August-14th-2018, 11:14 AM
Hi there,
I watched your screen shot. Based on the screen shot I cannot detect whether you are using a netPI RTE 3 or CORE 3. Please comment on this question.
I gree that your netPI must have recognized the USB stick correctly. So this is not the problem I and other users have seen before that a USB stick was basically not recognized at all.
This time here there seems to be an inconsistency with the image found on the stick. I tried my best to get it resonstructed with my netPI, but independend which of the files I made corrupt on my image netPI bootloader either detects it and stop at a different position or doesn't boot the stick... but in all cases I cannot make it happen like your screen shot shows.
What I can see from the screen shot is that the "data hash" check fails. I am also wondering why the fitimage is indicated as 22798106 bytes while for the netPI RTE 3 for example the file is 22780242 bytes long on the image.
Are you sure that you copied the files in a 1:1 copy onto your usb stick? Did you try another stick?
I watched your screen shot. Based on the screen shot I cannot detect whether you are using a netPI RTE 3 or CORE 3. Please comment on this question.
I gree that your netPI must have recognized the USB stick correctly. So this is not the problem I and other users have seen before that a USB stick was basically not recognized at all.
This time here there seems to be an inconsistency with the image found on the stick. I tried my best to get it resonstructed with my netPI, but independend which of the files I made corrupt on my image netPI bootloader either detects it and stop at a different position or doesn't boot the stick... but in all cases I cannot make it happen like your screen shot shows.
What I can see from the screen shot is that the "data hash" check fails. I am also wondering why the fitimage is indicated as 22798106 bytes while for the netPI RTE 3 for example the file is 22780242 bytes long on the image.
Are you sure that you copied the files in a 1:1 copy onto your usb stick? Did you try another stick?
„You never fail until you stop trying.“, Albert Einstein (1879 - 1955)