![]() At least you will get the ID of one SD Card.ġ0. Unfortunately if you change your SD card it will always show the same number, at least in my case. On top you will see Device ID: 10 digit number, which is the Card ID of the SD Card inserted. Click “Yes” at the next question (Some aspects will not work and so on)ĩ. ![]() Next question is, Connect or power on GPS, click “Done”ħ. After starting up it will ask if the purchase included a GPS, click “Yes”ĥ. Install using MAIN.msi (if using setup.exe it will look for previous version installed and terminate if not found)Ĥ. So if you want to try use the card you really want to use.Ģ. Subsequently inserted cards all showed the same ID number which was incorrect. This worked for me, but only for the first ever Card inserted. Once Mobile PC is installed you can go to Settings-About and it will show you the Card ID of the Card inserted in your PC. The only way I could get the SD CARD ID was by installing Garmin MobilePC. Some gadgets like even mobile phones are able to show the Card ID, but if you don’t have the right one you are busted. Unfortunately there is no simple way of retrieving the Card ID by software. There are many ideas on how to get the SD Card ID, but none of them worked for my GPS, (by the way, it uses same BIOS as GPSMAP62). I have a GPSMAP78 which I use for Marine navigation. So, not a lot of help, but just to save you time looking on the wrong track. Splitting the number into two sections and hex->dec converting and then concatanating produces an incorrect result. If you can find the correct SD card ID as 8 hex chars then you simply enter the whole 8 chars into windows calculator and convert to decimal which will produce 10 decimal digits, which would be the number required to decode the card. ![]() There are other ways but I'm still working on that. I found my SD card ID by putting the card into a nuvi 250w and pressing the battery icon for 10 seconds. There are internet links which look like they find the right id but actaully don't seem to work on current OS versions. The specification for how to access the code as part of the CID is on the SD card official website, but no help if you aren't an engineer. The SD card ID is surrounded by secrecy for obvious reasons. That is a volume id generated by windows when formatting a new medium. I don't think that the checkdisk id is what you are looking for. Some of this was covered by the last post, but since I started already, with apologies. If you have a Windows Mobile, Windows PPC or Windows CE unit you can try this tool.Īttached Card_ID.rar that reads correct CID by using Windows CE / PPC / WM: It may then fail the disk requests of applications using those drives. NT may become confused and think that the media (disk) has changed after a FAT volume id has changed and pop up messages indicating that you should reinsert the original disk (!). In addition, you should shut down any applications you have running before changing a volume id. Note that changes on NTFS volumes won't be visible until the next reboot. This is a command-line program that you must run from a command-prompt window. This utiltity, VolumeID, allows you to change the ids of FAT and NTFS disks (floppies or hard drives). While WinNT/2K and Windows 9x's built-in Label utility lets you change the labels of disk volumes, it does not provide any means for changing volume ids. The tool mentioned for changing the Volume ID: No such luck with the volume method though. If that worked to change the CID then everyone could easily clone a Garmin map from one memory card to another. There's also tools to change the Volume ID (volume serial number). The volume serial number changes when the volume is reformatted. The CID is permanent in the memory cards internal register. I've tried many times to explain that it doesn't work that way. It seems to be very hard to stop the spreading of the "urban myth" that a disk volume serial number is the same as a memory cards CID ( 128 bit Card identification number: individual card number for identification). So the ID number to plug into Jetmouse is either 1340925650 or 2565013409. Partitiion ID: 3461-6432 (8-digit number in Hex?) It seems that no-one on this forum can answer that question. That is why I asked if it is a hex code that one can convert into the 10 digit code needed by programs such as Jetmouse KeygenĪlso, many hex codes are displayed reversed so that the first five numbers un-hexed into decimal are actually the last five in the 10 digit numbers. You say to type in the 10 digit SD_Card ID.īut the SD_Card ID discovered by the software and by Microsoft Checkdisk program is 8 digits, not 10. Unfortunately again my question has been completely misunderstood! Jedtmouse keygen is very easy to understand and use but. Launch the keygen, and type in your 10# (10 digit decimal) SD-Card ID into the "Unit ID" field. "Jetmouse keygen is a brilliant tool, just a bit tricky to understand for some folks.ġ.
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