I installed Windows 10 recently and have found that my Samsung M3 Portable 1 TB is not working correctly. I have installed Samsung Drive Manager. The drive shows up on This PC, Disk Management, and Device Manager, but the Samsung Drive Manager is blank.
Brithny· Answered on Jan 04, 2024
Suppose your Samsung M3 Portable 1TB external hard drive not showing up on Drive Manager on your Windows 10 PC; don't worry! The good news is that It sounds like the issue is with the Samsung Drive Manager software but not the drive itself. Why? Because it can be recognized by the Disk Management on your computer, that means you can access files stored on your external hard drive.
External hard drives are often used to store more important data. If you are worried about data loss on your Samsung M3 Portable 1TB external hard drive, then we recommend a very useful and effective data recovery tool, EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard Pro.
With the EaseUS external hard drive recovery software on your Windows 10 computer, you can recover your Samsung M3 Portable 1TB external hard drive in three steps. Check out!
Step 1. Launch the EaseUS data recovery software on your computer and connect your Samsung external hard drive to it.
Step 2. Choose the Samsung M3 Portable external hard drive in the left partition list in the software window. Click 'Scan'.
Step 3. You can see the list of recoverable data found by the EaseUS software. Select what you want and click 'Recover'.
After recovering your Samsung M3 Portable 1TB external hard drive, you can plug it out of your computer and restart your computer to try again without worrying about data loss.
If your external hard drive still can't be recognized by the Samsung Drive Manager while it shows up in 'This PC' and 'Disk Managent', consider reinstalling the Samsung Drive Manager to check if it normally works.
Read More: Fixed: USB/External Hard Drive Shows in Device Manager Not This PC
Use EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard to recover deleted or lost files easily and quickly.
Tutorials on how to recover lost, deleted, or formatted data from HDD, SSD, USB, SD card, or other storage media on Windows and Mac.