Internal SD Card Drive not Returning/Waking up after Sleep/Hibernate












1















Here is the setup:



I have an internal SD card reader in my laptop. It contains a 32GB SD card that contains my research library. Information I use on a regular basis.



The problem:



When the computer is woken up after being in sleep or hibernation the SD drive does not return. No media removed chirp. No error reported. There is no evidence that it was ever there in the first place. Taking out the card and replacing it again has no effect. The SD card, and the card reader drive is ignored completely after wake up.



Rebooting will fix the problem, but this isn't really a fix as it defeats the point of being able to sleep the computer in the first place.



System Details: Macbook Pro running Windows 10 through boot camp. System runs Windows 10 almost exclusively. The SD card is internal. None of the USB ports and connect devices experience this problem. This has been an on going problem for months, through numerous updates so I do not think it is a update/driver issue.



Ideas? Suggestions? Anyone?










share|improve this question























  • Look in device manager for the card reader then the 32gb card, double click it and see if there is a power management Tab, if there is be sure the "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power" is Unchecked.

    – Moab
    Apr 14 '16 at 17:55











  • There is no power management tab is the listed for the drive. It did describe itself as a USB drive, so just to be extra sure I went in and disabled the "selective suspend" on all usb devices. This had no effect. While I was at it, I also checked for drive updates. There were none. And no old drives to revert to.

    – codingCat
    Apr 14 '16 at 18:17











  • Sounds like a Windows 10 bug then.

    – Moab
    Apr 14 '16 at 18:47











  • This issue has apparently been around for more than two years. Both apple and microsoft acknowledge it as an issue although neither has bothered to address it. A discussion on the topic at the apple discussion board can be found at the following link: discussions.apple.com/thread/5408471?start=0&tstart=0

    – codingCat
    Apr 14 '16 at 19:57






  • 1





    I have discovered a workaround - Lock the laptop first. From the lock screen, hibernate the laptop. When you turn the computer on again and login the drive should return as well.

    – codingCat
    Sep 5 '16 at 5:00
















1















Here is the setup:



I have an internal SD card reader in my laptop. It contains a 32GB SD card that contains my research library. Information I use on a regular basis.



The problem:



When the computer is woken up after being in sleep or hibernation the SD drive does not return. No media removed chirp. No error reported. There is no evidence that it was ever there in the first place. Taking out the card and replacing it again has no effect. The SD card, and the card reader drive is ignored completely after wake up.



Rebooting will fix the problem, but this isn't really a fix as it defeats the point of being able to sleep the computer in the first place.



System Details: Macbook Pro running Windows 10 through boot camp. System runs Windows 10 almost exclusively. The SD card is internal. None of the USB ports and connect devices experience this problem. This has been an on going problem for months, through numerous updates so I do not think it is a update/driver issue.



Ideas? Suggestions? Anyone?










share|improve this question























  • Look in device manager for the card reader then the 32gb card, double click it and see if there is a power management Tab, if there is be sure the "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power" is Unchecked.

    – Moab
    Apr 14 '16 at 17:55











  • There is no power management tab is the listed for the drive. It did describe itself as a USB drive, so just to be extra sure I went in and disabled the "selective suspend" on all usb devices. This had no effect. While I was at it, I also checked for drive updates. There were none. And no old drives to revert to.

    – codingCat
    Apr 14 '16 at 18:17











  • Sounds like a Windows 10 bug then.

    – Moab
    Apr 14 '16 at 18:47











  • This issue has apparently been around for more than two years. Both apple and microsoft acknowledge it as an issue although neither has bothered to address it. A discussion on the topic at the apple discussion board can be found at the following link: discussions.apple.com/thread/5408471?start=0&tstart=0

    – codingCat
    Apr 14 '16 at 19:57






  • 1





    I have discovered a workaround - Lock the laptop first. From the lock screen, hibernate the laptop. When you turn the computer on again and login the drive should return as well.

    – codingCat
    Sep 5 '16 at 5:00














1












1








1








Here is the setup:



I have an internal SD card reader in my laptop. It contains a 32GB SD card that contains my research library. Information I use on a regular basis.



The problem:



When the computer is woken up after being in sleep or hibernation the SD drive does not return. No media removed chirp. No error reported. There is no evidence that it was ever there in the first place. Taking out the card and replacing it again has no effect. The SD card, and the card reader drive is ignored completely after wake up.



Rebooting will fix the problem, but this isn't really a fix as it defeats the point of being able to sleep the computer in the first place.



System Details: Macbook Pro running Windows 10 through boot camp. System runs Windows 10 almost exclusively. The SD card is internal. None of the USB ports and connect devices experience this problem. This has been an on going problem for months, through numerous updates so I do not think it is a update/driver issue.



Ideas? Suggestions? Anyone?










share|improve this question














Here is the setup:



I have an internal SD card reader in my laptop. It contains a 32GB SD card that contains my research library. Information I use on a regular basis.



The problem:



When the computer is woken up after being in sleep or hibernation the SD drive does not return. No media removed chirp. No error reported. There is no evidence that it was ever there in the first place. Taking out the card and replacing it again has no effect. The SD card, and the card reader drive is ignored completely after wake up.



Rebooting will fix the problem, but this isn't really a fix as it defeats the point of being able to sleep the computer in the first place.



System Details: Macbook Pro running Windows 10 through boot camp. System runs Windows 10 almost exclusively. The SD card is internal. None of the USB ports and connect devices experience this problem. This has been an on going problem for months, through numerous updates so I do not think it is a update/driver issue.



Ideas? Suggestions? Anyone?







windows windows-10 macbook boot-camp sd-card






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Apr 14 '16 at 17:51









codingCatcodingCat

211312




211312













  • Look in device manager for the card reader then the 32gb card, double click it and see if there is a power management Tab, if there is be sure the "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power" is Unchecked.

    – Moab
    Apr 14 '16 at 17:55











  • There is no power management tab is the listed for the drive. It did describe itself as a USB drive, so just to be extra sure I went in and disabled the "selective suspend" on all usb devices. This had no effect. While I was at it, I also checked for drive updates. There were none. And no old drives to revert to.

    – codingCat
    Apr 14 '16 at 18:17











  • Sounds like a Windows 10 bug then.

    – Moab
    Apr 14 '16 at 18:47











  • This issue has apparently been around for more than two years. Both apple and microsoft acknowledge it as an issue although neither has bothered to address it. A discussion on the topic at the apple discussion board can be found at the following link: discussions.apple.com/thread/5408471?start=0&tstart=0

    – codingCat
    Apr 14 '16 at 19:57






  • 1





    I have discovered a workaround - Lock the laptop first. From the lock screen, hibernate the laptop. When you turn the computer on again and login the drive should return as well.

    – codingCat
    Sep 5 '16 at 5:00



















  • Look in device manager for the card reader then the 32gb card, double click it and see if there is a power management Tab, if there is be sure the "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power" is Unchecked.

    – Moab
    Apr 14 '16 at 17:55











  • There is no power management tab is the listed for the drive. It did describe itself as a USB drive, so just to be extra sure I went in and disabled the "selective suspend" on all usb devices. This had no effect. While I was at it, I also checked for drive updates. There were none. And no old drives to revert to.

    – codingCat
    Apr 14 '16 at 18:17











  • Sounds like a Windows 10 bug then.

    – Moab
    Apr 14 '16 at 18:47











  • This issue has apparently been around for more than two years. Both apple and microsoft acknowledge it as an issue although neither has bothered to address it. A discussion on the topic at the apple discussion board can be found at the following link: discussions.apple.com/thread/5408471?start=0&tstart=0

    – codingCat
    Apr 14 '16 at 19:57






  • 1





    I have discovered a workaround - Lock the laptop first. From the lock screen, hibernate the laptop. When you turn the computer on again and login the drive should return as well.

    – codingCat
    Sep 5 '16 at 5:00

















Look in device manager for the card reader then the 32gb card, double click it and see if there is a power management Tab, if there is be sure the "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power" is Unchecked.

– Moab
Apr 14 '16 at 17:55





Look in device manager for the card reader then the 32gb card, double click it and see if there is a power management Tab, if there is be sure the "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power" is Unchecked.

– Moab
Apr 14 '16 at 17:55













There is no power management tab is the listed for the drive. It did describe itself as a USB drive, so just to be extra sure I went in and disabled the "selective suspend" on all usb devices. This had no effect. While I was at it, I also checked for drive updates. There were none. And no old drives to revert to.

– codingCat
Apr 14 '16 at 18:17





There is no power management tab is the listed for the drive. It did describe itself as a USB drive, so just to be extra sure I went in and disabled the "selective suspend" on all usb devices. This had no effect. While I was at it, I also checked for drive updates. There were none. And no old drives to revert to.

– codingCat
Apr 14 '16 at 18:17













Sounds like a Windows 10 bug then.

– Moab
Apr 14 '16 at 18:47





Sounds like a Windows 10 bug then.

– Moab
Apr 14 '16 at 18:47













This issue has apparently been around for more than two years. Both apple and microsoft acknowledge it as an issue although neither has bothered to address it. A discussion on the topic at the apple discussion board can be found at the following link: discussions.apple.com/thread/5408471?start=0&tstart=0

– codingCat
Apr 14 '16 at 19:57





This issue has apparently been around for more than two years. Both apple and microsoft acknowledge it as an issue although neither has bothered to address it. A discussion on the topic at the apple discussion board can be found at the following link: discussions.apple.com/thread/5408471?start=0&tstart=0

– codingCat
Apr 14 '16 at 19:57




1




1





I have discovered a workaround - Lock the laptop first. From the lock screen, hibernate the laptop. When you turn the computer on again and login the drive should return as well.

– codingCat
Sep 5 '16 at 5:00





I have discovered a workaround - Lock the laptop first. From the lock screen, hibernate the laptop. When you turn the computer on again and login the drive should return as well.

– codingCat
Sep 5 '16 at 5:00










1 Answer
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Solution: (1) Select the SD-Card in Device Manager. Then in the "view" menu select devices by connection. Click on properties of "Apple SD Card Reader" (which is the parent of "Apple SD Card Reader USB Device"). Then in the Power-Management tab uncheck "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power". Then do a restart.
(2) This method will successfully reactivate the "card reader" or the "thunderbolt-ethernet-adapter" after hibernation without having to lock the screen.
(3) When the computer is woken up after being in sleep mode, you need to put it into hibernation. After coming out of hibernation all your devices will be there again. This is a little bit cumbersome, but this workaround will save you from restarting your computer.






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    Solution: (1) Select the SD-Card in Device Manager. Then in the "view" menu select devices by connection. Click on properties of "Apple SD Card Reader" (which is the parent of "Apple SD Card Reader USB Device"). Then in the Power-Management tab uncheck "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power". Then do a restart.
    (2) This method will successfully reactivate the "card reader" or the "thunderbolt-ethernet-adapter" after hibernation without having to lock the screen.
    (3) When the computer is woken up after being in sleep mode, you need to put it into hibernation. After coming out of hibernation all your devices will be there again. This is a little bit cumbersome, but this workaround will save you from restarting your computer.






    share|improve this answer




























      0














      Solution: (1) Select the SD-Card in Device Manager. Then in the "view" menu select devices by connection. Click on properties of "Apple SD Card Reader" (which is the parent of "Apple SD Card Reader USB Device"). Then in the Power-Management tab uncheck "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power". Then do a restart.
      (2) This method will successfully reactivate the "card reader" or the "thunderbolt-ethernet-adapter" after hibernation without having to lock the screen.
      (3) When the computer is woken up after being in sleep mode, you need to put it into hibernation. After coming out of hibernation all your devices will be there again. This is a little bit cumbersome, but this workaround will save you from restarting your computer.






      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        Solution: (1) Select the SD-Card in Device Manager. Then in the "view" menu select devices by connection. Click on properties of "Apple SD Card Reader" (which is the parent of "Apple SD Card Reader USB Device"). Then in the Power-Management tab uncheck "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power". Then do a restart.
        (2) This method will successfully reactivate the "card reader" or the "thunderbolt-ethernet-adapter" after hibernation without having to lock the screen.
        (3) When the computer is woken up after being in sleep mode, you need to put it into hibernation. After coming out of hibernation all your devices will be there again. This is a little bit cumbersome, but this workaround will save you from restarting your computer.






        share|improve this answer













        Solution: (1) Select the SD-Card in Device Manager. Then in the "view" menu select devices by connection. Click on properties of "Apple SD Card Reader" (which is the parent of "Apple SD Card Reader USB Device"). Then in the Power-Management tab uncheck "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power". Then do a restart.
        (2) This method will successfully reactivate the "card reader" or the "thunderbolt-ethernet-adapter" after hibernation without having to lock the screen.
        (3) When the computer is woken up after being in sleep mode, you need to put it into hibernation. After coming out of hibernation all your devices will be there again. This is a little bit cumbersome, but this workaround will save you from restarting your computer.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Oct 25 '17 at 12:04









        RalphRalph

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