SUPPORT | CHAPTER |
HDD LED STATUS CODES
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Solid Green: A healthy, functioning HDD.
Flashing Green/Red: The connected HDD is writing or formatting.
Solid or Flashing Orange: The connected HDD is attempting to access the host PC.
Solid or Flashing Red: The connected HDD is unhealthy or offline.
No LED: No HDD is connected, or the HDD is
TROUBLE SHOOTING
WARNING! Always switch USB cables as your first troubleshooting step for all of the situations below. We suggest that you simply unplug your USB printer cable and plug it straight into your dock, putting your original cable aside. That allows you to use a
I can’t see my drive(s)! If you have followed all of the above steps, and your drive is operational, you should see it in your disk management utility. If you can’t, then check the dock using a
I can see my drive on my motherboard, but not in the dock. If this is the case, there may be a problem with the USB port on your computer. Try connecting the dock to a different computer. If it shows up there, you probably have a bad port on the original computer. If it doesn’t you may have a faulty dock. In that case, please contact Customer Support by email or phone in the Contact Us section (Pg. 9).
I see the drive in my disk management application, but not on (My) Computer/Desktop. This is usually because the drive was not initialized using the procedure described in Installation Guides. Windows users may need to change or assign a new drive letter. It may also mean that the drive is recognized by your computer but uses a different file system from another OS. You would then need to remove all the data from it and then format it as described in Initializing Your Blank Array (Pg. 7).
How do I assign a
#.Select “Change Drive Letter or Path”. Take note of the assigned
Computer.
I see my drive but it’s “Offline”? Just
My drive doesn’t seem to fit. This is probably because you are using an obsolete IDE drive. Our authorized parts retailer sells an enclosure made especially for IDE. Please email us at customersupport@cavalrystorage.com for more information.
How do I create a drive that can be used on both Mac and Windows? You need to format a drive specifically with the FAT32 file system. This can most easily be done on a Mac, in Disk Utility. Just select the drive you want to use. Then select “Erase>MS Dos (Fat)> Erase…” Once created, this disk will be usable by both operating systems!
But I can see my Windows disk on my Mac (or vice versa)! Yes, you can often see a Windows disk on a Mac or a Mac disk on Windows. You may even be able to pull files off of it. But, you WON’T be able write to that disk unless it is formatted to FAT32. This goes both ways.
How do I check the health of my slow or unresponsive disk(s)? In Windows, you
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