
Carefully open the plastic outer casing of the flash drive to expose the circuit board.
The SSS6698-BB controller is a reliable but common point of failure for budget flash drives. While finding free, dedicated repair tools ( MP Tools ) requires visiting niche forums and developer sites, these tools can effectively bring a "dead" drive back to life. Always ensure you have the correct firmware for your NAND chip to avoid permanently damaging your drive.
: Try using a different USB port, preferably on the back of a desktop motherboard. Avoid USB hubs.
Disclaimer: Modifying firmware carries risk. The author is not responsible for data loss or hardware damage. Always use free tools from verified community sources.
Manually edit your chosen .INI file to reference a compatible flash configuration layout.
Using the wrong configuration or a mismatched .BIN file can render a drive permanently unusable. The process involves writing directly to the controller's firmware, and a mistake can "brick" the drive beyond repair.
Open ChipGenius to confirm your drive uses the SSS6698-BB controller and locate the Flash ID.
Run the utility as an administrator. It should detect the drive, even if the capacity is reported incorrectly.
If you have a drive with this controller that is not working (e.g., showing 0 bytes, asking to format constantly, or not recognized by Windows), you can look for .
The drive is detected as "Generic USB Device" but cannot be opened. Windows demands that you "Insert a disk into USB Drive."
~30% for logical corruption. Lower if the controller firmware is truly dead.