I went to a show recently, and I approached the sound guy and asked him if I provided a USB stick, if he'd be able to give me a copy of the SBD recording? He agreed. At the end of the night, I drove home feeling all excited, but was met with disappointment when I plugged in the USB stick and saw a corrupted wav file with 0 kb. I'm not sure if I just got unlucky, or if this is not the proper way to capture a SBD recording?
There's a lot to unpack about why this happened -
What make and model of soundboard was it?
Was it a stereo mix file? independent track files?
Was the USB drive formatted correctly?
Did the drive run out of space while writing? A 16 gig would only make it a half hour if it was writing 32 wav files at 24/48
Did the file get properly closed before removing the USB drive?
All may not be lost - several file recovery programs can work and it may be as simple as writing a new header to the wav.
I don't do the USB stick sbd patch - partly because more than half the time I've asked it's already in use and I usually want to mix a sbd feed with mics and the clocks are off so I just patch audio out of the board into my recorder.