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Posted on May 28, 2017

I have a BLU DASH L3 cell phone. Why I can't setup my SD 32 GB card. After formatting it always says I don't have enough memory to continue.

5 Related Answers

Anonymous

  • 3 Answers
  • Posted on Jan 28, 2009

SOURCE: memory card error after inserting SDHC card on powershot A620

the a 620 only goes up to 2 gb no higher

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Anonymous

  • 96 Answers
  • Posted on Feb 21, 2009

SOURCE: cell phone how do you format the sd card?

just go memory card in that u find format option
select that & ur memory card will get format or try connectioning ur mobile to pc & format through pc by selecting memory drive right click mouse button select format option in that asked for quick & custom format select one of them & format ur micro sd card

Anonymous

  • 1 Answer
  • Posted on Aug 26, 2009

SOURCE: Problems with formating samsung e250 micro sd card

I had the same problem and I tried everything. I couldn't think of anything else to do so I just turned my phone off and back on again. When I went back to the memory card menu on my phone all the folders that I lost re-appeared. I don't know if it would work on other phones but it's worth a try!

Anonymous

  • 1 Answer
  • Posted on Oct 25, 2009

SOURCE: camera will not format 4 gig card

I am having the same problem. I phoned a camera store and they said the camera is too to accept a 4GB card may only accept to a 2 Hope this helps

Anonymous

  • 87 Answers
  • Posted on Jun 27, 2010

SOURCE: TRying to install a new sd memory card, screen

take you card and insert it into your pc. format the card there into the desired form the camera wants. then you can use your card.

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0helpful
1answer

Can I use a 128GB or a 512GB micro sd card for storage in a BLU 4.0 Advance L3 phone

Apparently 64g is the largest it will take from what I could find. I don't think you should be having an issue with space. If you look up in settings, it should tell you how much capacity is left on your phone.
tip

How to recover SDXC Memory Card

Storage is getting cheaper, smaller while offering higher capacity every year. 64 GB memory cards are extremely common in today's smartphones, digital cameras, tablets and media players. Due to their sheer capacity, a single failure can cause a local catastrophe with that much information being gone.

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Fortunately, the market offers numerous data recovery tools that can help you get your data back. But there is something about these cards you should know before you reach for a data recovery tool.

Flash Chips: Riddled with Defects

Can you believe you can buy the whole 64 gigabytes of fast, high-quality solid-state memory for as little as $20, or does it sound too good to be true? Why is an SSD drive of said capacity three to four times as expensive as a much smaller SD card with similar capacity? Isn't it using exactly the same type of memory, just in a different shell?
In fact, you can't really buy 64 gigs of high-quality flash memory for under $20, and there is a good reason why SSD drives are that much more expensive compared to SD or micro SD cards. The answer is buried in the question itself. Why you can buy a 64 GB microSDXC memory card off Amazon for not much more than $20, the actual flash memory the manufacturer puts in these cards is of a completely different quality compared to that of a typical SSD drive.
So how exactly are manufacturers able to achieve these unbelievably low memory prices? They do smart tricks to make the memory card appear as 64 GB of contiguous space while in fact the actual chip is riddled with defects.
Each memory card employs a tiny microcontroller that maps flash cells to logical addresses. The memory chips are manufactured with abundant capacity. During the manufacture, the chip is tested for defects. Unreadable blocks are simply mapped out and become non-addressable and inaccessible from the outside. Bingo! We've just turned an imperfect chip into a perfectly usable memory card. These tricks are nothing shoddy; they are used by all SD card manufacturers, and they are part of the published SD standard. If not for these tricks, SD memory would probably cost the same (or more) as today's SSD drives.
Now when you know the truth about today's flash chips... can you trust them your data? In fact, you can. Granted, SD cards can sustain a much more limited number of write cycles compared to an SSD drive. When one or more data blocks reach their end of life, the built-in microcontroller of said SD card is supposed to take them out of circulation and assign their logical address to another (working) cell. But what if that cell contained some system information such as a part of a file system? If this is the case, the memory card becomes corrupted, and you'll need to use special tools to extract information from that card.

Recovering Data from SD Cards

Luckily, we have a large number of data recovery tools available on the market that claim to recover the entire content of your memory card. But were they really tested with any of those memory cards in their compatibility lists, or do developers simply assume the recovery will work based on the same principle as traditional magnetic media? In fact, I've seen both and in between. Some products can recover all types of SD cards as they claimed, some other tools can't deal with SD cards at all, while some other tools can only recover SD cards up to 32 GB.
Wait a minute... Why the 32 GB limitation? Why some of the tools can recover 32 GB cards, but fail miserably when reading a 64 GB one? Should the tool either work or not? The reality is more complex than the numbers. While SD memory cards up to and including 32 GB conform to the SDHC standard, larger SD cards (64 and 128 GB) conform to a different standard called SDXC.

Recovering SD, SDHC and SDXC Memory Cards: Is There a Difference?

There is in fact a big difference between smaller (up to and including 32 GB) and larger (64 GB and up) SD cards. The former conform to the SDHC standard, while the latter use the newer SDXC standard.
For you as a user this can mean two things.
  • First, if you are using a 64 GB memory card, make sure that both your portable device and your computer's SD card reader advertise support for SDXC cards (or simply put, they explicitly state support for 64 GB SD cards). If your card reader is old and can only support SDHC cards, you won't be getting anything but errors if you try to read that card with your computer.
  • Second, SDXC cards are formatted with a different file system. Let me explain. When SD cards initially appeared, they used FAT32 as a file system. FAT32 was good enough in the old days. However, this file system has inherent limitations, restricting maximum file size to 4 GB. Just a few years ago this would be a laughable limitation. Today, a typical HD video will already run you more than said 4 GB. If you try to save a large file onto a 32 GB memory card (formatted with FAT32), the write operation will fail.
This is why the SD consortium decided to use a different file system for the new generation of SD cards. 64 Gb, 128 GB and larger SD cards come formatted with exFAT.
exFAT is a new file system developed by Microsoft. exFAT is based loosely on the original FAT32. However, exFAT does not have the limitations of the older FAT/FAT32. exFAT is extensively used in portable electronic devices due to its lightweight design. This was one of the reasons exFAT was selected by the SD consortium as a standard file system for the SDXC format.
Are there downsides to exFAT? There's one, but it's a major one. While exFAT is designed and owned by Microsoft, it's not free. Microsoft requires manufacturers pay licensing fees for using exFAT in their devices. As a result, this has become a limiting factor for many portable electronic devices, especially inexpensive ones. This is one of the reasons why you can use 64 GB SD cards in some devices but not in others.
As a result, when recovering data from a 64 GB SD card, you'll need two things:
  • An SD card reader supporting SDXC (or stating explicitly that it can read 64 GB SD cards);
  • A data recovery tool that supports exFAT;
Not all data recovery tools can support exFAT because of the restrictive licensing model employed by Microsoft. Even if a tool advertises support for "all types of memory cards", it may or may not support exFAT. One of the tools known to support SDXC memory cards and exFAT file systems is Hetman Partition Recovery.

But I've Just Bought a 64 GB SDHC Card!

Sigh. This chapter is probably the most disturbing part of this article. Every other week, we receive an email from a customer describing a typical situation. Because there are so many reports, and because they all describe the same thing, let me just summarize it below.
A guy buys a 64 GB SD card for a price that's significantly below the market. When the memory card arrives, he tests it in his computer, discovering 64 gigabytes of usable capacity. Suspecting that 64 GB of flash memory for under $5 could be a scam, the guy tests the card by writing some data. The writes are extremely slow (3-7 MB/s), so testing the entire capacity would literally take the whole day. He writes some 1-4 GB of data and reads it back. All seems fine, so the guy formats the card and puts it into a phone, MP3 player, digital camera, or whatever portable device he bought it for.
Day after day, week after week the card is filling up with data. Pictures, music and videos are saved onto that memory card. 8 gigs, 16 gigs, 32 gigs, 64 gigs - the writes keep going, the memory card seems to be holding well. Then all of a sudden a photo won't show in a viewer, an MP3 file won't play, a video won't show up. The guy takes the card out and connects it to a PC in an attempt to save the rest of the data. But... oops! There are no photos, music or videos on that card, just garbage.
It is this moment the guy seeks for help and writes us an email. Sadly, in situations such as the one I described our hands are tied: that memory card was a fake. In fact, the "deal" advertises a 64 GB micro SD card for only $4.79. Yes, it's under five bucks for a 64 GB memory card. The description is Pidgin English and reads something like this: "New 64 GB Class 10 Micro SD HC Memory Card with Adapter Fast USA Shipping Dependable memory card for your favorite photos, videos, apps, and games Easily transfer files between phone, tablet and camera" blah, blah, blah.
Remember: if it seems too good to be true, it's probably not true. See that "Micro SD HC" designation? It's a dead giveaway. You can't buy 64 gigs of memory for $5. And, THERE ARE NO 64 GB SDHC CARDS, period. The SD standard dictates that all SD cards with capacities higher than 32 GB are made to conform to the newer SDXC standard. If you buy this card, you won't be getting anything but a fake.
Ditto. Do not buy these. Remember how the packaging looks, and ignore deals that seem too good to be true.

SDXC Recovering 64GB and 128GB Memory Cards Hetman Software
0helpful
1answer

The sd card does not have enough space. please release some storate

This message is from high capacity cards (SDHC) in phones that can not read them, or formatted on a PC before being initialized on the phone. Older Alcatel phones can't read higher than 4-8 Gb cards or some phones only specify SD or TF cards but people keep stuffing SDHC cards into the slots because they are the same size. Always use the phone's internal initialize or mounting system to stick a card in. Likewise always use the unmount procedure to remove a card. Never format a card on a PC before sticking it into the phone. Likewise do not use the PC to format the card.
0helpful
1answer

I have a Samsung galaxy centera Smartone and having hard time with replacing a full 2 gb microSDHC Card with 8 gb microSDHC CARD and it still says memory full What do i need to do now

The phone can handle up to 32 Gb micro SD cards, so I think the format is not good. Try formatting the SD card in your phone, to make sure the format is what your phone can work with.
If you can't use the card, because the phone does not let you format is, try formatting it in a PC, using an external memory card reader. Us format FAT32.
Jul 17, 2014 • Cell Phones
0helpful
1answer

Memory card full

Did you format the card with your computer, or with your camera? Very often, if you use your computer, the format it uses will not work properly with the camera. Always use the camera to format the card. If that doesn't help the problem, make sure your card is large enough for the bitdepth you have selected. If you're taking RAW images at 14 Mp, it will use up a lot of space for each photo. Cameras with that high of a pixel count usually marry well with a 32 GB card. Anything smaller than a 16 GB card will frustrate you unless you switch the camera to a lower resolution and/or compression (JPEG/JPG files).
0helpful
2answers

I just bought a new memory card-4 gb SD-K046. It says that the memory card is full but it is not. I have only used this memory card to scan pictures. I uploaded these pictures onto my camera and deleted...

The following information lists the type and maximum storage capacity of the memory card that each type of camera accepts.

EASYSHARE CX-, DX-, LS-Series Cameras accept:
DX3500, DX3600, DX3900: CF memory cards up to 1 GB
LS755: xD memory cards only
All other CX, DX, LS: SD memory cards up to 1 GB
EASYSHARE C-Series Cameras accept:
C300, C310, C315, C330, CD33, CW330, C530, CD40, CD50: SD memory cards up to 1 GB
C340, C360, C433, C503, C533, C603, C633, C643, C663, C703, C743, C875: SD memory cards up to 2 GB
CD43: xD memory cards only
All other C-Series Cameras: SDHC and SDHC UHS-1 memory cards up to 32 GB
EASYSHARE M-Series Cameras accept:
M590, M583, M577 TOUCH, M5370 TOUCH: MicroSD and MicroSDHC memory cards up to 32 GB
All other M-Series Cameras: SD, SDHC, SDHC UHS-1 memory cards up to 32 GB
EASYSHARE P-Series Cameras accept:
P850, P880: SD memory cards up to 2 GB
P712: SD or SDHC memory cards up to 4 GB
EASYSHARE SLICE Digital Camera accepts:
MicroSD and MicroSDHC memory cards up to 32 GB.
EASYSHARE V-Series Cameras accept:
V1233, V1253, V1073, V1273: SDHC, SDHC UHS-1 memory cards up to 32 GB
All other V-Series Cameras: SD memory cards up to 2 GB
EASYSHARE Z-Series Cameras accept:
Z610, Z650, Z700, Z710, Z730, Z740, Z760, Z7590: SD memory cards up to 2 GB
All other Z-Series Cameras, including MAX: SDHC and SDHC UHS-1 memory cards up to 32 GB
FUNSAVER FD-Series Cameras accept:
SD and SDHC memory cards up to 32 GB
EASYSHARE ONE Camera accepts:
SD and SDHC memory cards up to 1 GB
Notes:
Most KODAK Digital Cameras are compatible with SD, SD/MMC, and/or SDHC memory cards.
Most current KODAK Digital Cameras are compatible with SDHC UHS-1 memory cards.
All KODAK Digital Cameras that are compatible with SDHC and SDHC UHS-1 memory cards use cards with Speed Class up to Class 10.
MicroSD and MicroSDHC cards with SD adapters can also be used in cameras that use SD or SDHC cards if the storage capacity criteria above is followed.
KODAK Digital Cameras are not compatible with SDXC memory cards.

reference: http://www.kodak.com/global/mul/service/index.html?reqURL=http://support.en.kodak.com/app/home/src/gosupport

http://support.en.kodak.com/app/answers/list/p/2/selected/true

Phone Number for Kodak is:

800-235-6325

or try get human below for more info on support:
http://gethuman.com/phone-number/Kodak/
1helpful
1answer

What is the most capacity of Micro SD that suport of that cellphone!

The SDA announced the microSD format at CTIA Wireless 2005 on March 14, 2005, and approval of the final microSD specification was announced on July 13, 2005. At launch, the microSD format was available in capacities of 32, 64, and 128 MB. SanDisk introduced a 2 GB microSD card in July of 2006, initially priced at 99 USD. Since then, prices for flash memory devices have fallen dramatically. The same 2 GB card as of April 2009 can be found for as little as 12 USD at department stores, and as of May 2009 for as little as 6 USD at online electronics stores. At present date Jan 2010 a 16 GB micro SD card class 2 comes for about $40 and a 4 GB class 2 micro SD card comes for about $8.
please rate my answer as helpful. thanks. Joe
0helpful
2answers

Cannot format PNY 4gb microsd card

I could help if you provide some more information about the error message or something.

The most common cause is something might have corrupted the video card and its no longer usable
10helpful
3answers

8gb micro sd card does not work. lg vu cu920. is there a fix

I HAD THE SAME PROBLEM AND KEPT ON MESSING WITH THE 4G MEMORY CARD AND FOUND OUT THAT I HAD TO FORMAT THE MEMORY CARD ON MY COMPUTER AND NOW IT READS THE CARD..ON THE SIDE OF THE SD ADAPTER HAS A SLIDING PIECE THAT SAVES YOU FROM DELETING THINGS ACCIDENTALLY BUT IF YOU SLIDE IT INTO THE MIDDLE POSITION THEN IT WILL ALLOW YOU TO FORMAT THE MEMORY CARD BUT YOU WILL LOSE WHATEVER THAT IS ON THE MEMORY CARD AND WILL HAVE TO DOWNLOAD IT ALL OVER AGAIN..I HOPE THIS IS CLEAR ENOUGH FOR EVERYBODY TO UNDERSTAND BUT THIS IS HOW I GOT MY MUSIC AND PICS ON THE MEMORY CARD
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