Drive Letter Conflict (Windows Operating Systems)
As mentioned in the 'System Requirements' section of this manual (on page 3), the D300 requires two
consecutive drive letters AFTER the last physical disk that appears before the 'gap' in drive letter assignments
(see Figure 11.5.) This does NOT pertain to network shares because they are specific to user-profiles and not
the system hardware profile itself, thus appearing available to the OS.
What this means is, Windows may assign the D300 a drive letter that's already in use by a network share or
Universal Naming Convention (UNC) path, causing a drive letter conflict. If this happens, please consult your
administrator or helpdesk department on changing drive letter assignments in Windows Disk Management
(administrator privileges required.)
Figure 11.5 – My Computer
In this example, the D300 uses drive F:, which is the first available drive letter after drive E: (the last physical
disk before the drive letter gap.) Because letter G: is a network share and not part of the hardware profile, the
D300 may attempt to use it as its second drive letter, causing a conflict.
If there are no network shares on your system and the D300 still won't load, it is possible that a card reader,
removable disk, or other previously-installed device is holding on to a drive-letter assignment and still causing
a conflict.
Please note that Drive Letter Management, or DLM, has improved significantly in Windows Vista, 7, 8/8.1 and
10 so you may not come across this issue, but if you are unable to resolve the conflict, please contact
Kingston's Technical Support Department for further assistance.
Document No. 48000130-001.A00
D300
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