? what os are you using.

Have you checked the md5sums of the files you have downloaded ?

On Debian I prefer using the bmap tool.

the swap file is 1G (see below)
You can use the following commands to copy to sd-card:

 mib@debian9-ws:~/Development/MK-Image-gen$ md5sum 
mksocfpga_jessie_machinekit_4.1.22-2017-08-30-de10-nano_sd.img.bmap
a99856f140727124b09daa7fc910e3f4 
 mksocfpga_jessie_machinekit_4.1.22-2017-08-30-de10-nano_sd.img.bmap

mib@debian9-ws:~/Development/MK-Image-gen$ md5sum 
mksocfpga_jessie_machinekit_4.1.22-2017-08-30-de10-nano_sd.img.tar.bz2
5bd1d319bac2cb23e3db279970626b5d 
 mksocfpga_jessie_machinekit_4.1.22-2017-08-30-de10-nano_sd.img.tar.bz2

sudo apt install bmap-tools
sudo apt install bzip2

mib@debian9-ws:~/Development/MK-Image-gen$ lsblk
NAME        MAJ:MIN RM   SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
loop0         7:0    0   5,7G  0 loop /tmp/qt_5.7.1-img
sdb           8:16   1   7,4G  0 disk 
├─sdb1        8:17   1     1M  0 part 
├─sdb2        8:18   1     1G  0 part 
└─sdb3        8:19   1   5,7G  0 part 
nvme1n1     259:0    0 953,9G  0 disk 
├─nvme1n1p4 259:1    0   512M  0 part 
├─nvme1n1p5 259:2    0 874,3G  0 part 
└─nvme1n1p6 259:3    0  15,3G  0 part 
nvme0n1     259:4    0   477G  0 disk 
├─nvme0n1p1 259:5    0   512M  0 part /boot/efi
├─nvme0n1p2 259:6    0  59,6G  0 part /
├─nvme0n1p3 259:7    0  16,2G  0 part [SWAP]
└─nvme0n1p4 259:8    0 400,6G  0 part /home


mib@debian9-ws:~/Development/MK-Image-gen$ sudo bmaptool copy 
mksocfpga_jessie_machinekit_4.1.22-2017-08-30-de10-nano_sd.img.tar.bz2 
/dev/sdb
[sudo] password for mib: 
bmaptool: info: discovered bmap file 
'mksocfpga_jessie_machinekit_4.1.22-2017-08-30-de10-nano_sd.img.bmap'
bmaptool: info: block map format version 2.0
bmaptool: info: 1740800 blocks of size 4096 (6.6 GiB), mapped 564041 blocks 
(2.2 GiB or 32.4%)
bmaptool: info: copying image 
'mksocfpga_jessie_machinekit_4.1.22-2017-08-30-de10-nano_sd.img.tar.bz2' to 
block device '/dev/sdb' using bmap file 
'mksocfpga_jessie_machinekit_4.1.22-2017-08-30-de10-nano_sd.img.bmap'
bmaptool: info: 100% copied
bmaptool: info: synchronizing '/dev/sdb'
bmaptool: info: copying time: 37.5s, copying speed 58.8 MiB/sec
mib@debian9-ws:~/Development/MK-Image-gen$ lsblk
NAME        MAJ:MIN RM   SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
loop0         7:0    0   5,7G  0 loop /tmp/qt_5.7.1-img
sdb           8:16   1   7,4G  0 disk 
├─sdb1        8:17   1     1M  0 part 
├─sdb2        8:18   1     1G  0 part 
└─sdb3        8:19   1   5,7G  0 part 
...
mib@debian9-ws:~/Development/MK-Image-gen$ sudo fdisk -l /dev/sdb
Disk /dev/sdb: 7,4 GiB, 7948206080 bytes, 15523840 sectors
Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disklabel type: dos
Disk identifier: 0x55e7ded8

Device     Boot   Start      End  Sectors  Size Id Type
/dev/sdb1          2048     4095     2048    1M a2 unknown
/dev/sdb2          4096  2101247  2097152    1G 82 Linux swap / Solaris
/dev/sdb3       2101248 13926399 11825152  5,7G 83 Linux



On Friday, 1 September 2017 01:03:30 UTC+2, mugginsac wrote:
>
> Michael,
>
> How much swap did you add? I am trying to get my image to load but my SD 
> writing programs don't like your image. I use  ApplePi Baker or Etcher. 
> Etcher complains about no partition table. ApplePi Baker wrote an SD image 
> but Linux thinks it is a CD. 
>
> How do you format the uSD card??
>
> sudo sfdisk ${DISK} <<-__EOF__
> 1M,1M,0xA2,
> ---------------------------swap format goes here----------------------
> 2M,,,*
> __EOF__
>  
>

-- 
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