Thanks mate, but tried that already, no luck.
Sounds a right head scratcher. I just told google reformatting from ex fat to fat 32 failed, and it suggested this
If formatting your 14.2 GB drive to
FAT32has already failed, the problem is likely not the "format" itself, but the
partition styleor the
audio file properties. Most car systems, including Skoda's (Amundsen, Columbus, or Bolero), are very picky about how the drive is built underneath.
Here are the specific technical reasons why a FAT32 drive still fails and how to fix them:
1. Change Partition Style to MBR (Most Likely Fix)
Most modern USB drives are set to a
GPTpartition style, which newer computers love but older car stereos cannot "see." You need to change it to
MBR (Master Boot Record).
- The Fix: Use a free tool like Rufus.
- When formatting in Rufus, ensure:
- Boot selection: "Non bootable"
- Partition scheme: MBR (This is the critical step)
- File system: FAT32
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2. Check for "Hidden" Partition Issues
If you previously used the drive as a bootable installer (like for Windows or Linux), it might have hidden system partitions that confuse the car's player.

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- The Fix: Use Windows Disk Management (Right-click Start > Disk Management).
- Look at the USB drive. If you see multiple "blocks" or partitions, right-click and "Delete Volume" on all of them until the whole drive is one "Unallocated" black bar. Then right-click and select New Simple Volume to format it as one clean FAT32 partition.
3. Audio File "Cleanliness"
If the car "sees" the drive but won't play songs, the files themselves might be the issue:
- Unsupported Formats: Ensure they are standard MP3 files. Some Skoda systems struggle with "Lossless" formats like FLAC or ALAC unless they are the very newest models.
- Bitrate Limits: Some older units cannot play MP3s with a bitrate higher than 320kbps or "Variable Bitrate" (VBR) files.
- Album Art/Tags: Large embedded album art (over 500x500 pixels) or complex ID3 tags can cause the system to skip the song or crash the folder.
4. Hardware Limitations
- USB 3.0 vs 2.0: Some older Skoda units (pre-2016) physically cannot provide enough power to high-speed USB 3.0/3.1 drives. If you are using a very modern, fast drive, try an older, slower USB 2.0 "thumb drive".
- The Port itself: Ensure you are using a data-capable port. In some Skodas, certain USB ports (like those in the rear) are charge-only and do not connect to the media system.
Who knows, with google those suggestions could be leading you up the garden path or completely accurate, whatever the solution my guess it will be something simple when you finally suss it.