When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.
I'm sure that most of you/all of you know this, but just in case: never 'hard' format a card if it has data on it that you want to keep. Copy or transfer the data to another storage device first. Once you format or re-format a card ('hard' format), any data residing on the card will be lost.
As mentioned by a PP, you can buy cards bigger than 32GB and format with aftermarket software. I think this has been posted maybe here or in the C7 Tech, but I created a tech tip for other interested members in our local club. It is attached below. If you try it and it doesn't work for you, PM me and let me know what happened, so I can correct the tech tip and get it so anyone can read it and use it.
Keeps tabs on the young drivers of the car by the FOB they use.
Have to be honest - I didn't know "Teen mode" existed. Not that anyone under age would be driving my car, but that's a cool feature in any event.
And the availability of an SD Card is practically everywhere, so in case you need one immediately, BRCC pretty much nailed it: Target, Walmart, I'm sure Best Buy has them alongside many office supply stores (Staples, Office Depot/Max, FedEx post offices), and at decent prices.
[QUOTE=muncie21;1596315398]Not sure that FAT 32 is viewable by a Mac or how to format it. On a Windows based machine, insert the SD card and pull up the Windows Explorer view. Right click on the 'drive' for your SD card and you'll get an option to 'format' it.
Easy to reformat on a Mac using the native Disk Utility app.
Finder - Applications - Utilities - Disk Utility