1-4 of 4 Answers
Fat 32 format is the default for these modules, you can reformat 2 other ways. My car media player will play whatever music and video files i copy to these drives in any folder or format (wmv,mp3,mp4,mpeg,avi just to list a few).
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Not playlists by themselves, no, but you'll be able to copy whatever actual .mp3 music files and their folders you've got directly onto these drives -- songs are typically under 10 mb apiece so you can do the math :-). You'll just need to erase and reformat the drives on your computer first to the older Fat32 format. I happen to use a Mac, where the built-in Disc Doctor app does that in about a minute. There, that format is called MS-DOS (FAT), not these flash drive's default ExFAT or Mac's own Mac OS (Extended). Right now I've got a great mix of hundreds of hot summer tunes on a pair of these plugged into my 2007 minivan and 2013 compact - all in a under 1 gig. B-52's, Beach Boys, Bob Marley, James Brown ... and that's just the "B"s.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Most USB drives are formated for FAT. However playlists for iTunes only work with Apple products, so you can't place songs on a USB drive to play in your car this way. You would need to purchase the files in MP3 format or buy the CD for the songs and then you should be able to play in your car.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.You can use these usb for this : they can be reformatted to FAT. You may want to look up a guide though - I don't believe you can simply drag and drop.
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