View Full Version : How sync external hard drive to WMP
 
 SAB123
Feb 16, 2017, 09:16 AM
Through out the years I have been burning my cds and down loads to an external hard drive through WMP or copy and paste directly to ext HD. About a month ago my ext HD crashed. I have know backed up my music I have from other ext HD's to a Seagate for main ext HD. How to I sync the new hard drive to windows media player I've pressed sync with device and it say I cant. I would like to see all albums again with album covers. I would put everything in C/ drive but my music collection is very large about 1 TB. Any solutions to this problem.
 Scleros
May 12, 2017, 09:19 PM
Under Library options, the folders WMP monitors for media files can be  adjusted. Add a path to where the music is located on the external drive  and wait for everything to be ingested. The default RIP path can  likewise be adjusted to point to the root music folder (or otherwise) on  the external drive.
 
Sync syncs to portable players and such.
 
As your music library grows, you might be interested in external RAID  (redundant array of inexpensive disks) enclosures (Example: Icydock (http://www.icydock.com)  ICYRAID or ICYCube) that use multiple drives to protect against a  single drive failure (and recovery hassle). RAID 1 uses two or more  drives to mirror data across all drives. RAID 5 uses 3 or more drives to  stripe data across all drives.
 
You can start with two mirrored  drives and add drives as needed for capacity or performance. I have my  music library on a 4 drive RAID 5 array in a full tower chassis backed  up to a large esata connected drive in an Icydock enclosure that sits on  top of the tower. I rotate two backup drives in the enclosure. I use  Acronis Trueimage software for backup. The RAID functionality is  provided by an old Intel D945PVS motherboard. One caveat: if built-in  motherboard RAID is used vs. a dedicated RAID add-in adapter, a  motherboard failure then requires replacement with a similar motherboard  supporting the RAID used on the failed board.