HP's little tool is the USB flash drive tool that could, bringing enhanced power and capability to your Windows system at no cost.
We then moved the data back to the newly reformatted drive, ejected it, reinserted it, and verified that everything was in order, including our portable apps. Clicking Close called up a small dialog with detailed information about the drive. We allowed it to proceed, and it formatted the drive in seconds. Canon C300 Mark III: Delkin BLACK is recommended for recording in the highest resolution available (POWER not recommended). BLACK provides the fastest minimum sustained write speeds, while POWER offers the largest storage capacity. We clicked Start, and a pop-up warned us all data on the drive would be lost. CFexpress Type B Compatibility Notice: For CFexpress Type B memory cards, Delkin offers two options: POWER and BLACK. We chose to reformat it in NTFS and enable compression. HP USB immediately identified it and its file type, FAT. We moved the data off of an older 1GB flash drive and inserted the drive in an open USB port. Other than Start and Close buttons, that's it, not even a Help file, though this tool is easy enough to figure out without one. This compact tool has an equally compact interface, an efficient little dialog with selections for Device and File system, and an entry field for Volume label, and check boxes for format options, including the ability to create a bootable DOS start-up disk using either internal system files or files at a location you can specify. Hewlett-Packard's USB Disk Storage Format Tool can quickly and thoroughly format virtually any USB flash drive in a wide range of file systems as well as create bootable USB media. You can even boot from flash drives, just like the old floppies, which, together with portability, universal compatibility, and enough space to host useful tools, makes them ideal recovery devices. hnr (North America) files on it.įjw -> newer version of fjv (Primo only)įpa -> Adress points (house numbers) (Primo only)įsp -> Smart route (about same as hsp files that go in histspeed folder) historical traffic data in relation to time and day of the week.USB flash drives are this century's floppies, holding everything from personal and medical information to music and pictures and even secure data, with the added advantage of being small and rugged enough for keychain duty.
fsp.ftr? I see some are called "Primo only", but since I'm apparently running a version of Primo wouldn't they work? My SD card only had. I found my notes from 2014 and saw I needed the files to be iGO8.3 which appear to be the same thing as iGO 8 R3, so I'm D/L the 2015.Q2 files now.Īs a follow up after doing some more reading, is there any use for the other extensions such as. Joined: Sun 2:14 am Posts: 6 Has thanked: 5 times Been thanked: 4 times I may have missed it, but the Primo tutorial section here seems to be aimed at doing things I don't want or need to do.
They have the proper extensions and appear to be similar in size to my old files, which are dated 2013.Q2.ġ) Can I use these as they are by swapping them?Ģ) Should I swap them and use the old name format for each state?ģ) Would it be better to start over with a clean install of Primo 2.01 presuming it has the latest maps/poi or the newer 2.4? 2.01 is working OK as are the rest of the radio functions, so I'd like to avoid using 2.4 from what I've read here. I found a number of iGO8 R3 (Navteq) 2015 Q2 maps and poi files, but am not sure they would work. poi files seem to have 130724 except for Canada, which has 130828) There is also an "extended" file for most of them, such as: poi files seem to have 130723 including Canada) fbl files seem to have 131004 in them except for a few with 131017) The sub directories on the card align with iGO sub directories I've read about here, such as content/map, content/poi, etc. copy to a blank on the SD card inserted into the navigator. The file version is 9.6.5.0, the product version is 9.67. For example, my boot automatically run the rtnavi file under the rtnavi.exe folder. The icon for it says iGOprimo, so I'm presuming that's the system I'm using. I copied the SD card from the radio, and it has an "RTNavi" directory, which contains a main executable called Mobilenavigator.exe.
I'm wanting to update (USA maps & poi) again, and have been reading a number of threads here and elsewhere.
I know the used radio had no SD card when I bought it, and I had to download a card file to get it operating.
I have this radio and had installed some map updates over a year ago, but I forgot how I did so.