I'm glad you've got a plan for getting a refund on the card.
droofus wrote:
Especially, since I attempted to format this card with the software, and now that computer won't boot -- booting up reports there's no OS on the HD. Which is what you'd expect if the HDD was reformated, not the card!
I don't know who actually supports that tool on this forum, but based on the error message which you first included, it clearly encountered a problem.
I can't find it with a search (probably due to so many slightly different names for the tool), but I seem to remember a posting a while ago about another Win7 user having a problem trying to use it - notice that the last version I can see (ver.2.36 build 1181 from 2006), predates Win 7 and hence can't have been tested for compatibility.
http://hddguru.com/software/2006.04.12- ... rmat-Tool/Quote:
Operating System: MS Windows 2000SP4/2003/XP
As you see, it doesn't mention Win 7 as being compatible.

droofus wrote:
You'd think a card formatting utility would have some significant built in restrictions from reformatting HDDs -- apparently not..
Who said that something called "HDD Low Level Format Tool" shouldn't reformat HDDs?
I'm genuinely sorry to hear that something has gone wrong when you've been using it, such that it seems to have overwritten your 1TB disk, but any expectation for "restrictions from reformatting HDDs" is unrealistic IMHO - don't you think?
droofus wrote:
In the meantime, before you noted the 1t HDD Samsung issue, I moved the card reader to a laptop and tried Panasonic's card formatting software. It at least reported 32Gs on the card...
So the internal Flash memory controller in the card is still functioning (at least to some extent).
droofus wrote:
But it was clearly having troubles reading the card -- it took minutes... It also wasn't able to reformat the card.
That's typical behavour for a counterfeit card, which has attempted to write to more Flash than actually exists.
droofus wrote:
I've contacted the Amazon source of the card and asked for a refund.
Unfortunately Amazon Marketplace (if that's what you're referring to) seems to be almost as bad as Ebay for counterfeit Flash memory. For a project, a friend wanted to deliberately buy some counterfeit USB Flash drives, and was able to easily source some counterfeits from Amazon Marketplace. I hope that Amazon supports you better than Ebay do!
Good luck
