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I have an HP computer with Ubuntu 18.04. I was copying some stuff to a USB drive. During the copy, I accidentally pulled the USB out. Now the issue is that I get an input/output error whenever I plug in the USB.

I have tried rebooting multiple times. It is not a recent case. I have 2 USBs with the same issue and both USBs are of ADATA. Both had the same issue as I was copying something from Ubuntu and after the copy, I was getting a message of 'Writing to Disk'. I pulled it out anyway and it never worked for me again.

I don't think that the issue is related to the kernel as I have plugged the USB in different computers running different OS but the error is the same in all the cases. My kernel 4.18.0-22-generic

I tried to fix it using GParted but the same issue. When I load up the details of the drive from GParted I get the output shown in the screenshot. I tried to add a new partition table but it just hangs up on me and gets stuck.

Can anyone explain what is going on?

Input/Output Error during read on /dev/sdb

xiota
  • 5,038

1 Answers1

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Since you're having the same problems with different computers and operating systems, I suspect the drives are dead. If they're within warranty, try contacting the manufacturer for replacement.


You're having an issue using a couple USB drives. It could be a problem with the drives themselves or with your computer. You've ruled out a problem with your computer by rebooting and trying the drives with other computers.

Most likely something electrical is broken that prevents them from writing new data, which is why you can't reformat. It sounds like you pulled the drives when they got stuck "writing to disk" so the problem probably occurred before, not as a result of, your pulling them out.

Since you have two ADATA drives with this problem, you could be dealing with fakes, a bad batch, QA problems, or bad luck. If ADATA replaces them and you have no further problems, it was probably a bad batch. If you have problems with the replacements, QA problems and bad luck come into play.

Unfortunately, storage devices fail. There's not much anyone can do about it aside from backing up and purchasing from historically reliable manufacturers who honor warranties quickly and without hesitation.

xiota
  • 5,038