Hi, Nevet.
Have you found and used Disk Management? Ever since Windows 2000, DM has
been the tool to use for creating, deleting, formatting and otherwise
managing hard drives (plus optical drives, USB thumb drives, etc.).
To find it, you can right-click Computer, then Manage, then Disk Management.
(But I prefer to Run diskmgmt.msc; I use this so often that it's on my Quick
Launch.)
RC
--
R. C. White, CPA
San Marcos, TX
Microsoft Windows MVP
(Running Windows Live Mail beta in Vista Ultimate x64)
"Nevet" <> wrote in message
news:75FE8D1E-8A17-4EB6-A61F-...
> Thanks, Richard. I tried that, still no cigar..... I moved my files off
> the
> hard drive, deleted the FAT32 partition, created a new NTFS partition and
> formatted it. CHKDSK reports no problem. Still, Backup fails
> immediately:
> "The backup target drive F:\ failed with the following error: The backup
> location could not be found or is not valid." I've removed my McAfee
> firewall and anti-virus and rebooted, to no avail.
>
> Any other ideas?
>
> --Nevet
>
> "Richard Urban" wrote:
>
>> You are having a problem because the drive is formatted as fat32.
>> Remember,
>> I said to format as NTFS. Fat32 has a file size limitation of 4 gig -
>> max. A
>> full system backup is going to exceed this, and will therefore fail.
>>
>> If you format as NTFS you will have no such limitations.
>>
>> --
>>
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> Richard Urban
>> Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User
>>
>> "Nevet" <> wrote in message
>> news:9DBFD9FC-A3FB-4903-BFBE-...
>> > Thanks, Richard. I ran chkdsk /f and it reported no problems on the
>> > (FAT32)
>> > drive. In fact, the drive seems fine for all applications except for
>> > Windows
>> > Backup.
>> >
>> > Can anybody recommend a third-party backup & restore application that
>> > works
>> > with Vista? Or any other ideas as to why Windows Backup doesn't like
>> > my
>> > external drive?
>> >
>> > --Nevet
>> >
>> > "Richard Urban" wrote:
>> >
>> >> If you do not have too much information already on your external drive
>> >> I
>> >> would copy it elsewhere. Then I would delete the drives partition and
>> >> create
>> >> a new partition on the external hard drive. I would create this as a
>> >> NTFS
>> >> partition which has more security and built in recovery than a fat32
>> >> partition.
>> >>
>> >> Then, before I tried to store anything on the drive I would run an
>> >> error
>> >> check on the drive.
>> >>
>> >> From an elevated command prompt type chkdsk XXX: /f (where XXX is the
>> >> drive
>> >> letter of your external drive).
>> >>
>> >> --
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> Regards,
>> >>
>> >> Richard Urban
>> >> Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User
>> >>
>> >> "Nevet" <> wrote in message
>> >> news:BD62387D-D621-4F48-A75E-...
>> >> > Greetings Vista gurus,
>> >> >
>> >> > I just bought a new Western Digital "Passport" external (USB)
>> >> > portable
>> >> > hard
>> >> > drive. The drive is working fine, I can see it in Windows Explorer
>> >> > and
>> >> > manually copy files to & from it. But when I try to use Windows
>> >> > Backup
>> >> > (from
>> >> > Vista's Backup & Restore Center), I immediately get an error message
>> >> > that
>> >> > the
>> >> > backup target drive failed: "The backup disk has a corrupted file
>> >> > system.
>> >> > Fix it using the disk error checking tool, or choose a different
>> >> > backup
>> >> > location." Western Digital tech support says that their hard drive
>> >> > is
>> >> > obviously okay, since I can read from and write to it, and they do
>> >> > not
>> >> > support Windows software.
>> >> >
>> >> > Two questions....
>> >> >
>> >> > (1) Why would Backup claim a corrupted file system when Vista can
>> >> > see,
>> >> > read,
>> >> > and write to the same file system with other applications?
>> >> >
>> >> > (2) What is "the disk error checking tool," where do I find it, and
>> >> > would
>> >> > that help me?
>> >> >
>> >> > Thanks much for any pointers or suggestions!
>> >> >
>> >> > --Nevet