Hi,
Your English language skills are better than my Russian language skills, so hopefully we can communicate.

If we are not successful, then perhaps someone else will help you...
Let's try to understand the problem more by (a) getting more information, and (b) doing some testing. Note: I am assuming that you don't need any data from that USB drive (since you've been trying to format it). The testing I suggest below is
destructive to any data on the USB drive.
(a) The history of this USB drive...
* How long have you had this drive?
* Have you ever filled the drive with 64GB data, and then been able to read all 64GB of that data successfully? (If this has not been done, then the program below will do that test.)
* Where did you get the drive (private sale? auction site? well-known retail shop? somewhere else? etc.)
* Do you have any kind of warranty so that you can return the drive to the seller, and get a refund?
* Why were you trying to do a "low level format" on the USB drive - what happened first, to make you want to try that? (I'm guessing something bad happened - but what?)
* Did you try a Windows format
before running the "low level format" tool? If so - what was the type of Windows format that you tried (quick or full); what was the Windows version that you used (XP, 7, Vista etc.); what was the result of that Windows format attempt?
(b) Testing the drive
The type of behaviour you are seeing can be caused by a "fake" flash drive e.g. it is labeled as 64GB capacity, but it actually has much less physical NAND flash. (Or it can just be a faulty drive.) One easy way to check a USB drive for having the correct reported capacity is to use the
H2testw program. This web page includes a download link for the program itself, as well as links to the German (and English translation) web pages where you can read more about the program, if you want to read that. (Unfortunately there is a dead link to another article.)
http://sosfakeflash.wordpress.com/2008/ ... it-drives/Attach the "suspect" 64GB drive to your PC, and remove all other USB drives from the PC before running the H2testw program (German or English language text only). You can see an example of the text report from a "fake" drive on the web page I linked above.
Please include the text report from running H2testw on your 64GB drive, with your reply and the answers to my questions about the history of the drive - hopefully it will help to explain the behaviour which you are seeing.