-
All replies
-
Helpful answers
-
Apr 25, 2016 3:53 PM in response to Nutronicby Kenichi Watanabe,Try putting the iPod into Disk Mode
Putting iPod into Disk Mode - Apple Support
Run iTunes and connect iPod. If iTunes picks it up, it may prompt you to do a Restore. If you're OK with erasing the iPod, do the Restore. After the Restore, if there's no hardware problem, the iPod should work and connect properly, and you can re-sync your songs.
-
Apr 26, 2016 1:45 AM in response to Kenichi Watanabeby Nutronic,I have managed to get it into Disk Mode, but iTunes still freezes when connected.
It's not even showing the ipod is there in itunes - it just freezes it.
-
Apr 26, 2016 5:58 AM in response to Nutronicby Kenichi Watanabe,If possible try a different USB docking cable, to rule out faulty cable as the cause.
If you connect the iPod (in Disk Mode) with iTunes not running, are you able to see it as a USB storage device in Windows?
-
Apr 26, 2016 6:06 AM in response to Kenichi Watanabeby Nutronic,Thanks for the suggestions.
I have tried 6 USB ports on my main PC and 2 on another machine, both give the same result.
I have also tried 2 different cables, both does the same thing.
I have also tried using a previous version of iTunes that I used to sync the ipod but this just freezes too....I am starting to believe that the iPod is not compatible with windows 10 or something.
I found another suggestion that states to put it in Disk Mode and then format it using the right click method but when trying to do that the mouse cursor just sits "loading" rather than actually present a menu.
If I disconnect the ipod from my PC then the PC tells me the ipod needs to be formatted and asks if it should open iTunes but as soon as the ipod is connected again we are back to "square one".
It is becoming quite annoying.
-
Apr 26, 2016 6:16 AM in response to Nutronicby Kenichi Watanabe,It's compatible with Windows 10, if it's working properly. My next suggestion, if you could get the iPod to appear in Windows as a storage device, was to reformat it using Windows. It sounds like you tried that, and it does the equivalent of iTunes "freezing."
The flash-based storage use in iPod nano does eventually become faulty, like the failure of hard drives in older iPod models. The likely cause for your problem is the computer's system not being able to access the iPod's storage to read and write data properly, which is why the attempts cause the system to "hang."
-
Apr 26, 2016 6:47 AM in response to Kenichi Watanabeby Nutronic,Yes "hanging", that's what it seems to do remarkably well