Hi,
Just to expand on Scott(0)'s suggestion.
You can try this to see if it helps.
Plug in the USB, Open gparted.
Make sure you select the USB stick in drop down list, top right "sdc.?"
Then Select the "Device" menu option.
Then Select "Create partition table"
and apply that. It will warn about deleting everything O.K it.
That will in effect completely put the USB stick to a virgin condition.
Then highlight the "Free Space" and create a new partition using all the space.
You can either format it EXT4 if only using on Linux
or FAT32 if you want to using across platforms.
Dave
Just to expand on Scott(0)'s suggestion.
You can try this to see if it helps.
Plug in the USB, Open gparted.
Make sure you select the USB stick in drop down list, top right "sdc.?"
Then Select the "Device" menu option.
Then Select "Create partition table"
and apply that. It will warn about deleting everything O.K it.
That will in effect completely put the USB stick to a virgin condition.
Then highlight the "Free Space" and create a new partition using all the space.
You can either format it EXT4 if only using on Linux
or FAT32 if you want to using across platforms.
Dave
Upgrades WIP 2.6 to 2.8 - (6 X 2.6 to 2.8 completed on: 20/02/16 All O.K )
Linux Lite 3.0 Humming on a ASRock N3070 Mobo ~ btrfs RAID 10 Install on 4 Disks
Computers Early days:
ZX Spectrum(1982) , HP-150 MS-DOS(1983) , Amstrad CPC464(1984) , BBC Micro B+64(1985) , My First PC HP-Vectra(1987)
Linux Lite 3.0 Humming on a ASRock N3070 Mobo ~ btrfs RAID 10 Install on 4 Disks
Computers Early days:
ZX Spectrum(1982) , HP-150 MS-DOS(1983) , Amstrad CPC464(1984) , BBC Micro B+64(1985) , My First PC HP-Vectra(1987)