Fat32 missing in Disk Utility?!

Hello, I want/need to format my 2GB USB stick to Fat32 to use with my Xbox 360.
I have done this successfully on my Mum's old Macbook running 10.5 so assumed the process would be the same.
I opened up Disk Utility and erased it, then in the partition tab clicked on options then "Master Boot Record" as that should give the option for Fat32, yet only Fat is available. After formatting it as Fat and hoping it would work, I got an error saying it needs to be in Fat32 to be read.
So am I doing something wrong, or is there a third party disk utility-like app that will format it to Fat32?
Thanks guys, baRRy
Message was edited by: baRRy boRRis

Thanks to Tom Craigen for this command line method of formatting FAT32. I found this archived thread, and Tom's instructions are the last post in the thread:
http://discussions.apple.com/message.jspa?messageID=8509160#8509160
I had to download a firmware update for my Vizio LED LCD HDTV. I hardly ever have a Windoze computer handy. I found a jump drive and used this archived thread to format the drive. Then I followed the firmware update instructions from the TV manufacturer's web site. I was able to do the update just fine using Disk Utility and Terminal command line. Thanks, Tom!
If you decide to try this FAT32 formatting using Terminal, and you are new to using Disk Utility and Terminal, and using Unix language and instructions, maybe you should get someone to help. At least read the instructions carefully, and be sure anything you do is only with the jump drive or disk drive you want to format. The commands will wipe the drive.
You can do in Terminal what Disk Utility does not (yet?) do. You still need Disk Utility to do some of the work, but Tom's command line instructions will do the formatting.
There are a couple of spots that might not be clear (in item 9, the word, "Apple" appears when he meant "Apply"), but the context should be fairly obvious. When he says to select the drive you want to format FAT32, he means this is within Disk Utility.
The instructions assume you are starting with a jump drive that the Mac recognizes, but might not have MS_DOS FAT32 formatting. Just to be sure, since I don't work in Terminal very much, I probably overdid it, formatted the drive with 1 partition, and chose the Mac OS Extended Journaled format to make a fresh start.
For one thing, if you don't start with the Mac OS format, you might not get the partition menu in Disk Utility, and that's very important. I was working with an old 126Mb jump drive, and I only needed 8Mb, so I made just one partition.
Before you make any changes to the format of the drive, while the format is still Mac OS Extended Journaled, check in the System Profiler, under the Hardware menu, the USB item. Locate the drive identifier. It will look like disk1s#. Mine, for example, was disk1s1. That's the jump drive -- not to put too fine a point on it. You really want the right disk ID, because the command line script totally erases the disk and formats it FAT32.
Once you follow the instructions, you can double-check in Disk Utility. I suggest you quit Disk Utility, then start it again. Click on the newly formatted drive in the left list of the available drives. The FAT32 format should appear in the descriptions below the window in bottom margin. If it shows up at FAT16, try the command line text again: newfs_msdos -F32 -v "yourdrivename" /dev/rdisk1s# [where # is your specific drive's number. Check Tom's items Tech Part > 4. and 5.
In my case, once I had the FAT32 jump drive ready, I had to download the firmware update file. Of course, the Mac could not do anything with it, but it did download. I went to the Downloads folder and dragged the file to the jump drive. I had to change the name of the file, following the manufacturer's instructions. I followed the manufacturer's instructions on everything, and once I had the drive inserted, and powered up the TV, the firmware update took off and did its thing. I'll watch for the hoped-for improvements in performance for a couple of days. I don't want to make the hike back to Cost**.
The beautiful thing about this TV is that it is natively 12 volts, and we plan to use it in our RV. Cool energy savings!
Please don't hold me (or Tom) responsible if something goes wrong. Go slowly and follow the instructions. If you've never used Disk Utility or Terminal, back away from this process and try something safer.
Holiday cheers,
Anne

Similar Messages

  • Harddisk suddenly missing in Disk Utility

    Hi,
    My 2nd hard drive is missing in Disk Utility. It doesn't show in Finder either.
    System profile is the only place where I can see the physical drive, but no partitions are displayed. It only shows this:
    WDC WD5000KS-00MNB0:
    Model: WDC WD5000KS-00MNB0
    Revisie: 07.02E07
    Serienummer: WD-WCAN**262
    Native Command Queuing: Ja
    Queue Depth: 32
    Externe eenheid: Nee
    Whereas for my ROOT drive it says this (including the partition)
    WDC WD2500JS-41SGB0:
    Capaciteit: 232,89 GB
    Model: WDC WD2500JS-41SGB0
    Revisie: 20.06C04
    Serienummer: WD-WCAN**092
    Native Command Queuing: Ja
    Queue Depth: 32
    Verwisselbare media: Nee
    Externe eenheid: Nee
    BSD-naam: disk0
    Naam nis: "Bay 1"
    Mac OS 9-besturingsbestanden: Nee
    Type partitie-indeling: GPT (GUID-partitietabel)
    S.M.A.R.T.-status: Gecontroleerd
    Volumes:
    Macintosh HD:
    Capaciteit: 211,88 GB
    Beschikbaar: 21,48 GB
    Beschrijfbaar: Ja
    Bestandssysteem: Journaled HFS+
    BSD-naam: disk0s2
    Activeringspunt: /
    Furthermore I cannot shutdown my system with this particular internal drive connected. It hangs after a few seconds. With a hard reset using the power button, I removed the whole 2nd drive bay and after a restart leopard shuts down as normal. Since I cannot see the drive in Disk Utility, how am I able to repair it? Any help would be really appreciated. Thanks.
    <Edited by Host>

    Try Disk Warrior (you'll want to have a system for just maintenance and repairs only); or Drive Genius 2; or TechTool Pro.
    The directory and journaling could be so corrupt for various reasons it can't be mounted. Bad sector.
    Other than anything not backed up I'd RMA or zero, but I'd also invest in replacing with a new model.

  • Format External Drive for HFS+ volume and FAT32 volume with Disk Utility

    I just bought a Seagate 1tb external drive from OWC and I want to partition it into a HFS+ (journaled I assume) volume and a NTFS volume. Objective: To manually backup critical folders from my wife’s Dell (running XP) to the NTFS volume and critical Mac folders from my PowerBookG4 to the HFS volume.
    My plan was to have my Mac (10.4.11) do the partitioning into a 350gb FAT32 volume for Windows and a 650gb HFS+ volume for Mac – then take the external drive to the Dell and have the Dell reformat the 350gb FAT drive to NTFS.
    First question – Is this possible overall?
    Second question – I haven’t been able to get my Disk Utility on my Mac to do the initial partitioning into one HFS volume and one FAT32 volume the way I want it. Is this step possible?
    I’m happy to be more specific about the steps I’ve taken if the basic plan is good. From what I’ve found in some forums so far, I think I’m on the right track but am unable to execute it. Thank you.

    Thank you Limnos for all your help. Last night I tried again and it worked! I’ not totally sure on what I did right but:
    • Both volumes on the new ext. driver were HFS (from my last attempt the other day) so I looked into a simple erase of one partition/volume into a different format, but DU did not offer a way of erasing it into MS-DOS(FAT32). But I think I did a simple HFS erase anyway of the volume I wanted to format to FAT32. There was nothing “in” that volume because this was a new external drive but I figured it could not hurt anything.
    • So then, I think I went back to Partition, locked the partition/volume that I wanted to keep in HFS+ for my Mac files, and (re)partitioned the other just erased volume to MS-DOS. I think I did it under the MBR option.
    • It worked! Not sure why but my Mac recognized both volumes one as HFS, the other as FAT32. Maybe someone will find this useful some day!!
    • Then, I hooked up the drive to my work Dell, the Dell found only the FAT32 drive (as expected), and I executed a short simple easy command I found on ehow.com (search for ‘convert FAT32 to NTFS’) to make that volume NTFS.
    Thanks again Limnos and everyone else!

  • Dynamic resize of FAT32 partition with disk utility?

    Hi there.
    I have a 1TB external FAT32 drive with 300GB of data on it.
    I want to convert it to HFS+, but I know there's no easy way to do that.
    What I want to know is can I resize my FAT32 partition to 500MB and keep all the data?
    Then I'll move it to the new HFS+ 500MB partition, delete the original partition and resize the HFS+ partition.
    Or do I have no hope of that?
    Thanks
    Greg

    Greg,
    You're probably out of luck on this one. If the drive was partitioned and formatted by a PC (every drive has a partition map, whether there are multiple partitions or only one), it almost certainly has an "MBR" partition map. This would preclude a dynamic resizing by Disk Utility. It will need to be partitioned using either GUID (Intel) or APM (PPC).
    Scott

  • Xserve RAID volume corruption, volumes missing in Disk Utility

    I have an Xserve with 3 drives in a RAID 5 set. The RAID set is divided into 2 volumes. After hard booting the server to recover from a crash, the volumes seemed to disappear.
    We booted to an install disk and ran Disk Utility, which showed that there were no volumes at all. We then ran RAID Utility, which showed the volumes there.
    After the RAID ran a re-initialization and verify, RAID Utility shows green lights throughout, as if everything is fine. Nothing else, however, can see the volumes.
    We booted to an external drive with OS X installed, and basically found the same situation. Only RAID Utility can see those volumes, but otherwise they're just plain missing. However, RAID Utility does show "Partitions: None" for both of those volumes.
    We have tried placing the drives into another server to determine if the problem is with the RAID card, but we had the same results. I also tried booting to target disk mode, but the other machine can't see the volumes all the same.
    Using an external boot disk, we upgraded the RAID firmware. We also reset the SMC, as well as the PRAM. Nothing is working so far.
    AppleCare basically told me that we're SOL and have to rebuild. Unfortunately, there is some data there which was overlooked in our backup procedure. If there is any possibility of recovering the data, I'd like to try it before giving up.
    My absolute last option is to recreate the volumes exactly as they were before, then hope that I can use some manner of un-erase to recover the data. However, I'm not sure how RAID works on that level, should it just jumble the data, or if this is even remotely a feasible option.

    Port 1: Link Established
    2Gps
    Point to point
    Status light green
    In the system Profiler I'm not sure what you're asking for, I'm running 10.5.8 standard not server.
    the fibre channel shows link established 2Gps and cable type copper but nothing else, the disks & RAID controller don't show up anywhere I've looked.
    RAID Admin shows the JBOD disks as online and lists the LUNs etc.
    System looks fine, only error is missing second power supply.

  • Partition tab missing in Disk Utility

    I have a 2011 iMac that came with Mtn Lion.  I have a WD 2 TB external HD that I reformatted, as it came with WinOS.  I formatted it with Disk Utility to MAC OS EXTENDED (JOURNALED).  I have Carbon Copy Cloner (v.3.5.3) and want to partition the external drive to be bootable. However, DU has no Partition Tab.  How do I then partition this to be bootable? 
    I am using a separate HD for Time Machine.
    Please advise.  Thanks!

    Welcome to Apple Support Communities
    You need to select the highest level of the external drive listed in the left column of Disk Utility.
    Once one partition is created on the drive and you select it, that partition cannot be further partitioned, so the Partition tab does not appear.

  • No Fat32 option in Disk Utility

    I'm running OS 10.4.11 and I have an external HD that I need to transfer files from my Mac to be used on a PC. I am trying to format the HD so it can be used on both, but I do not have FAT32 as an option.
    How do I format this external HD to be used on a PC after I dump down the files from my Mac?
    Thanks,

    Are you selecting the top-level physical disc icon, rather than the existing logical partition's Volume icon? The Partition operation isn't valid on an existing partition, you have to select the disc, then it should show up.

  • Partition Tab Missing: Disk Utility

    I've just noticed that the "Partition" tab is missing from Disk Utility.
    Suggested correction?

    Make sure you have a drive selected, at the left in the left column, not a volume, indented below the drive.

  • Disk Utility Cannot Repair

    About one month ago my system at startup was acting odd, the menu items in the top right corner were missing and Disk Utility would not repair the volume, DiskWarrior was real slow in trying to repair the volume so I decided to Erase the Drive and install the OS fresh.
    Well this morning at startup after the progress bar I was faced with a black screen with with writing. I started from the install Disk and tried Disk Utility, it could not repair the volume. Keys out of order and missing items were what I saw. I tried Disk Warrior, it was able to repair the volume, hardly any errors shown, no long report for those familiar with DW. However when I went to restart I ended up with the startup you see the 1st time you start your Mac, looking for registration etc after the Welcome video.
    Once again the menu items in the upper right hand corner spotlight and clock are missing.
    Any Ideas what can be causing this. DW is set to check the HD's SMART status and has never found a problem, the computer is used primarily for email and internet access. It is the G4 that is having these issues.
    450 MHz PowerMac G4 40 GB HD 1.12GB SDRAM 700 MHz eMac 40 GB HD 768MB SDRAM iMac 266 MHz 96MB SDRAM   Mac OS X (10.4.5)  

    I don't do hardware
    Try looking in "do-it-youself" repair.
    EDIT: To find drives that would be right you can look at OWC
    -mj
    [email protected]
    Message was edited by: macjack

  • Mounted .iso file shows in Disk Utility, but inaccesible through finder

    Hello.
    I have an .iso file that used to mount flawlessly, but now when double clicked shows only in Disk Utility, while remaining inaccesible otherwise (finder hierarchy starting from computer should show all mounted drives, but this one is missing). Disk Utility doesn't find any errors. Is there any other way to find out what's wrong?
    thanks

    Do know the name of any file that is on the iso image? If so, do a Spotlight search on the file name and see if it show up. If it does, Command click on the result in the Spotlight list and see if the enclosing folder opens in Finder.
    Francine
    Francine
    Schwieder
    PS--Forgot to aske: when you said "shows in Disk Utility" I'm assuming it is shown not just as existing, but as being mounted.
    Message was edited by: Francine Schwieder

  • Disk Utility won't let me format external drive to FAT32

    Maybe this cannot be done or the answer is simple and I am missing it. I have a 1.5tb Maxtor drive hooked up via fw800. I want to have 120gb of this as Mac OS extended journaled to back up my internal drive via Time Machine. I want the other 1.38tb to be in FAT32 so I can share files between my windows and mac machines. I keep all of my external storage except for the backup partition in FAT32. I have never had an issue until I upgrades to Leopard and now when I click on the larger partition I only have the option for the 4 mac formats-- FAT32 is not available. I can format the entire 1.5tb to FAT32 but once I try and partition it only mac formats are available. I forgot to mention I just did the upgrade to 10.5.1 and the issue is still present.
    How do I format the smaller partition as mac os extended journaled and the larger as FAT32? Any help is appreciated.
    Thanks so much,
    Patrick
    PS. I did a search but did not find anything.
    Message was edited by: PatrickB

    It may depend on the type of partition table scheme you are using (see bottom of page in disk utility for that says Apple Partition Map/APM, GUID Partition table/GPT or Master Boot Record/MBR partition map).
    MS-Windows can read MBR scheme only (64 bit MS-Windows supports GPT, according to MS). If you have Apple Partition Map, your disk won't be usable on Windows. I suspect you have APM partition table and hence the disk utility is not giving the option for FAT32 format, since you can't use it under MS-Windows.
    On the Mac side, all 3 schemes are readable (for bootability, you'll need APM on PPC Macs, GPT for Intel Macs). Time Machine doesn't need a bootable disk, but I'd suggest APM/GPT if you are using PPC/Intel macs respectively (but I'd think either will work for Time Machine, if you have a mix of Macs).
    But here's the catch - Apple says Time Machine won't work with drives with MBR partition map (even though Macs are MBR-aware), so the issue for you is Time Machine's ability to use MBR drives. http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=306932
    I suspect unless you are on an Intel Macs (OS X) and use only 64 bit MS-Windows (using GPT)/Itanium, using the same disk for TM and FAT32 sharing between Mac and Win worlds is not possible. Not the desirable answer.
    If you do want to experiment, make a temporary setup and try it out on both Mac side and Windows side first (on all your machines), before making a "production" system. You can select the DISK (first line on Disk Utility for that disk, not second line) and click on Options at the left bottom (it might have to be erased first) and then select the type of partition scheme. Note formats like HFS+/FAT32 are a level lower in the hierarchy than partition map/table.
    Let us know what you find out/decide?

  • I can't burn a dvd using any method, Idvd tells me that my super drive is missing, dvd studio pro quits when i click burn and disk utility keeps spitting the disk out when i click burn and enter the disk??? how do i repair my superdrive for imac

    I can't burn a dvd using any method, idvd tells me that my super drive is missing, dvd studio pro quits when i click burn and disk utility keeps spitting the disk out when I click burn and enter the disk??? how do i repair my superdrive for imac, or how do I do whatever I need to do to get it working: I have already tried using a lens cleaning cd and also restored my nvram or something i forget what it was called but i restarted my computer holding down  command+optoion+p+r and still nothing???
    Free solutions are the best, although if I have to pay I will, I would prefer to not have to buy an external burner if possible and already know that is an option so please don't give me that answer... thank you for any help you can give

    Unless your iMac is still covered by AppleCare, get an external DVD burner.
    You can get perfectly good ones from Amazon for less than $40.

  • Hard drive is missing. I can boot from the cd but when running the disk utility, no hard drive shows up.

    Hard drive is missing. I can boot from the cd but when running the disk utility, no hard drive shows up.
    This is a problem that suddenly appeared.

    Please post a screenshot of Disk Utility that shows what you mean. Be careful not to include any private information.
    Start a reply to this message. Click the camera icon in the toolbar of the editing window and select the image file to upload it. You can also include text in the reply.

  • Disk Utility unable to partition as FAT32

    Hello,
    I am trying to set up bootcamp on my Late 2013 13" MBP running Yosemite 10.10.1 (14B25). I went and purchased a 16GB flash drive and directly followed the instructions laid out here. I have a family copy (3 activation codes) of Windows 7 Home Premium. I used the 64bit. After formatting my USB to FAT32, and mounting the W7 ISO, I followed and completed all instructions listed above
    Upon rebooting into windows, I selected my partition labeled "BOOTCAMP" and tried to continue. I was prompted with "Setup was unable to create a new system partition or locate an existing system partition.  See the Setup log files for more information." from the Windows installer. After coming across this thread, I removed anything plugged in (outside of the USB w/ W7 ISO) and tried again. No luck. Lastly, I tried moving the USB from the left to the right, no luck. I then tried to reformat the USB ISO as prompted by the Installer, and that didn't work. (I assume this would have wiped the drive - probably a dumb idea)
    I restarted and booted into OSX. I assumed that my best bet would be to restart everything and try again. I removed the partition from my Microsoft HD, and went to erase my USB drive. Upon trying to reformat it as I had before, I realized there is no option for FAT32 in Disk Utility. I have attached an image of this. I am not sure what happened here. I have reformatted the drive by Erasing and Partitioning it multiple different times. Still not option for FAT32. I have been sure to have selected Master Boot Record.
    I assume I now can't try again until I am able to reformat the USB into FAT32 so I can again mount my ISO and go from there.
    Any guidance? What are my options here?

    Confirm that this is what you have been doing?
    Selecting an Operating System During Startup
    You can select which operating system to use during startup by holding down the Option key. This displays icons for all available startup disks, and lets you override the default setting for the startup disk in Startup Disk preferences (Mac OS X) or the Boot Camp control panel (Windows) without changing that setting.
    To select an operating system during startup:
    1  Restart your computer and hold down the Option key until disk icons appear onscreen.
    2  Select the startup disk with the operating system you want to use, and then click the arrow beneath the icon.
    11
    12
    Removing Windows from Your Computer
    How you remove Windows from your computer depends on whether you installed Windows on a second disk partition or on a single-volume disk.
    If you installed Windows on a second disk partition: Using Boot Camp Assistant as described below, remove Windows by deleting the Windows partition and restoring the disk to a single-partition Mac OS X volume.
    If your computer has multiple disks and you installed Windows on a disk that has only one partition: Start up in Mac OS X and use Disk Utility, in the Utilities folder, to reformat it as a Mac OS X volume.
    To delete Windows and the Windows partition:
    1  Start up in Mac OS X.
    2  Quit all open applications and log out any other users on your computer.
    3  Open Boot Camp Assistant.
    4  Select “Remove Windows 7,” and then click Continue.
    5  Do one of the following:
      If your computer has a single internal disk, click Restore.
      If your computer has multiple internal disks, select the disk with Windows on it, and then select “Restore to a single Mac OS partition” and click Continue.
    If yes, we now have to get you to get the MBP to boot and that is relatively easy, provided that you have followed all the right steps.

  • Disk Utility and fsck report 'missing thread records' and can't repair.

    Hello,
    What first made me realise there was a problem with my iMac was that when I tried to update a application it failed. I then manually download the .dmg of the update and tried replaced the app (Transmission 1.82 being that app in question). This failed, OS X claiming that it could not replace the older version (1.81). I then tried copying the file to the desktop where OS X claimed that there was already a copy of the application and so left a corrupted file on my desktop. This also happened when i attempted to move and copy a couple of pages documents and movie files around. I decided the best thing to do at this point was to reboot my computer; OS X decided it needed to install a couple of security updates at this point. This installation failed.
    My iMac booted up, but only after a progress bar has appeared under the Apple logo and spinner and has done its thing (From what I've read this means that OS X is trying its best to resolve some sort of errors). This happens upon every boot.
    This made me think that something must be going on with the file system of my Mac so I ran all the tests in Disk Utility. Permissions repair ran fine and fixed a few issues, but when I verified the disk this is what it reported:
    "Verifying volume “Macintosh HD”
    Performing live verification.
    Checking Journaled HFS Plus volume.
    Checking extents overflow file.
    Checking catalog file.
    Missing thread record (id = 2045563)
    Missing thread record (id = 2096282)
    Keys out of order
    The volume Macintosh HD was found corrupt and needs to be repaired.
    Error: This disk needs to be repaired. Start up your computer with another disk (such as your Mac OS X installation disc), and then use Disk Utility to repair this disk."
    I booted up from the DVD and tried to repair; this failed. Next I tried using fsck in single user mode; this also failed. Upon rebooting again and waiting for the progress bar to fill I was able to move files around and update Transmission without issue. Disk Utility still reports the same error.
    If I boot into Windows Vista everything works perfectly; as of yet I haven't got around to installing the new Boot Camp update for Windows 7 support incase that changes anything. When running the diagnostic tool on the Windows Vista DVD it reports that everything is fine for Windows.
    I really am at a loss for what to do next. All my data is backed up by Time Machine onto a Time Capsule as well as manually onto a FW external. I also made a clone of the Windows partition using the free app Winclone. Does anyone know anything I can do to fix this problem?
    Thanks so much,
    Sam.

    I have been experiencing exactly the same problem here with my MacPro. Apple replaced the hard disk because it was reporting bad sectors. However even with the replacement hard disk I'm experiencing the "missing thread" issue again. I'm guessing its either a software issue that keeps recurring or a fundamental hardware issue. Is the disk controller part of the hard disk or the motherboard? I've never had hard disk problems like this before.
    Here's my Disk Utility report from earlier today:
    Checking Journaled HFS Plus volume.
    Checking extents overflow file.
    Checking catalog file.
    Missing thread record (id = 1067066)
    Missing thread record (id = 1111528)
    Missing thread record (id = 1196845)
    Missing thread record (id = 1200621)
    Missing thread record (id = 1260154)
    Missing thread record (id = 1277166)
    Missing thread record (id = 1285010)
    Missing thread record (id = 1297257)
    Missing thread record (id = 1316679)
    Missing thread record (id = 1437800)
    Incorrect number of thread records
    Checking multi-linked files.
    Checking catalog hierarchy.
    Invalid volume directory count
    (It should be 155085 instead of 155095)
    Checking extended attributes file.
    Checking volume bitmap.
    Checking volume information.
    Repairing volume.
    Missing directory record (id = 1437800)
    Missing directory record (id = 1316679)
    Missing directory record (id = 1297257)
    Missing directory record (id = 1285010)
    Missing directory record (id = 1277166)
    Missing directory record (id = 1260154)
    Missing directory record (id = 1200621)
    Missing directory record (id = 1196845)
    Missing directory record (id = 1111528)
    Missing directory record (id = 1067066)
    Look for missing items in lost+found directory.
    Rechecking volume.
    Checking Journaled HFS Plus volume.
    Checking extents overflow file.
    Checking catalog file.
    Checking multi-linked files.
    Checking catalog hierarchy.
    Checking extended attributes file.
    Checking volume bitmap.
    Checking volume information.
    Invalid volume directory count
    (It should be 155106 instead of 155096)
    Repairing volume.
    Rechecking volume.
    Checking Journaled HFS Plus volume.
    Checking extents overflow file.
    Checking catalog file.
    Checking multi-linked files.
    Checking catalog hierarchy.
    Checking extended attributes file.
    Checking volume bitmap.
    Checking volume information.
    The volume MacHD was repaired successfully.

Maybe you are looking for