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Can't open USB drives, Windows 10, code 19


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I am having a bizarre problem with my USB ports on my computer. They aren't working. I have 4 ports, and the only device that works in any of them is my mouse - an older Razer Death Adder 3.5G. If I plug any other device in, Windows plays that nice "connecting" sound, then instantly plays the rude "disconnecting" sound and disconnects. Sometimes it connects/disconnects a few times. Afterwards I go to device manager and, if the device is a external drive I get the error under the Storage controller section, and if it was a mouse, I get the same error under the Human Interface Devices section.



Error:




Windows cannot start this hardware device because its configuration
information (in the registry) is incomplete or damaged. (Code 19)




code19



I have looked at the registry following the advice given on other questions, but none of the registry keys suggested have UpperFilters or LowerFilters that were values that should be deleted.
Here are a couple of the keys I checked.



HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlClass{4D36E965-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318}



HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlClass{4d36e978-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318}



Anyone have any suggestions?





Edit:



I am able to make my devices work, if after they are plugged in and I am shown the yellow exclamation mark, I follow these steps. However, once I unplug/plugin again I have to go through these steps again. Sometimes device manager doesn't find the device automatically and I have to right click and "scan for hardware changes."




  • Right click on the device.

  • "Update driver".

  • "Browse my computer for
    driver software".

  • "Let me pick from a list of available drivers on my
    computer".

  • Then, in the list of available drivers I can choose the
    appropriate one.


    • For a mouse: "USB Input Device".

    • For a HDD: "USB
      Attached SCSI (UAS) Mass Storage Device".




That works, but if I have to do that every time I plug anything in, it is going to get tiresome.










share|improve this question
















bumped to the homepage by Community yesterday


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
















  • I suggest you follow this troubleshooting and update your question accordingly: lifewire.com/how-to-fix-code-19-errors-2623182

    – user772515
    Jan 29 '18 at 23:47


















0















I am having a bizarre problem with my USB ports on my computer. They aren't working. I have 4 ports, and the only device that works in any of them is my mouse - an older Razer Death Adder 3.5G. If I plug any other device in, Windows plays that nice "connecting" sound, then instantly plays the rude "disconnecting" sound and disconnects. Sometimes it connects/disconnects a few times. Afterwards I go to device manager and, if the device is a external drive I get the error under the Storage controller section, and if it was a mouse, I get the same error under the Human Interface Devices section.



Error:




Windows cannot start this hardware device because its configuration
information (in the registry) is incomplete or damaged. (Code 19)




code19



I have looked at the registry following the advice given on other questions, but none of the registry keys suggested have UpperFilters or LowerFilters that were values that should be deleted.
Here are a couple of the keys I checked.



HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlClass{4D36E965-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318}



HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlClass{4d36e978-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318}



Anyone have any suggestions?





Edit:



I am able to make my devices work, if after they are plugged in and I am shown the yellow exclamation mark, I follow these steps. However, once I unplug/plugin again I have to go through these steps again. Sometimes device manager doesn't find the device automatically and I have to right click and "scan for hardware changes."




  • Right click on the device.

  • "Update driver".

  • "Browse my computer for
    driver software".

  • "Let me pick from a list of available drivers on my
    computer".

  • Then, in the list of available drivers I can choose the
    appropriate one.


    • For a mouse: "USB Input Device".

    • For a HDD: "USB
      Attached SCSI (UAS) Mass Storage Device".




That works, but if I have to do that every time I plug anything in, it is going to get tiresome.










share|improve this question
















bumped to the homepage by Community yesterday


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
















  • I suggest you follow this troubleshooting and update your question accordingly: lifewire.com/how-to-fix-code-19-errors-2623182

    – user772515
    Jan 29 '18 at 23:47














0












0








0








I am having a bizarre problem with my USB ports on my computer. They aren't working. I have 4 ports, and the only device that works in any of them is my mouse - an older Razer Death Adder 3.5G. If I plug any other device in, Windows plays that nice "connecting" sound, then instantly plays the rude "disconnecting" sound and disconnects. Sometimes it connects/disconnects a few times. Afterwards I go to device manager and, if the device is a external drive I get the error under the Storage controller section, and if it was a mouse, I get the same error under the Human Interface Devices section.



Error:




Windows cannot start this hardware device because its configuration
information (in the registry) is incomplete or damaged. (Code 19)




code19



I have looked at the registry following the advice given on other questions, but none of the registry keys suggested have UpperFilters or LowerFilters that were values that should be deleted.
Here are a couple of the keys I checked.



HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlClass{4D36E965-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318}



HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlClass{4d36e978-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318}



Anyone have any suggestions?





Edit:



I am able to make my devices work, if after they are plugged in and I am shown the yellow exclamation mark, I follow these steps. However, once I unplug/plugin again I have to go through these steps again. Sometimes device manager doesn't find the device automatically and I have to right click and "scan for hardware changes."




  • Right click on the device.

  • "Update driver".

  • "Browse my computer for
    driver software".

  • "Let me pick from a list of available drivers on my
    computer".

  • Then, in the list of available drivers I can choose the
    appropriate one.


    • For a mouse: "USB Input Device".

    • For a HDD: "USB
      Attached SCSI (UAS) Mass Storage Device".




That works, but if I have to do that every time I plug anything in, it is going to get tiresome.










share|improve this question
















I am having a bizarre problem with my USB ports on my computer. They aren't working. I have 4 ports, and the only device that works in any of them is my mouse - an older Razer Death Adder 3.5G. If I plug any other device in, Windows plays that nice "connecting" sound, then instantly plays the rude "disconnecting" sound and disconnects. Sometimes it connects/disconnects a few times. Afterwards I go to device manager and, if the device is a external drive I get the error under the Storage controller section, and if it was a mouse, I get the same error under the Human Interface Devices section.



Error:




Windows cannot start this hardware device because its configuration
information (in the registry) is incomplete or damaged. (Code 19)




code19



I have looked at the registry following the advice given on other questions, but none of the registry keys suggested have UpperFilters or LowerFilters that were values that should be deleted.
Here are a couple of the keys I checked.



HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlClass{4D36E965-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318}



HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlClass{4d36e978-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318}



Anyone have any suggestions?





Edit:



I am able to make my devices work, if after they are plugged in and I am shown the yellow exclamation mark, I follow these steps. However, once I unplug/plugin again I have to go through these steps again. Sometimes device manager doesn't find the device automatically and I have to right click and "scan for hardware changes."




  • Right click on the device.

  • "Update driver".

  • "Browse my computer for
    driver software".

  • "Let me pick from a list of available drivers on my
    computer".

  • Then, in the list of available drivers I can choose the
    appropriate one.


    • For a mouse: "USB Input Device".

    • For a HDD: "USB
      Attached SCSI (UAS) Mass Storage Device".




That works, but if I have to do that every time I plug anything in, it is going to get tiresome.







windows windows-10 usb windows-registry






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 30 '18 at 18:19







blackandorangecat

















asked Jan 29 '18 at 21:57









blackandorangecatblackandorangecat

192316




192316





bumped to the homepage by Community yesterday


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







bumped to the homepage by Community yesterday


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.















  • I suggest you follow this troubleshooting and update your question accordingly: lifewire.com/how-to-fix-code-19-errors-2623182

    – user772515
    Jan 29 '18 at 23:47



















  • I suggest you follow this troubleshooting and update your question accordingly: lifewire.com/how-to-fix-code-19-errors-2623182

    – user772515
    Jan 29 '18 at 23:47

















I suggest you follow this troubleshooting and update your question accordingly: lifewire.com/how-to-fix-code-19-errors-2623182

– user772515
Jan 29 '18 at 23:47





I suggest you follow this troubleshooting and update your question accordingly: lifewire.com/how-to-fix-code-19-errors-2623182

– user772515
Jan 29 '18 at 23:47










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














IF all the devices can installed and work properly on other Computer, let's try to reinstall USB hub driver to check the results:



Uninstalling USB Root Hubs: Uninstalling USB Root Hubs forces the system to reinstall the root hubs next time the computer is started. Use the following steps to uninstall USB Root Hubs:




  1. Disconnect all USB devices connected to the computer except a USB mouse and keyboard (if in use). This includes hubs, thumb drives, printers, and cameras.

  2. In Windows, search for and open Device Manager. The Device Manager window opens.

  3. Double-click Universal Serial Bus Controllers to expand the list.


  4. Right-click the first USB Root Hub in the list, then select Uninstall.


  5. Click OK to confirm. Continue uninstalling all USB Root Hubs listed.


  6. Close Device Manager and restart the computer, the driver could be reinstalled automatically.


Also, to make sure if there is any corrupted system files related to this issue, run commands below to do the repair:



SFC /SCANNOW



Reconnect the USB device that was having problems and test it to see if it works when you connect your devices again.





Try to disable USB suspend feature:




  1. Select the Start button, type power plan in the Search box, and then select Choose a power plan.


  2. Next to your currently selected plan, select Change Plan Settings.


  3. Select Change advanced power settings.


  4. Select the box to expand USB Settings > USB selective suspend settings.


  5. Select Plugged in, select the drop down menu, and then select disabled.


  6. If you're using a laptop, select Battery, select the drop down menu, and then select disabled.


  7. Select Apply > OK.







share|improve this answer


























  • After I follow your steps the devices show up at the bottom, in a list titled "Unknown". I then follow the same steps I listed in the edit to my original question and they work until I unplug them.

    – blackandorangecat
    Jan 30 '18 at 18:15











  • After what you have done, have you tried to unplug and plug in to check the device status?

    – Kattee Lee
    Jan 31 '18 at 9:05











  • As soon as I unplug, plug back in, the computer has forgotten about it and I have to reinstall the driver.

    – blackandorangecat
    Jan 31 '18 at 17:23











  • Try to disable USB suspend, if issue persists, please help to collect C:WindowsINFsetupapi.dev.log, setupapi.setup.log onto Network drive and share the link here.

    – Kattee Lee
    Feb 1 '18 at 3:23












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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














IF all the devices can installed and work properly on other Computer, let's try to reinstall USB hub driver to check the results:



Uninstalling USB Root Hubs: Uninstalling USB Root Hubs forces the system to reinstall the root hubs next time the computer is started. Use the following steps to uninstall USB Root Hubs:




  1. Disconnect all USB devices connected to the computer except a USB mouse and keyboard (if in use). This includes hubs, thumb drives, printers, and cameras.

  2. In Windows, search for and open Device Manager. The Device Manager window opens.

  3. Double-click Universal Serial Bus Controllers to expand the list.


  4. Right-click the first USB Root Hub in the list, then select Uninstall.


  5. Click OK to confirm. Continue uninstalling all USB Root Hubs listed.


  6. Close Device Manager and restart the computer, the driver could be reinstalled automatically.


Also, to make sure if there is any corrupted system files related to this issue, run commands below to do the repair:



SFC /SCANNOW



Reconnect the USB device that was having problems and test it to see if it works when you connect your devices again.





Try to disable USB suspend feature:




  1. Select the Start button, type power plan in the Search box, and then select Choose a power plan.


  2. Next to your currently selected plan, select Change Plan Settings.


  3. Select Change advanced power settings.


  4. Select the box to expand USB Settings > USB selective suspend settings.


  5. Select Plugged in, select the drop down menu, and then select disabled.


  6. If you're using a laptop, select Battery, select the drop down menu, and then select disabled.


  7. Select Apply > OK.







share|improve this answer


























  • After I follow your steps the devices show up at the bottom, in a list titled "Unknown". I then follow the same steps I listed in the edit to my original question and they work until I unplug them.

    – blackandorangecat
    Jan 30 '18 at 18:15











  • After what you have done, have you tried to unplug and plug in to check the device status?

    – Kattee Lee
    Jan 31 '18 at 9:05











  • As soon as I unplug, plug back in, the computer has forgotten about it and I have to reinstall the driver.

    – blackandorangecat
    Jan 31 '18 at 17:23











  • Try to disable USB suspend, if issue persists, please help to collect C:WindowsINFsetupapi.dev.log, setupapi.setup.log onto Network drive and share the link here.

    – Kattee Lee
    Feb 1 '18 at 3:23
















0














IF all the devices can installed and work properly on other Computer, let's try to reinstall USB hub driver to check the results:



Uninstalling USB Root Hubs: Uninstalling USB Root Hubs forces the system to reinstall the root hubs next time the computer is started. Use the following steps to uninstall USB Root Hubs:




  1. Disconnect all USB devices connected to the computer except a USB mouse and keyboard (if in use). This includes hubs, thumb drives, printers, and cameras.

  2. In Windows, search for and open Device Manager. The Device Manager window opens.

  3. Double-click Universal Serial Bus Controllers to expand the list.


  4. Right-click the first USB Root Hub in the list, then select Uninstall.


  5. Click OK to confirm. Continue uninstalling all USB Root Hubs listed.


  6. Close Device Manager and restart the computer, the driver could be reinstalled automatically.


Also, to make sure if there is any corrupted system files related to this issue, run commands below to do the repair:



SFC /SCANNOW



Reconnect the USB device that was having problems and test it to see if it works when you connect your devices again.





Try to disable USB suspend feature:




  1. Select the Start button, type power plan in the Search box, and then select Choose a power plan.


  2. Next to your currently selected plan, select Change Plan Settings.


  3. Select Change advanced power settings.


  4. Select the box to expand USB Settings > USB selective suspend settings.


  5. Select Plugged in, select the drop down menu, and then select disabled.


  6. If you're using a laptop, select Battery, select the drop down menu, and then select disabled.


  7. Select Apply > OK.







share|improve this answer


























  • After I follow your steps the devices show up at the bottom, in a list titled "Unknown". I then follow the same steps I listed in the edit to my original question and they work until I unplug them.

    – blackandorangecat
    Jan 30 '18 at 18:15











  • After what you have done, have you tried to unplug and plug in to check the device status?

    – Kattee Lee
    Jan 31 '18 at 9:05











  • As soon as I unplug, plug back in, the computer has forgotten about it and I have to reinstall the driver.

    – blackandorangecat
    Jan 31 '18 at 17:23











  • Try to disable USB suspend, if issue persists, please help to collect C:WindowsINFsetupapi.dev.log, setupapi.setup.log onto Network drive and share the link here.

    – Kattee Lee
    Feb 1 '18 at 3:23














0












0








0







IF all the devices can installed and work properly on other Computer, let's try to reinstall USB hub driver to check the results:



Uninstalling USB Root Hubs: Uninstalling USB Root Hubs forces the system to reinstall the root hubs next time the computer is started. Use the following steps to uninstall USB Root Hubs:




  1. Disconnect all USB devices connected to the computer except a USB mouse and keyboard (if in use). This includes hubs, thumb drives, printers, and cameras.

  2. In Windows, search for and open Device Manager. The Device Manager window opens.

  3. Double-click Universal Serial Bus Controllers to expand the list.


  4. Right-click the first USB Root Hub in the list, then select Uninstall.


  5. Click OK to confirm. Continue uninstalling all USB Root Hubs listed.


  6. Close Device Manager and restart the computer, the driver could be reinstalled automatically.


Also, to make sure if there is any corrupted system files related to this issue, run commands below to do the repair:



SFC /SCANNOW



Reconnect the USB device that was having problems and test it to see if it works when you connect your devices again.





Try to disable USB suspend feature:




  1. Select the Start button, type power plan in the Search box, and then select Choose a power plan.


  2. Next to your currently selected plan, select Change Plan Settings.


  3. Select Change advanced power settings.


  4. Select the box to expand USB Settings > USB selective suspend settings.


  5. Select Plugged in, select the drop down menu, and then select disabled.


  6. If you're using a laptop, select Battery, select the drop down menu, and then select disabled.


  7. Select Apply > OK.







share|improve this answer















IF all the devices can installed and work properly on other Computer, let's try to reinstall USB hub driver to check the results:



Uninstalling USB Root Hubs: Uninstalling USB Root Hubs forces the system to reinstall the root hubs next time the computer is started. Use the following steps to uninstall USB Root Hubs:




  1. Disconnect all USB devices connected to the computer except a USB mouse and keyboard (if in use). This includes hubs, thumb drives, printers, and cameras.

  2. In Windows, search for and open Device Manager. The Device Manager window opens.

  3. Double-click Universal Serial Bus Controllers to expand the list.


  4. Right-click the first USB Root Hub in the list, then select Uninstall.


  5. Click OK to confirm. Continue uninstalling all USB Root Hubs listed.


  6. Close Device Manager and restart the computer, the driver could be reinstalled automatically.


Also, to make sure if there is any corrupted system files related to this issue, run commands below to do the repair:



SFC /SCANNOW



Reconnect the USB device that was having problems and test it to see if it works when you connect your devices again.





Try to disable USB suspend feature:




  1. Select the Start button, type power plan in the Search box, and then select Choose a power plan.


  2. Next to your currently selected plan, select Change Plan Settings.


  3. Select Change advanced power settings.


  4. Select the box to expand USB Settings > USB selective suspend settings.


  5. Select Plugged in, select the drop down menu, and then select disabled.


  6. If you're using a laptop, select Battery, select the drop down menu, and then select disabled.


  7. Select Apply > OK.








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Feb 1 '18 at 3:21

























answered Jan 30 '18 at 7:45









Kattee LeeKattee Lee

47535




47535













  • After I follow your steps the devices show up at the bottom, in a list titled "Unknown". I then follow the same steps I listed in the edit to my original question and they work until I unplug them.

    – blackandorangecat
    Jan 30 '18 at 18:15











  • After what you have done, have you tried to unplug and plug in to check the device status?

    – Kattee Lee
    Jan 31 '18 at 9:05











  • As soon as I unplug, plug back in, the computer has forgotten about it and I have to reinstall the driver.

    – blackandorangecat
    Jan 31 '18 at 17:23











  • Try to disable USB suspend, if issue persists, please help to collect C:WindowsINFsetupapi.dev.log, setupapi.setup.log onto Network drive and share the link here.

    – Kattee Lee
    Feb 1 '18 at 3:23



















  • After I follow your steps the devices show up at the bottom, in a list titled "Unknown". I then follow the same steps I listed in the edit to my original question and they work until I unplug them.

    – blackandorangecat
    Jan 30 '18 at 18:15











  • After what you have done, have you tried to unplug and plug in to check the device status?

    – Kattee Lee
    Jan 31 '18 at 9:05











  • As soon as I unplug, plug back in, the computer has forgotten about it and I have to reinstall the driver.

    – blackandorangecat
    Jan 31 '18 at 17:23











  • Try to disable USB suspend, if issue persists, please help to collect C:WindowsINFsetupapi.dev.log, setupapi.setup.log onto Network drive and share the link here.

    – Kattee Lee
    Feb 1 '18 at 3:23

















After I follow your steps the devices show up at the bottom, in a list titled "Unknown". I then follow the same steps I listed in the edit to my original question and they work until I unplug them.

– blackandorangecat
Jan 30 '18 at 18:15





After I follow your steps the devices show up at the bottom, in a list titled "Unknown". I then follow the same steps I listed in the edit to my original question and they work until I unplug them.

– blackandorangecat
Jan 30 '18 at 18:15













After what you have done, have you tried to unplug and plug in to check the device status?

– Kattee Lee
Jan 31 '18 at 9:05





After what you have done, have you tried to unplug and plug in to check the device status?

– Kattee Lee
Jan 31 '18 at 9:05













As soon as I unplug, plug back in, the computer has forgotten about it and I have to reinstall the driver.

– blackandorangecat
Jan 31 '18 at 17:23





As soon as I unplug, plug back in, the computer has forgotten about it and I have to reinstall the driver.

– blackandorangecat
Jan 31 '18 at 17:23













Try to disable USB suspend, if issue persists, please help to collect C:WindowsINFsetupapi.dev.log, setupapi.setup.log onto Network drive and share the link here.

– Kattee Lee
Feb 1 '18 at 3:23





Try to disable USB suspend, if issue persists, please help to collect C:WindowsINFsetupapi.dev.log, setupapi.setup.log onto Network drive and share the link here.

– Kattee Lee
Feb 1 '18 at 3:23


















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