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Hi,
I am unable to post in the dev forums. hence opening this thread.
I am facing a problem installing sd card bootable CM7.
I am refering to the folowing thread: [ROM][CM7] Size-agnostic SD Card image and CM7 installer for SD Cards. with updater: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1000957
I do the following:
1. Burn the 9M image (that would unpack into ~130M disk image)
2. Put the downloaded CM nightly build on the sdcard
3. Put the card in the nook color and boot
4. The nook boots to the installation process...penguin image in a corner and starts the process
However, it gets stuck at "Writing superblocks and filesystem accouting information".
I dunno if its stuck or not......because the cursor keeps on blinking.
Its been about 30 minutes and the screen stays in the above status only.
For information, I am using 16gb Kingmax Class 10 microsd card.
Any help will be greatly appreciated.......
acme2ajax said:
Hi,
I am unable to post in the dev forums. hence opening this thread.
I am facing a problem installing sd card bootable CM7.
I am refering to the folowing thread: [ROM][CM7] Size-agnostic SD Card image and CM7 installer for SD Cards. with updater: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1000957
I do the following:
1. Burn the 9M image (that would unpack into ~130M disk image)
2. Put the downloaded CM nightly build on the sdcard
3. Put the card in the nook color and boot
4. The nook boots to the installation process...penguin image in a corner and starts the process
However, it gets stuck at "Writing superblocks and filesystem accouting information".
I dunno if its stuck or not......because the cursor keeps on blinking.
Its been about 30 minutes and the screen stays in the above status only.
For information, I am using 16gb Kingmax Class 10 microsd card.
Any help will be greatly appreciated.......
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ummm... did you unpack the image prior to burning it to your Sdcard?
In addition it is not proven yet to work on 16gig cards, it has only been tested up to 8gig cards.
Edit: Others now have posted that 16gig cards do not work.
And Class 10 cards are known to have issue with Nook.
Search TITLES in this Forum only for "card" for threads on sd cards.
ADude said:
And Class 10 cards are known to have issue with Nook.
Search TITLES in this Forum only for "card" for threads on sd cards.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi Adude...Thanks for the update.
Have a small doubt...
I am able to install and run successfully, the sdcard bootable CM7 bt image...which is for 2gb card.
I, then, expand that partition to the rest of the card.
So is it the size of the card thats the issue?
Can this 'size agnostic' image be modified to write only to 2 or 4 gb and then we can expand the rest. I will like to ask this question to verygreen, but i still have some posts to go till I can paste in dev forums.
Thanks again for the info.......
Bumping an old thread, since I have the exact same problem, and can't post in the proper thread as well.
But I used a 2GB class 2 card( I think, it's a generic card that you get in the bundle when you buy a phone) instead, but got the same message.
Did I harm the card in anyway? Can I use it again for this procedure? Or do I have to reflash it in some way?
BrotherZero said:
Bumping an old thread, since I have the exact same problem, and can't post in the proper thread as well.
But I used a 2GB class 2 card( I think, it's a generic card that you get in the bundle when you buy a phone) instead, but got the same message.
Did I harm the card in anyway? Can I use it again for this procedure? Or do I have to reflash it in some way?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Generic Class 2 card. You answered your own question, it's probably too slow.
Pity, that's the only card I have lying around.
I'm very new to this so sorry for some very basic questions. But:
1. How do I restore the card to it's original state? I tried the HPUSBFW.EXE file that is in the link above(how to flash a bootable SD guide) but it says that I need admin rights even though I already am admin. Is there any other way to restore the card?
2. I have another generic 2GB from a Sony X10 mini pro, but no idea to try that then? What kind of SD-card should I buy? Since I saw that too fast SD cards have problem as well.
I also can't post in the dev thread and am having issues with this. I'm using an 8gb sandisk class 4 microsd card. I used win32imager to burn the agnostic iso file to the card. Then I clicked exit, unmounted the drive, and plugged it back in. Now the drive shows as a 115mb drive with 107mb free. In gparted it shows as 2 partitions, 1 as 115mb and another as unallocated with the rest of the 8gb. Windows can't see the unallocated one though.
So right now I'm stuck and can't copy the nightly cm7 build onto the drive. Anyone know why it formatted it like this and what I can do to fix it?
Here's an image of what I'm talking about:
107 MB is enough
gmanpie said:
I also can't post in the dev thread and am having issues with this. I'm using an 8gb sandisk class 4 microsd card. I used win32imager to burn the agnostic iso file to the card. Then I clicked exit, unmounted the drive, and plugged it back in. Now the drive shows as a 115mb drive with 107mb free. In gparted it shows as 2 partitions, 1 as 115mb and another as unallocated with the rest of the 8gb. Windows can't see the unallocated one though.
So right now I'm stuck and can't copy the nightly cm7 build onto the drive. Anyone know why it formatted it like this and what I can do to fix it?
Here's an image of what I'm talking about:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The nightly CM7 -87 file has around 91 MB (here: http://download.cyanogenmod.com/get/cm_encore_full-87.zip), so you should have enough space to copy it onto your sd card. Actually, that leaves more than 15 MB available, so I suggest you also put the gapps in your SD card (here: http://android.d3xt3r01.tk/cyanogen/gapps/gapps-gb-20110307-signed.zip)
About the unallocated space, it will be partitioned by the installer accordingly once you boot the NC with your SD card in it.
Looks like it's working now. I fit the nightly build on there but couldn't fit gapps(144mb). I messed up my froyo install earlier trying to put cm7 on, so I was worried I'd be stuck with a half functional rom for my upcoming 14 hr flight :/
Ok, now for my next question. How do I install it to the emmc? I tried installing it through froyo, but when I deleted the system folder and reset it to factory settings it messed up the froyo install, so now the rom manager doesn't work.
[Edit:] going to try following this thread:
http://fineoils.blogspot.com/2011/04/nookcolor-with-cyanogen-mod-70-emmc.html
What? Gapps is ~5MB only. If you're trying to install with both at the same time verygreen's instructions say that you should flash CM7 and turn on wifi first, prior to flashing gapps.
To install to EMMC you need to burn a CWM SD card, plop the nightly zip on there, boot up with it, then install zip from SD card (select the nightly). Wipe caches/data. Remove CWM card, hit reboot option in CWM menu. You'll need to either have a fresh SD card or reformat the CWM card since CM7 on EMMC requires an SD card in. Instructions for doing this (step by step) are somewhere in General forum by eyeballer.
(Also of note: the info that 16GB cards do not work with this image is no longer true)
Could anybody use a 16Gb sd card so far? I bought one just for the nook and now I found out that its not working - damn! I can't give it back so what? pls help!
Earymgn said:
Could anybody use a 16Gb sd card so far? I bought one just for the nook and now I found out that its not working - damn! I can't give it back so what? pls help!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I used SanDisk 16Gb and everything worked like a charm.
stud_muffler said:
I used SanDisk 16Gb and everything worked like a charm.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I did too(both with issues and successfully), the only problem I had with my card is that with the size of cm7 and gapps you ahve to flash them separately, so do cm7 first, put the gapps on the boot partition then reboot into recovery.
if you don't do that you'll run out of space on the boot partition during installation.
I used verygreen's instructions to put CM& on a Sandisk 16 gig class 4. Worked the first time I tried. After CM7 I shut down, put gapps on, then rebooted into recovery.
I think the majority of the problems people are having is NOT READING the part in the verygreen instructions about using Sandisk cards.
Imbroglio said:
I used verygreen's instructions to put CM& on a Sandisk 16 gig class 4. Worked the first time I tried. After CM7 I shut down, put gapps on, then rebooted into recovery.
I think the majority of the problems people are having is NOT READING the part in the verygreen instructions about using Sandisk cards.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sandisk is not required.. I've also used Transcend and Kingston. Class 4 and 6 between the three.
What is required is a card that's not crap, or works like crap in the Nook Color. An OS does a lot of small operations or uses a lot of small files, so even if the card is great at mass transfers but sucks at smaller ones, it's going to be a bad experience.
Sandisk is one way to avoid it. So if you're buying one, might as well make it Sandisk. Any others.... if it doesn't work right, try a different card. That easy.
I recently used the size agnostic SD card installer to install cm7 on my nook color. I noticed after I made the SD card (a 8gb card) a bootable SD card. That my computer was saying that it only had a capacity of 117 megabytes. Can someone explain it step by step how I can keep the SD card as a usd to boot cm7 but it is able to use all 8 gigabytes for app storage? Any help would be appreciated .
Google Easus download and use that utitlity to resize the partition to the full remaining space of your sd card.
Is there a way to access that extra space and store media on it?
Hi, i used win32diskimager to burn my 16 gig microsd card. Now it reads 300 mb and even when i reformat it, it won't go back to the 16gb. I was wondering how i can fix this and get my sd card back to it's real size
mastermind1234321 said:
Hi, i used win32diskimager to burn my 16 gig microsd card. Now it reads 300 mb and even when i reformat it, it won't go back to the 16gb. I was wondering how i can fix this and get my sd card back to it's real size
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
use easeus partition master.
ShutterPeep said:
use easeus partition master.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, yes. Specifically, use EASEUS to delete all partitions except the storage partition (the largest) then drag that partition to fill all the unallocated space. Windows only recognizes the first partition on any flash storage.
If you are running off SD card - and left the stock NC in tact on the EMMC - you can use settings to reformat your card. It'll have a couple folders you will have to delete afterwards - but it should free up the memory to original state.
mastermind1234321 said:
Hi, i used win32diskimager to burn my 16 gig microsd card. Now it reads 300 mb and even when i reformat it, it won't go back to the 16gb. I was wondering how i can fix this and get my sd card back to it's real size
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you are doing this in Windows you probably will have to go to Disk Management and delete the first partition and then format.
Right click "My Computer"
Select "Manage"
Select "Disk Management" (you need Administrative privileges)
Be very careful to pick the correct drive letter!
Right click the area where the drive letter appears and select "Delete partition"
Create a new primary partition and format
What I did to restore my micro SD card completely to a formatted state was put it in a SD adapter and put it in my digital camera and formatted the card. It removed all partitions and files. Works everytime.
Sent from my MB860
SD card 16 go to 74mo partition
Taosaur said:
Well, yes. Specifically, use EASEUS to delete all partitions except the storage partition (the largest) then drag that partition to fill all the unallocated space. Windows only recognizes the first partition on any flash storage.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You made my day ! Thanks for this information! After set up debian for arm on my 16 go sd card I just had a 74mo partition I got my full space back with your advice thanks
I am using this card for Raspberry Pi and I set up debian for arm with Win32DiskImager. It is at this moment the problem happened
The simpler solution now is probably to use SD Formatter for Windows. It should wipe all partitions and get you back to a 'default' state.
Use SD Formatter
Another simple way is to look for a program called SD Formatter (free) on the internet.
and format the SD card (make sure it is correct drive letter) using NOT the default setting but i believe it is a pulldown call (erase all zeros)
Great program, if you play with SD cards you should get it.
Everett1954
Not Enough Disk Space Error using Win32diskmanager
I have been working at this for hours and can't seem to figure it out.......I have an 8 gb empty (formatted fat32) micro sd which I am trying to write the clockworkmod 8gb file using win32diskimager. Every time I try to write it I get an Error Message "Not Enough Disk Space".......does anyone know what I should do??
djfury said:
I have been working at this for hours and can't seem to figure it out.......I have an 8 gb empty (formatted fat32) micro sd which I am trying to write the clockworkmod 8gb file using win32diskimager. Every time I try to write it I get an Error Message "Not Enough Disk Space".......does anyone know what I should do??
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just find and write a smaller image file to the card. Then use a partition manager program like Mini-Tool Partition Wizard (free) to expand the partition to fill the card. I have 200MB version in my tips thread linked in my signature. It has CWM 5.5.0.4 on it.
Use the 4 GB CWM image... then use minitools partition manager or eausus to resize to full capacity.
Not Enough Disk Space Error using Win32diskmanager
DizzyDen said:
Use the 4 GB CWM image... then use minitools partition manager or eausus to resize to full capacity.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
First time to post. Hope I'm in the right thread. Have read many of the threads here regarding Nook Color, CM7, CM9 et al. I really enjoy learning from all the information posted. I currently have an unrooted NC running CM9 on a micro SD and love it.
My problem: like djfury, I have tried to write an image file of a given size - in my case 16GB - to a new 16GB microSD card and always get a message that the file is too large for the card. What I have done is to make an image of my current CM9 installation on the microSD card using win32diskimager. Then I try to write that image to a new 16GB microSD card. But, alas, the image is suddenly to large for the card.
I want to keep this exact same image as it contains various apps and data that I have installed to my CM9 card.
Is there any way to "resize" the created image to make it about 2MB smaller so it will fit on the card?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
madavis77 said:
First time to post. Hope I'm in the right thread. Have read many of the threads here regarding Nook Color, CM7, CM9 et al. I really enjoy learning from all the information posted. I currently have an unrooted NC running CM9 on a micro SD and love it.
My problem: like djfury, I have tried to write an image file of a given size - in my case 16GB - to a new 16GB microSD card and always get a message that the file is too large for the card. What I have done is to make an image of my current CM9 installation on the microSD card using win32diskimager. Then I try to write that image to a new 16GB microSD card. But, alas, the image is suddenly to large for the card.
I want to keep this exact same image as it contains various apps and data that I have installed to my CM9 card.
Is there any way to "resize" the created image to make it about 2MB smaller so it will fit on the card?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, use a partition software program like Mini-Tool Partition Wizard to make your partition 4 a little smaller (take it off the end). Then use win32diskimager to make an image of the card. Then burn that to your new card.
Sent from my Nook Color running ParanoidAndroid and Tapatalk
I'm a little concerned about what version number of CWM people are getting in these size-specific images. Anything earlier than 3.2.0.1 (the last stable release) has a good chance of causing you problems down the road, depending on what you try to do with it, and I'm not aware of any 3.2.0.1 images bouncing around except for eyeballer's 1GB image over here (quoted text near the top).
Leapinlar's 5.5.x.x image should be fine, too, but if you have 3.0.2.8 or earlier it can be finicky about dealing with the partition tables on NCs released after July 2011 or NCs with modified partitions, which can result in boot loops and other shenanigans.
As detailed earlier in the thread, you can expand the partitions from the smaller images later if you want to continue using the card for backups, or if you're just using it one time to root or flash something, you don't need the space anyway.
Another thing that causes confusion and issues is manufacturer's selection of how to report size... some use the 1024 standard... some use the 1000 standard... If you read from a 16 GB card using the 1024 standard and try to write it to a 16 GB card using the 1000 standard... it will be approx 16 MB too large...
That being said... you are best if you can resize the last partition on a card approx 20 MB (to be safe) make the image... then write image to a new card and resize the last partition to consume the remainder of the card.
DizzyDen said:
Another thing that causes confusion and issues is manufacturer's selection of how to report size... some use the 1024 standard... some use the 1000 standard... If you read from a 16 GB card using the 1024 standard and try to write it to a 16 GB card using the 1000 standard... it will be approx 16 MB too large...
That being said... you are best if you can resize the last partition on a card approx 20 MB (to be safe) make the image... then write image to a new card and resize the last partition to consume the remainder of the card.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry about the delay in offering thanks to those who replied. THANKS.
I also found the best solution for me was to use Mini Tool Partition Wizard and the Copy Disk Wizard. This process took a mirror image of my micro SD card then allowed me to write it ot a larger or smaller card. In my case from a 16GB to another 16GB, then from the 16GB to a 32GB. The last partition was automatically resized to fit the selected card size.
I'm happy now and can use one card for experimentation and still have a backup for restore purposes.
Thanks again for the advice offered.
---------- Post added at 03:40 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:24 PM ----------
DizzyDen said:
Another thing that causes confusion and issues is manufacturer's selection of how to report size... some use the 1024 standard... some use the 1000 standard... If you read from a 16 GB card using the 1024 standard and try to write it to a 16 GB card using the 1000 standard... it will be approx 16 MB too large...
That being said... you are best if you can resize the last partition on a card approx 20 MB (to be safe) make the image... then write image to a new card and resize the last partition to consume the remainder of the card.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry about the delay in offering thanks to those who replied. THANKS.
I also found the best solution for me was to use Mini Tool Partition Wizard and the Copy Disk Wizard. This process took a mirror image of my micro SD card then allowed me to write it ot a larger or smaller card. In my case from a 16GB to another 16GB, then from the 16GB to a 32GB. The last partition was automatically resized to fit the selected card size.
I'm happy now and can use one card for experimentation and still have a backup for restore purposes.
Thanks again for the advice offered.
I am sure this has been covered before but I finally made a boot SD for CM7 and while it works pretty good I want to try a class 4 sandisk SD card to see if its any faster. My question is can I just copy everything from my card now to the new card and insert it in my Nook?
Raydee35 said:
I am sure this has been covered before but I finally made a boot SD for CM7 and while it works pretty good I want to try a class 4 sandisk SD card to see if its any faster. My question is can I just copy everything from my card now to the new card and insert it in my Nook?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not using windows explorer. But you can get the free program win32diskimager. It can read your card and write the image to your PC. Then you can write it to your new card.
Sent from my Nook Color running ICS and Tapatalk
uSD Card Size
Hi,
I notice a lot of Rom images say will will work in a 4GB card.
Is there any problems using a larger card, like 8GB?
Thanks.
Everett1954
Yep. Use above method to put your image file on anything up to 32gig card; be sure you are using Sandisk brand, though. Small block read/write speed makes this the Nookers choice.
I just migrated from an 8gb to 16gb Sandisk card last night. I used win32diskimager to make an image of the 8gb card and then wrote that to the 16gb card. I then had to use a combination of Linux GParted and EASEUS partition manager to modify the partition sizes. I wanted to make more space available for apps instead of the 1GB (I upped it to 2GB), and expanded the CM7 partition to fill the remainder of the drive. I booted from the new card and everything seems to be working fine.
Hi everybody:
Now I have installed hybrid CM10.1 on Nook HD in a 8G TF card. Then I would like to replace it with a new 32G card.
My question is how to transfer all the data, use the extra space and does not broke the system.
Thanks
Use win32diskimager to read the 8GB card to a file. The file will be 8GB. Then use win32diskimager to write that file to your new 32GB card. Then use partitioning software like Mini-Tool Partition Wizard to expand the last partition to the full size of the card.
The data on internal memory will remain and be unchanged. You should be able to boot the new SD just like it was the old one. The only difference will be your CM10SDCARD will be much larger.
Sent from my Nook HD+ running CM10 on Hybrid SD
leapinlar said:
Use win32diskimager to read the 8GB card to a file. The file will be 8GB. Then use win32diskimager to write that file to your new 32GB card. Then use partitioning software like Mini-Tool Partition Wizard to expand the last partition to the full size of the card.
The data on internal memory will remain and be unchanged. You should be able to boot the new SD just like it was the old one. The only difference will be your CM10SDCARD will be much larger.
Sent from my Nook HD+ running CM10 on Hybrid SD
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you! It works.
leapinlar said:
Use win32diskimager to read the 8GB card to a file. The file will be 8GB. Then use win32diskimager to write that file to your new 32GB card. Then use partitioning software like Mini-Tool Partition Wizard to expand the last partition to the full size of the card.
The data on internal memory will remain and be unchanged. You should be able to boot the new SD just like it was the old one. The only difference will be your CM10SDCARD will be much larger.
Sent from my Nook HD+ running CM10 on Hybrid SD
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If I use the win32diskimager utility to read my working 8GB MicroSD Class4 card it sees nothing because using read will only accept IMG files. There must be something that I am missing here, so please fill in the missing details.
I was going to post an image I created using Snagit of what I see when I attempt what you suggested, but the forum software won't let me.
I plan on trying a clone operation with GParted from the working 8GB SD card to the 32Gb SDHC card. I will post my results here
badger60 said:
If I use the win32diskimager utility to read my working 8GB MicroSD Class4 card it sees nothing because using read will only accept IMG files. There must be something that I am missing here, so please fill in the missing details.
I was going to post an image I created using Snagit of what I see when I attempt what you suggested, but the forum software won't let me.
I plan on trying a clone operation with GParted from the working 8GB SD card to the 32Gb SDHC card. I will post my results here
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I had made an empty ".txt" file, then rename it to ".img". It may solve the problem.
badger60 said:
If I use the win32diskimager utility to read my working 8GB MicroSD Class4 card it sees nothing because using read will only accept IMG files. There must be something that I am missing here, so please fill in the missing details.
I was going to post an image I created using Snagit of what I see when I attempt what you suggested, but the forum software won't let me.
I plan on trying a clone operation with GParted from the working 8GB SD card to the 32Gb SDHC card. I will post my results here
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just type in a name. Like 8GB.img in the box. You do not have to actually create the file first, win32diskimager will create it. Then after it is done reading that write it back to your new card.
Sent from my Nook HD+ running CM10 on Hybrid SD
attempt number 25
leapinlar said:
Just type in a name. Like 8GB.img in the box. You do not have to actually create the file first, win32diskimager will create it. Then after it is done reading that write it back to your new card.
Sent from my Nook HD+ running CM10 on Hybrid SD
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
OK. Thanks. I am giving that a shot. I am going to try it on the Sandisk 16GB class 4 card first and then on the Samsung 32 GB class 6 unit. I will post my results here.
The results were negative with theSandisk 16 GB class 4 and Samsung 32GB class 6 HDSC cards. The 32 GB card went into a loop with the appearance of the CWM graphics and back to the initial Nook image. I let it cycle perhaps 10 times. I then tried the 16 GB card and had the same results.
badger60 said:
OK. Thanks. I am giving that a shot. I am going to try it on the Sandisk 16GB class 4 card first and then on the Samsung 32 GB class 6 unit. I will post my results here.
The results were negative with theSandisk 16 GB class 4 and Samsung 32GB class 6 HDSC cards. The 32 GB card went into a loop with the appearance of the CWM graphics and back to the initial Nook image. I let it cycle perhaps 10 times. I then tried the 16 GB card and had the same results.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Since that did not seem to work for you, another option is to make a nandroid backup with your old card to internal memory. You might also want to save your files that you have on CM10SDCARD. Then reburn the new card, let it set itself up, flash CM, the converter and gapps to it. Then before you reboot, restore the backup you made earlier. It should then be set up the same when you reboot. Then restore your CM10SDCARD files.
Sent from my Nook HD+ running CM10.1 on Hybrid SD
leapinlar said:
Since that did not seem to work for you, another option is to make a nandroid backup with your old card to internal memory. You might also want to save your files that you have on CM10SDCARD. Then reburn the new card, let it set itself up, flash CM, the converter and gapps to it. Then before you reboot, restore the backup you made earlier. It should then be set up the same when you reboot. Then restore your CM10SDCARD files.
Sent from my Nook HD+ running CM10.1 on Hybrid SD
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I do appreciate the advice, but it didn't work on either SDHC card.
Sent from my Nook HD+ running CM10.0 on Hybrid
badger60 said:
I do appreciate the advice, but it didn't work on either SDHC card.
Sent from my Nook HD+ running CM10.0 on Hybrid
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What do you mean it didn't work? Where did it fail? During backup, during new SD creation or restore?
Edit: If somewhere along the line of your trying to fix this, you installed a new image to a card and booted with it before you did a nandroid backup of your old card, you wiped out the internal /data for the old card and it is not retrievable. If you did that, you just have to start over.
Sent from my Nook HD+ running CM10 on Hybrid SD
leapinlar said:
What do you mean it didn't work? Where did it fail? During backup, during new SD creation or restore?
Edit: If somewhere along the line of your trying to fix this, you installed a new image to a card and booted with it before you did a nandroid backup of your old card, you wiped out the internal /data for the old card and it is not retrievable. If you did that, you just have to start over.
Sent from my Nook HD+ running CM10 on Hybrid SD
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I followed your advice exactly. It appeared to work the same way that it did with the working 8GB SDHC card. I still have a nandroid backup of the old card on my PC. It just doesn't work on the two higher capacity SD cards I have. I see that I am going to have to look through the list and find the exact model of a 32 GB card that someone got working. It works fine on the Sandisk 8GB Class 4 card. The two Samsung cards (class 6) of 16 & 32 GB capacity that I own don't work. They are OK for storage use, but trying to install Android on them was a waste of time. I tried so many times. I used your tutorials and others tutorials unsuccessfully. A bum SD card is a bum SD card. I am not exactly a newbie at installing ROMs on devices . I have been doing it on my HTC Desire HD for about a year ever since HTC abandoned us and decided to not give us ICS or Jellybean for our expensive devices. I have Venom DHD on my HTC Desire HD at the moment. I am waiting for my new Samsung Galaxy s4 to arrive this week.