2014 ES 350 USB Media
#1
Intermediate
Thread Starter
2014 ES 350 USB Media
Before I bought I went out and tried the USB port on the ES 350 with UL/ML in detail. I thought I'd share some info since it seems there is confusion out there.
I currently have a Western Digital 1 TB self-powered hard drive plugged into the UBS port for my music. About 9000 songs and about 900 albums. I re-ripped all my CDs into iTunes using the highest MP3 settings I could (320 kps). When I turn on the car I can play whatever was last selected and click individual songs or one click the arrow and change albums one at a time. But, for 9000 songs, it takes the car about 10 minutes to read all the songs and then I have full access to everything, and can use speech to play an artist or album (wish I could play a song, tho!) So, this setup works fine if folks have a large music collection. Now more details. Make sure any UBS thumb drive or hard drive is formatted for FAT16/32--this is critical factor number one. This is an old PC-DOS format but Windows and Mac can both format this. I called my disk "MUSIC" to be simple. Fancy names can confuse the car. You lose some disk space formatting a 1TB drive as FAT 16/32 because each file has be to "x" big regardless of its real size, but with 1 TB, it's not an issue, really.
Next, you basically copy your iTunes files onto your hard drive. Now, I'm a software engineer so I copied files in a more complex way--details skipped. However, I did notice that if you have any "dot" files, it may confuse the car. If you are having problems with USB music, hook up the USB to your computer and either Windows or Mac terminal, see if yo have "dot" files. For Mac (or Unix systems) run "Terminal" and type "ls -la" to see if you have files like ".DS_Store" or ".Spotlight", etc. You might need to remove those. This can get rather technical if you don't know this part of using the computer, so I'll skip the lengthy, gory details. This is perhaps the biggest issue I've seen with folks having issues. The car gets confused if there are strange "dot" files laying around. ONLY MP3 files and folders should exist on the disk if at all possible.
I really just wanted to let folks know that large, bus-powered USB hard drives will work and the more music you have, the longer it takes until the "album" selection lights up, indicating the disk is all ready for surfing and voice commands.
I currently have a Western Digital 1 TB self-powered hard drive plugged into the UBS port for my music. About 9000 songs and about 900 albums. I re-ripped all my CDs into iTunes using the highest MP3 settings I could (320 kps). When I turn on the car I can play whatever was last selected and click individual songs or one click the arrow and change albums one at a time. But, for 9000 songs, it takes the car about 10 minutes to read all the songs and then I have full access to everything, and can use speech to play an artist or album (wish I could play a song, tho!) So, this setup works fine if folks have a large music collection. Now more details. Make sure any UBS thumb drive or hard drive is formatted for FAT16/32--this is critical factor number one. This is an old PC-DOS format but Windows and Mac can both format this. I called my disk "MUSIC" to be simple. Fancy names can confuse the car. You lose some disk space formatting a 1TB drive as FAT 16/32 because each file has be to "x" big regardless of its real size, but with 1 TB, it's not an issue, really.
Next, you basically copy your iTunes files onto your hard drive. Now, I'm a software engineer so I copied files in a more complex way--details skipped. However, I did notice that if you have any "dot" files, it may confuse the car. If you are having problems with USB music, hook up the USB to your computer and either Windows or Mac terminal, see if yo have "dot" files. For Mac (or Unix systems) run "Terminal" and type "ls -la" to see if you have files like ".DS_Store" or ".Spotlight", etc. You might need to remove those. This can get rather technical if you don't know this part of using the computer, so I'll skip the lengthy, gory details. This is perhaps the biggest issue I've seen with folks having issues. The car gets confused if there are strange "dot" files laying around. ONLY MP3 files and folders should exist on the disk if at all possible.
I really just wanted to let folks know that large, bus-powered USB hard drives will work and the more music you have, the longer it takes until the "album" selection lights up, indicating the disk is all ready for surfing and voice commands.
#2
Questions:
Isn't a hard drive not recommended due to moving internal parts? I would imagine it would get damaged over time due to the car's movements.
Does the loading/transfer time of 10 minutes happen everytime you start the vehicle?
Isn't there a limit on the maximum number of files you can have in a folder? You didn't address the number of file limit per folder. From my experience, when I put all my music files into one folder, not all of them appeared. I had to put them in several folders.
Isn't a hard drive not recommended due to moving internal parts? I would imagine it would get damaged over time due to the car's movements.
Does the loading/transfer time of 10 minutes happen everytime you start the vehicle?
Isn't there a limit on the maximum number of files you can have in a folder? You didn't address the number of file limit per folder. From my experience, when I put all my music files into one folder, not all of them appeared. I had to put them in several folders.
#3
I started out with a 32GB USB stick and found it was way too large. Switched with an 8GB stick and loaded 20 CDs on it which took about a third of the space. I used three levels of folders to allow for Artist, Album and Song. For me that works just fine and there is no noticeable delay in accessing the music.
#4
Not sure why you would need a 1TB drive for 9000 songs. I have more than enough space for my >1k albums, all ripped at 320kbs, on a 128GB flash drive. The only issue I have is with the number of folders, so my library cuts off at whatever the max is. I can't remember the limit, but it's posted on here somewhere. Probably the best thing for me to do, would be remove the individual album names and just combine all songs under the artist. Too lazy to do that for now, though.
#5
Intermediate
Thread Starter
I got the 1 TB drive because I like this WD version, and for $69, I think it is a steal. I have several I use for backups. I thought about 128 GB USB stick but decided against it...no real reason why. The manual says to you can have up to 3000 folders each with 255 files and no more than 9999 files total in the device. So you're limited to 9,999 songs however you do it. So I organized mine by album (folders) and then the 10-15 or so songs in each folder.
Yes, it takes about 10 minutes to read all the songs every time I turn on the car. Kind of a bummer. You'd think that it could recognize that you didn't unplug the device and could remember stuff. Oh well. But that is a lot. I'm sure most people do a 4-16 GB stick or so which doesn't take as long.
Once the music is read in, however, because the MP3s encode the album, artist, etc., you can sort and surf through all the songs/albums/artists using the Remote Touch so I don't need to sort the songs in any special folder order. Also, after the songs have loaded, you can use voice commands. You have full access to "the system".
As for moving parts, hard drives are more rugged than people give credit for. Nonetheless, the HD sits in the center console on a towel to absorb some vibration. I really don't expect any problems.
Thanks!
Yes, it takes about 10 minutes to read all the songs every time I turn on the car. Kind of a bummer. You'd think that it could recognize that you didn't unplug the device and could remember stuff. Oh well. But that is a lot. I'm sure most people do a 4-16 GB stick or so which doesn't take as long.
Once the music is read in, however, because the MP3s encode the album, artist, etc., you can sort and surf through all the songs/albums/artists using the Remote Touch so I don't need to sort the songs in any special folder order. Also, after the songs have loaded, you can use voice commands. You have full access to "the system".
As for moving parts, hard drives are more rugged than people give credit for. Nonetheless, the HD sits in the center console on a towel to absorb some vibration. I really don't expect any problems.
Thanks!
#6
Yes, it takes about 10 minutes to read all the songs every time I turn on the car. Kind of a bummer. You'd think that it could recognize that you didn't unplug the device and could remember stuff. Oh well. But that is a lot. I'm sure most people do a 4-16 GB stick or so which doesn't take as long.
Is there a setting to avoid this text notification?
#7
I hate the fact that the "transferring" text appears and stays on the navigation screen after you turn on the vehicle. This obstructs the rear-view cam, and I find myself waiting for 10 extra seconds before I can reverse as this text notification blocks a good portion of the upper part of the screen. (I hope I am making sense.) But for you, do you have that notification on for 10 minutes?
Is there a setting to avoid this text notification?
Is there a setting to avoid this text notification?
I read somewhere that you can adjust the amount of time it's displayed.
Trending Topics
#8
Lexus Test Driver
Is there a workaround to the 255 songs per folder limit? Thanks!
#9
Intermediate
Thread Starter
I don't think there are any work arounds for the limits. If you have more than 9999 songs, you'll have to break it up. Otherwise, you'll have to organize your music to 3000 folders and up to 255 songs in each folder with no more than 9999 total. Also, the folders are just "one way" to organize. After the ES reads all your music, it will let you select by Folder, Artist, or Album. So regardless how your folders are organized, you'll still be able to select by Artist or Album. Again, the folders are just "another way" to organize your music.
After driving for a couple weeks now, I'll clarify. I have about 8500 songs on my USB HD. After turning on the car, the current song plays (if I select MEDIA). However, I can only select different songs from that album or change albums one at a time via the arrows. After five minutes (I said 10 above) then the albums selection is available. So then I can select by Folder, Artist, or Album. I unplugged and plugged it back in and now the ES has to re-compute the songs for voice recognition. That seems to take forever and I don't have a single ride long enough to let it finish. Heh. I have to take my son to college in August--my first ES road trip. We'll see how long it takes for the voice recognition to catalog all the files. Otherwise, the voice recognition works for Albums and Artists just fine.
After driving for a couple weeks now, I'll clarify. I have about 8500 songs on my USB HD. After turning on the car, the current song plays (if I select MEDIA). However, I can only select different songs from that album or change albums one at a time via the arrows. After five minutes (I said 10 above) then the albums selection is available. So then I can select by Folder, Artist, or Album. I unplugged and plugged it back in and now the ES has to re-compute the songs for voice recognition. That seems to take forever and I don't have a single ride long enough to let it finish. Heh. I have to take my son to college in August--my first ES road trip. We'll see how long it takes for the voice recognition to catalog all the files. Otherwise, the voice recognition works for Albums and Artists just fine.
#10
Driver School Candidate
Join Date: Jan 2015
Location: Washington
Posts: 2
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
USB usage issues, Dot Files
New owner of a 2015 ES300h. I ran into the question of sorting, USB vs iDevice, etc very soon after purchase. Apparently the ’15 has a new infotainment system so some things are a bit different tho the underlying problem of being able to ’Browse’ the stick is the same. I am certain this will help people having trouble using USB for larger libraries. But you’ll need to muck about in Terminal to correct it. This means learning a bit about Unix/Linux commands.
— Dot Files —
Sure enough Kijug is dead on. If you have dot files, you will bog the system. Remove your dot files in every folder.
The specific culprit files are:
.Spotlight-V100
.TemporaryItems
.Trashes
.fseventsd
.DS_Store
To remove these, brush up on your unix, then see below.
After performing the removals (and discovering simply viewing again in the OS regenerated some of the dot files) I took my known cleaned 16gig & 256gig sticks with the same 1800 files on them out to the car….
16gig - browse available in ~3 minutes.
256gig - browse available in ~4 minutes.
Moving forward now with loading the remaining library and cleaning. Updates to follow.
kp3
-PS
(Next topic, in a new thread, will be, “Why is the system NOT using my artwork, sometimes?”)
— Dot Files —
Sure enough Kijug is dead on. If you have dot files, you will bog the system. Remove your dot files in every folder.
My full library currently has ~8600 titles which totals around 118GB. Expecting future additions, I purchased a 256Gb stick, threw all the files on it via a Mac running 10.9.5. The structure is Artist/Album/Tracks directly off the root of the drive. The commute to work is ~30 minutes. The ‘Browse’ button never became available.
Over the next few days I researched everywhere and tested results with smaller chunks of data (1800 titles). Here is what I found.- Even a 32gig stick with 1800 titles (6gig) on it will not be browsable in 30 minutes with dot files in some/all of the directories on it.
- Creating a master directory on your computer, cleaning that, and then copying to a stick will not prevent the creation of dot files on the target stick. (perhaps if it was done 'dd' style in a terminal?)
- Just the act of inserting a stick in your mac AND viewing (in a finder window) the root level of that stick will create dot files at at least the root level and any level you continue to browse via the computer. Browsing via the terminal has no such ill effects.
The specific culprit files are:
.Spotlight-V100
.TemporaryItems
.Trashes
.fseventsd
.DS_Store
To remove these, brush up on your unix, then see below.
Apple has assisted somewhat by building in a command called dot-clean. The two other commands were needed as dot_clean didn't remove everything.
### Dot Clean recursively from the current directory.
dot_clean -m .
### Delete recursively all .Spotlight-V100, Temp items, Trashes, .fseventsd files.
rm -rf .Spotlight-V100 .TemporaryItems .Trashes .fseventsd
### Delete recursively all DS Store files.
find . -name '*.DS_Store' -type f -delete
There may be other better ways to perform the same functions. I am far from a unix expert but this worked. Experts please chime in.### Dot Clean recursively from the current directory.
dot_clean -m .
### Delete recursively all .Spotlight-V100, Temp items, Trashes, .fseventsd files.
rm -rf .Spotlight-V100 .TemporaryItems .Trashes .fseventsd
### Delete recursively all DS Store files.
find . -name '*.DS_Store' -type f -delete
After performing the removals (and discovering simply viewing again in the OS regenerated some of the dot files) I took my known cleaned 16gig & 256gig sticks with the same 1800 files on them out to the car….
16gig - browse available in ~3 minutes.
256gig - browse available in ~4 minutes.
Moving forward now with loading the remaining library and cleaning. Updates to follow.
kp3
-PS
(Next topic, in a new thread, will be, “Why is the system NOT using my artwork, sometimes?”)
Last edited by kp3; 01-11-15 at 07:19 PM.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
djlehman
ES - 6th Gen (2013-2018)
2
06-20-21 12:36 PM