Acer C710 SD Card Reader

drober05
drober05 Member Posts: 1 New User

Hello.

 

Recently installed Chrubuntu on my C710-2847.  All seems to work splendidly except for one problem.  The SD Card Reader does not function properly.  I have read about issues with the SD Card reader when not plugged in but my problem is different.  The SD Card will read ok but will not allow me to write anything to it (yes, the card is unlocked).  This seems inconsistent because some cards allow me to write a single file but not several files (as in a group drag n drop).  Other cards wont let me write anything to the SD Card.

 

I am suspecting there is a driver compatibility issue.  Does anyone know the model of card reader used in the C710?  Is is compatible with Linux?  Is there a Linux driver?

 

Thanks.

Answers

  • Tommy-Acer
    Tommy-Acer VIP Posts: 6,317 Seasoned Specialist WiFi Icon

    We are unable to support the installation of another operating system.

     

    Please review this article:
    Installing a different Operating System

  • eltonw
    eltonw Member Posts: 23 New User

    Normally you do not need any drivers to mount an SD card in linux. Sameis the case when you install chrubuntu (Ubuntu) or any other linux distro on a chromebook. The fact that you can only copy one file, or none at all indicates it is a matter of permissions under linux, and / or the SD card is formatted using the wrong partition type.

     

    The card should be formatted as regular V-FAT / FAT 32. Some SD cards come with 'hidden partitions' containing 'utiliies' (e.g. encryption for the contents). in such cases, the card is formatted as NTFS. if so, simply use the drive manager utility in ubuntu to delete the partition and reformat the SC card as V-FAT.

     

    Your problem, hence, is not the fault of either the chromebook hardware, nor chromeos. I have chrubuntu installed, and no problem whatsoever accessing any SD cards or USB sticks inserted into the machine while on the chrubutu partition.

     

    cheers,

    [edited for privacy]

     

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