One thing to remember is the USB drive is "temporary storage". Windows may reassign a different drive letter than what the USB drive was first assigned. This often happens if you plug the USB drive into different USB ports but can also happen even though you connect the USB drive into the same USB port every time.

Windows allows you to permanently assign a drive letter to a USB device. Here's how to do it in Windows 10:

1) Ensure that the drive you're relettering isn't in use and that no files from that drive are open.
2) Right-click on the Start button.
3) Click Disk Management to open the Disk Management console.
4) Right-click the volume that has the drive letter you want to change.
5) Click Change Drive Letter And Paths.
6) Click the Change button.
7) Choose from a list of available drive letters. (Don't use A or B, which have historically been reserved for floppy drives and can sometime confuse older software.)
8) Click OK.
9) Click Yes if a popup windows appears asking if you really want to do this.
10) Close the Disk Management console.

Last edited by Jim Fogle; 03/20/18 06:35 AM. Reason: Provide step-by-step

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