The partition table on my Inkpad 1 is also a bit of a mess. Some partitions are out of order, and overlap. So, I think this is normal on pocketbook devices, at least of that time. I used the old fdisk tool to look at and modify the partition table, as it will let you create problematic tables if you feel like it.
You should also use the ereader to format the new larger partition. The ereaders run linux, and require a particular file system format to work. Formatting the partition with Windows will probably make it unusable on the ereader.
Here is the partition table for the new 32GB card that I added:
Code:
Disk 840-c39e5f65-fw5.15.dd: 29.31 GiB, 31474057216 bytes, 61472768 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: 0x00000000
Device Boot Start End Sectors Size Id Type
840-c39e5f65-fw5.15.dd1 1009664 61472768 60463105 28.8G b W95 FAT32
840-c39e5f65-fw5.15.dd2 * 73728 139263 65536 32M 6 FAT16
840-c39e5f65-fw5.15.dd3 1 1009664 1009664 493M 85 Linux extended
840-c39e5f65-fw5.15.dd5 139264 172031 32768 16M 83 Linux
840-c39e5f65-fw5.15.dd6 172032 204799 32768 16M 83 Linux
840-c39e5f65-fw5.15.dd7 204800 275455 70656 34.5M 83 Linux
840-c39e5f65-fw5.15.dd8 275456 776191 500736 244.5M 83 Linux
840-c39e5f65-fw5.15.dd9 776192 976895 200704 98M 83 Linux
840-c39e5f65-fw5.15.dd10 976896 1009663 32768 16M 83 Linux