Forum Moderators: phranque
Led is properly on so I don't know what to do. Drivers are not needed and seems to be ok...
Any help?
Example: You have local drives A:, C:, and D: (a floppy, a hard disk, and a DVD). You then map a network drive to E:. If you next plug in a USB drive, a bug in Windows will cause it to decide that E: is what it should map the USB drive to, causing a collision. All kinds of weird results can happen, but one of them is that you can't "see" the contents of the drive. The fix is to make sure you map your network drives higher up (I start with Z: and work down from there for mapped network drives).
Google "Q297694" for the MS support article if this sounds like it might be your problem.
1) Unplug the drive. Go into the device manager and uninstall the driver (it'll be hidden so you'll have to show it). Restart Windows and try again.
2) Temporarily uninstall antivirus and firewall software (and disconnect from the internet). Restart Windows and try again. It would probably be advisable to uninstall the driver too.
Kaled.