Furthermore, a user searching for this download may actually be looking for a "mass production tool" rather than a simple driver. When a flash drive controller malfunctions, it often enters a failsafe mode. Simply reinstalling the driver may not be enough; the drive may need to be "reflashed." This process requires specialized software specific to the controller vendor (such as SMI MPTool or Phison MPALL). While these tools include drivers, they are designed for factory resetting the drive—a process that erases all data. Users often mistake these tools for simple driver fixes, leading to unintended data loss.
The primary reason a dedicated driver is not required is that operating systems include generic USB mass storage drivers that support the vast majority of flash drives. When a “NAND USB2Disk” device is connected, the system should automatically recognize it and assign a driver. If it fails to do so, the problem is unlikely to be a missing driver. Instead, it could be a corrupted firmware on the drive, a failing NAND chip, a loose connection, or a problem with the USB port or controller on the computer. In some cases, the drive may be using an uncommon or outdated controller chip that requires a vendor-specific driver, but for a generic “NAND USB2Disk,” such a driver is rarely distributed through official channels.
macOS and Linux have built-in USB storage drivers. No download is required. On Linux, the device appears as /dev/sdX automatically.
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