![]() ![]() But when I connect it to the computer to transfer music the system does see the unit but no drive letter assigned and shows it as a 7.88GB drive. The H340 boots properly and system info on rockbox shows the correct drive size and the proper capacity. I was under the impression that the rockboxed device would be able to see the cards as they are added. Perhaps I will need to get an external enclosure if they all need to be formatted in a certain way. When I added in a second card Rockbox still only saw the first card. I just popped in a preformatted 64GB microsd (I believe I used sdformatter tool) with the. I hope this helps anyone else out there considering trying this. Use some of the adhesive foam padding that comes with the iFlash as a strategically placed substitute instead. This means you need to trim back some of the rubber mounting that usually sits between the drive and the battery. Note: the iFlash and its adaptor are a bit longer than the standard drive. Once that was confirmed, I closed the unit up, and found myself with 320GB of storage (sheer coincidence.not planned.I had two 128GB and one 64GB microSD card on hand when I put it all together).I turned the unit off, and removed it, re-inserted, and everything worked perfectly. I thought maybe I had the orientation on the adaptor wrong when plugging it into the iRiver. Note: The first time I turned it on I got an "ATA -1" error. I turned the iRiver on without closing everything up to make sure it worked.I removed the iRiver's drive carefully, and plugged the iFlash setup in.I disconnected both, and opened up the iRiver. ![]() The stock firmware will run into library limitations apparently.I haven't confirmed this personally) into my computer, and copied over all (the Rockbox folders included) its files on its hard drive over to the newly formatted iFlash drive. I plugged my already Rockboxed iRiver H320 ( Note: you need to make sure you are using Rockbox.Using a drive formatter, I deleted all partitions and formatted the drive to FAT32.That doesn't matter, you don't need to close it up, you just need the interface. Note: the iFlash is too big for the enclosure I got. I popped my microSD cards into the iFlash Adaptor, added the 4th Gen iPod adaptor and put it into the hard drive enclosure. ![]() These are cheap-ish and fairly easily found on eBay and Amazon.
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