I was able to fix the damaged USB by doing the following:
- Go in Start > write “cmd” > right-click the Windows Command Prompt and choose to run it as an Administrator.
- At the prompt, enter “DISKPART” to launch Microsoft’s disk management utility. It will take a second until it loads and when ready it will read “DISKPART>”.
- Type in “list disk” to show a list of all disk drives. If your USB key is plugged into your PC, it should be listed here, along with other drives. Note the USB key’s disk number – you can pick it out by looking at the disk capacity.
- Type “select disk n" (whatever is your USB disk number in place of "n").
- Type “clean” for the utility to clean the disk, which DiskPart will confirm.
- Create a new partition by entering “create partition primary”.
- Choose this partition with “select partition 1", and then mark it as active by typing “active”.
- Format the key by inputting “format fs=fat32". This should take a few minutes, and DiskPart will display a progress percentage.
- Lastly, type “assign” to give this USB key a drive letter and “exit” to exit DiskPart.
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