Is the drive spinning without clicking noise? If no, check cable on both external drive and computer. Is the USB port good with another drive?
WD 2TB Black My Passport Portable External Hard Drive - USB 3.0. WD 4TB My Passport Game Storage for PS4 - USB 3.0 - WDBZGE0040BBK-NESN. By Western Digital. WD 2TB My Passport Ultra for Mac Silver Portable External Hard Drive, USB-C - WDBKYJ0020BSL-WESN. By Western Digital. $89.99 $ 89 99 Prime.
If yes, do you see the disk under device manager/windows and system profiler/mac? If no, reboot or unplug-replug.
If yes, do you see the partition under disk Management/winows and Disk Utility/Mac? If no, check if security enabled?. if yes, do you see the drive letter assigned/desk management/windows? If no, right click and assign drive letter.
5. if yes, you may have to format the drive again. Do this after all other methods failed as it will wipe out your data. Hi I am able to hear spinning sound.When i use Microsoft’s UVCView utility it is giving failed Enumeration and below error —Device Information Device Bus Speed: Low Device Address: 0x00 Open Pipes: 0.!.ERROR: No open pipes! Device Descriptor.
This post is referring to the MyPassport Protable Hard Drive. BEFORE REDING THIS, please keep in mind that I am no expert and that this is based on personal observation and speculation based on my own expirements using this product and five different computers as well as my understanding of company explantions from WD and Microsoft. I may be wrong, and if I am, please send an E-mail my way via text deleted for privacy explaining my error.
If I am right or this works for you, please feel free to send me an E-mail so that I may know. I have had the same problem. However, are you all running Windows 7?
If so, your upgrade has been WD’s loss. With the way the external hard drives work, from my understanding, does not allow it to be compatable with Window 7s new and more effecient file format. These hard drives do some come with a driver of thier own as a design descision, which was fine and dandy before Windows 7 popped up, as all PCs ran a similar default driver system. Now, with Windows 7s new driver and file format system (which is still able to sommunicate with all other pre-Windows 7 product I own that can with its own driver), WD’s hard drives do not follow a format that Windows 7 can read. Think of it as XP and older (as I am not sure about Vista’s file system) using British Pounds. Well, the new Windows 7 uses Euros, but will still accept pounds. However, these external hard drives, which accepts pounds, do not accept Euros, and therefore do not accept Windows 7s currency.
Because of this, I am getting a new external hard drive that will speak to my two Windows 7 computers, but will keeps this has a back-up driver for my three XP-based computers. This product works well with XP in my expierence, but just doesn’t have the capabilities to work well with Windows 7. Like I said before, please keep in mind that I could be wrong and am no expert. Thank you for reading and I hope this helps you. I had this problem too and was really upset. But I did “Alt + Ctrl + Delete” and went to “TASK MANAGER” and then clicked the tab “Processes” and then clicked the tab labled Image Name to catagorize them by name and found “WDSmartWare.exe” in the list and clicked on it once to highlight it and clicked end process. After I did that I unplugged my WD Passport Essential and plugged it back in and it came back on and was recognized and all my files were still there.
![External External](/uploads/1/2/5/5/125578022/872591654.jpg)
I hope this helps. I use Windows XP. P.s I don’t know if that is the safest thing to do but it worked for me. I’m having the same problem.
I’m using XP version 5.3, so in my case the problem has nothing to do with compatibility issues with Windows 7. My drive does work intermittently. Sometimes when I first plug it in I can read my files, but then it disconnects.
Usually it will go through a cycle of connecting then disconnecting before deciding on disconnection. I’ll get an array of messages ballooning up in my system tray, and sometimes I’m even treated to the install new software wizard. Throughout all of this it’s little white light shines on. Its all very entertaining. So, what are we supposed to do? I’ve had my hard drive just over one year, its worked hard for the full length of its warranty so it is probably ready to accept this is its last dance, and so am I.
As a westerner I like the idea of a shiny new hard disk. I couldn’t really give a.bleep. that this type of thing is an incredibly wasteful use of humanity’s finite resources or that farce of this flavour is occuring on a massive scale. What I would like to know is how can I rescue my music?
(Thank the lord I haven’t paid for music since my Maxtor HD died with all my real music collection). Perhaps its just time to admit all this technology is really a bit.bleep. and go back to tapes.