![]() Other than that, at most, it consumes 180 – 200MB RAM and runs seven processes in the background with minimal CPU usage. The app has no junkware, except for the recommendation to switch to Edge. I have a used iPod Classic 5th Generation (A1136) that was purchased for a parent as it is compatible with all their 40-pin gear.I wouldn’t compare it with the likes of CCleaner as PC Manager is better. One of the parents already has an identical model which was "working fine" (although hadn't been synced for over a year). By this I understand that syncing has worked on their family PC (running Windows 10) in the past, but updates may have been run / fiddling may have taken place since the last successful sync. However, I plugged in this newly purchased iPod to the family PC (via USB) and strange things began to happen. The iPod appeared to connect, then disconnect and reconnect again in a loop until eventually Windows gave up and said the device had malfunctioned. reinstall Apple Mobile Device Support driver (usbaapl64.inf) - same behaviour.uninstall iTunes, reboot, reinstall iTunes, reboot - same behaviour.different USB port on the same computer - all behave identically.different computer - tried it on another Windows 10 machine with an identical version of iTunes (12.7.4.76) - works flawlessly (with the same sync cable).iTunes doesn't detect the device at all, but once the connect/reconnect loop gives up the iPod appears as a mass storage device - but iTunes continues to ignore it. Short of a clean Windows 10 install I don't know what else to do. I feel your pain! I have an iPod Classic 160GB that is suffering the same issue on my Windows 10 PC and tablet as of a couple of weeks ago. However, my iPhone 8 is working perfectly. ![]() ![]() Like you, I have followed all the suggestions I can find on the web, including restoring my PC from a month ago and then installing an older version of iTunes with no luck. Windows currently recognizes the iPod as a USB disk, even when I switch it out of disk mode. So Windows PnP does not recognize it as a iPod, which is a software issue? So why didn't the recovery work? When I go through Device Manager to update the driver under Portable Devices to install the same driver as the iPhone is using, it tells me that it is not a valid driver for that hardware. I have run all sorts of diagnostics on the iPod with no issues. ![]()
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