![]() ![]() ![]() If you do so, don't use it in your Siglent scope anymore as you'll lose your data as soon as you write anything on it with the scope. With today's high capacity flash drives, you'd often want to reformat one from the default FAT32 to NTFS or exFAT in order to be able to write files larger than 4GB if nothing else. Quote from: Zbig on July 07, 2013, 06:57:54 pm I'm not sure it's worth its own thread but I thought I should warn Siglent scopes users about my recent finding. To sum this up, I think it's safest to use some old, low capacity, FAT formatted USB stick with your Siglent scope, ideally dedicated for this use alone. It didn't seem to damage the filesystem in that case but I'm not sure what would happen if it tried to write past the 4GB boundary, for example. ![]() Also, with my FAT32 formatted high capacity stick, it reported < 4GB free space when there actually was much more and while it seemed fine otherwise, I'm not sure that FAT32 is implemented there properly, either. It will ruin your filesystem as soon as you write your first screenshot/wave/whatever and then happily report successful write. I'm not sure it's worth its own thread but I thought I should warn Siglent scopes users about my recent finding. ![]()
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