Recently I discovered my SSD died (OCZ/Toshiba 240 GB). It was in a USB enclosure, attached to the Linksys WRT-AC1200 router. Since then I removed the USB enclosure and attached it to my Win7 PC (AMD 8150 CPU, 970 chipset, 64 GB RAM). I also gathered one or two other USB enclosures to figure out what is going on.
(I suspect that I lost quite a few MP3 and FLAC files I recently ripped from my audio CDs, I think I lost very little un-replaceable stuff.)
I think it is IMPOSSIBLE for Win7 to have any problems with a USB enclosure as long as Win7 knows how to speak to the motherboard's USB controller chips. But one or more of my USB enclosures makes Win7 give a message that it is trying to obtain drivers, and it never succeeds. So obviously it IS possible for Win7 to have problems with the USB enclosure's chips, OUTSIDE the motherboard's USB chips.
(Clearly in the future, I will need to use Linux (perhaps an awk script invoking the "cp" copy command) to back up files to the USB enclosure, then after the initial backup, copy only those files that I updated [docs / spreadsheets mostly]. The command line is a valuable tool indeed.) (I've dual-booted since my Windows 3.1 / Caldera Linux days with my K5-166 MHz CPU, so I have long had that "safety net" of Linux.)
Any idea what's going on here? If I buy a modern USB enclosure, will I have even more problems? Will Linux also have a problem seeing the drive, in addition to Win7?
(I suspect that I lost quite a few MP3 and FLAC files I recently ripped from my audio CDs, I think I lost very little un-replaceable stuff.)
I think it is IMPOSSIBLE for Win7 to have any problems with a USB enclosure as long as Win7 knows how to speak to the motherboard's USB controller chips. But one or more of my USB enclosures makes Win7 give a message that it is trying to obtain drivers, and it never succeeds. So obviously it IS possible for Win7 to have problems with the USB enclosure's chips, OUTSIDE the motherboard's USB chips.
(Clearly in the future, I will need to use Linux (perhaps an awk script invoking the "cp" copy command) to back up files to the USB enclosure, then after the initial backup, copy only those files that I updated [docs / spreadsheets mostly]. The command line is a valuable tool indeed.) (I've dual-booted since my Windows 3.1 / Caldera Linux days with my K5-166 MHz CPU, so I have long had that "safety net" of Linux.)
Any idea what's going on here? If I buy a modern USB enclosure, will I have even more problems? Will Linux also have a problem seeing the drive, in addition to Win7?
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