The MASM Forum

Miscellaneous => The Orphanage => Topic started by: sinsi on August 03, 2012, 11:39:03 PM

Title: Memory Stick in SD slot
Post by: sinsi on August 03, 2012, 11:39:03 PM
So I have a Sony Memory Stick which doesn't register, even in the camera it came with.
Now I know that things can die all by themselves, but is there a sinister explanation?
I assume that card readers get power via USB. Could plugging the stick into the SD slot short it out?
No reader I use (in a couple of PCs) trigger a disk mount, but the reader lights up the 'access' LED.

My thinking is: they killed it by plugging it into the wrong slot.
Title: Re: Memory Stick in SD slot
Post by: dedndave on August 04, 2012, 12:39:42 AM
static electricity - or a nice little voltage transition can do the job
i am surprised we don't hear more of this
Title: Re: Memory Stick in SD slot
Post by: MichaelW on August 04, 2012, 01:30:50 AM
Static electricity can be a real problem under low-humidity conditions. I've seen conditions where you could walk a short distance across carpet, then reach for a metal doorframe and hear the arc pop.
Title: Re: Memory Stick in SD slot
Post by: WillASM on August 04, 2012, 02:19:51 AM
Try plugging it back into your PC and see if it shows up under "Computer Management". If it does, try to format it from there.
If it does not show up, then you are most likely out of luck with that stick..
Title: Re: Memory Stick in SD slot
Post by: CommonTater on November 21, 2012, 04:15:11 PM
Quote from: sinsi on August 03, 2012, 11:39:03 PM
So I have a Sony Memory Stick which doesn't register, even in the camera it came with.
Now I know that things can die all by themselves, but is there a sinister explanation?
I assume that card readers get power via USB. Could plugging the stick into the SD slot short it out?
No reader I use (in a couple of PCs) trigger a disk mount, but the reader lights up the 'access' LED.

My thinking is: they killed it by plugging it into the wrong slot.

Plugging it into the wrong slot is more likley to short out the reader than the memory. 
Although, these things do happen from time to time.

As already suggested... see if it shows up under disk management.  If not... trash time.