive by name, and by right clicking it assign a letter to it. Please note, it won't likely be the same letter the other systems applied to it. It will probably be around K L M or so. If Vista doesn't see it, boot again into your bios setup, and make sure the bios sees it. It is probably there alright, and working fine but has no drive letter, if Device Manager can see it. Assign the letter in Disk Manager. Good luck. |
|
|||
WD MyBook 250 Gb external HD
"Wandering" wrote in message ... "Andy G" wrote in message ... Is this or is this not supported in Vista? Anyone know? It worked fine in XP, and it shows up in Device Manager, but I can't get a drive letter!! Thanks in advance Andy Mine worked fine on Win98, XP, and is working daily for a year or more in Vista. Try right clicking "computer" and selecting "manage" and then Disk Management. You should be able to see the drive by name, and by right clicking it assign a letter to it. Please note, it won't likely be the same letter the other systems applied to it. It will probably be around K L M or so. If Vista doesn't see it, boot again into your bios setup, and make sure the bios sees it. It is probably there alright, and working fine but has no drive letter, if Device Manager can see it. Assign the letter in Disk Manager. Good luck. Well, you do have a problem. Sometimes you can unplug the drive. Go to Device Manager, and remove the driver, if it's there. Reboot, and then plug the drive in and let Vista search for it. I did not install any external drivers for this when I moved it to Vista. The drivers in Vista were adequate. Some of the advanced models, mine is basic, have backup software with them, and will need the HID driver the other poster referred to activate the one-touch backup. One can hope! |
|
|||
WD MyBook 250 Gb external HD
Tried the suggestion of removing the driver, rebooting, and then plugging
the WD drive back in. It tried to install a driver, but said that having found one, it could not install as "an interactive window station is required for this operation". I have no idea what that is about, but I get the same message when I try to load a driver for a USB flash drive I'm trying to use. This all seemed a retrograde step, so I rolled back using system restore. Don't think I'm not grateful though, ;-) Any other thoughts? Andy "Wandering" wrote in message ... "Wandering" wrote in message ... "Andy G" wrote in message ... Is this or is this not supported in Vista? Anyone know? It worked fine in XP, and it shows up in Device Manager, but I can't get a drive letter!! Thanks in advance Andy Mine worked fine on Win98, XP, and is working daily for a year or more in Vista. Try right clicking "computer" and selecting "manage" and then Disk Management. You should be able to see the drive by name, and by right clicking it assign a letter to it. Please note, it won't likely be the same letter the other systems applied to it. It will probably be around K L M or so. If Vista doesn't see it, boot again into your bios setup, and make sure the bios sees it. It is probably there alright, and working fine but has no drive letter, if Device Manager can see it. Assign the letter in Disk Manager. Good luck. Well, you do have a problem. Sometimes you can unplug the drive. Go to Device Manager, and remove the driver, if it's there. Reboot, and then plug the drive in and let Vista search for it. I did not install any external drivers for this when I moved it to Vista. The drivers in Vista were adequate. Some of the advanced models, mine is basic, have backup software with them, and will need the HID driver the other poster referred to activate the one-touch backup. One can hope! |
|
|||
WD MyBook 250 Gb external HD
"Andy G" wrote in message ... Tried the suggestion of removing the driver, rebooting, and then plugging the WD drive back in. It tried to install a driver, but said that having found one, it could not install as "an interactive window station is required for this operation". I have no idea what that is about, but I get the same message when I try to load a driver for a USB flash drive I'm trying to use. This all seemed a retrograde step, so I rolled back using system restore. Don't think I'm not grateful though, ;-) Any other thoughts? Andy "Wandering" wrote in message ... "Wandering" wrote in message ... "Andy G" wrote in message ... Is this or is this not supported in Vista? Anyone know? It worked fine in XP, and it shows up in Device Manager, but I can't get a drive letter!! Thanks in advance Andy Mine worked fine on Win98, XP, and is working daily for a year or more in Vista. Try right clicking "computer" and selecting "manage" and then Disk Management. You should be able to see the drive by name, and by right clicking it assign a letter to it. Please note, it won't likely be the same letter the other systems applied to it. It will probably be around K L M or so. If Vista doesn't see it, boot again into your bios setup, and make sure the bios sees it. It is probably there alright, and working fine but has no drive letter, if Device Manager can see it. Assign the letter in Disk Manager. Good luck. Well, you do have a problem. Sometimes you can unplug the drive. Go to Device Manager, and remove the driver, if it's there. Reboot, and then plug the drive in and let Vista search for it. I did not install any external drivers for this when I moved it to Vista. The drivers in Vista were adequate. Some of the advanced models, mine is basic, have backup software with them, and will need the HID driver the other poster referred to activate the one-touch backup. One can hope! Well, now! That's a different story. The problem is not with the WD Drive at all. The problem is with the USB system. I don't recall the specifics, but a search of this forum will probably get you a bunch of posts on USB and deleting a particular INF file and letting the system rebuild it. Also there was at least one KB update that killed a lot of USB ports, and needed removal. Again, I don't have the specifics, but a new post describing your problems with USB ports may get some of the heavy hitters here on the right track for you. Rolling back was okay. You do what works for you. I don't have any direct experience with this issue, so I probably can't help you any more. Again, good luck. |
|
|||
WD MyBook 250 Gb external HD
Well, I've had some other USB problems, so your idea certainly feels right.
I'm going to set up the old XP laptop to double check the drive still works on that, then I shall take the route you suggest. Many thanks for the steer. Andy "Wandering" wrote in message ... "Andy G" wrote in message ... Tried the suggestion of removing the driver, rebooting, and then plugging the WD drive back in. It tried to install a driver, but said that having found one, it could not install as "an interactive window station is required for this operation". I have no idea what that is about, but I get the same message when I try to load a driver for a USB flash drive I'm trying to use. This all seemed a retrograde step, so I rolled back using system restore. Don't think I'm not grateful though, ;-) Any other thoughts? Andy "Wandering" wrote in message ... "Wandering" wrote in message ... "Andy G" wrote in message ... Is this or is this not supported in Vista? Anyone know? It worked fine in XP, and it shows up in Device Manager, but I can't get a drive letter!! Thanks in advance Andy Mine worked fine on Win98, XP, and is working daily for a year or more in Vista. Try right clicking "computer" and selecting "manage" and then Disk Management. You should be able to see the drive by name, and by right clicking it assign a letter to it. Please note, it won't likely be the same letter the other systems applied to it. It will probably be around K L M or so. If Vista doesn't see it, boot again into your bios setup, and make sure the bios sees it. It is probably there alright, and working fine but has no drive letter, if Device Manager can see it. Assign the letter in Disk Manager. Good luck. Well, you do have a problem. Sometimes you can unplug the drive. Go to Device Manager, and remove the driver, if it's there. Reboot, and then plug the drive in and let Vista search for it. I did not install any external drivers for this when I moved it to Vista. The drivers in Vista were adequate. Some of the advanced models, mine is basic, have backup software with them, and will need the HID driver the other poster referred to activate the one-touch backup. One can hope! Well, now! That's a different story. The problem is not with the WD Drive at all. The problem is with the USB system. I don't recall the specifics, but a search of this forum will probably get you a bunch of posts on USB and deleting a particular INF file and letting the system rebuild it. Also there was at least one KB update that killed a lot of USB ports, and needed removal. Again, I don't have the specifics, but a new post describing your problems with USB ports may get some of the heavy hitters here on the right track for you. Rolling back was okay. You do what works for you. I don't have any direct experience with this issue, so I probably can't help you any more. Again, good luck. |