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October 10th, 2007 15:00

200 GB only reading as 30 GB

My hard drive recently went bad and I had to replace it with a new drive. Th old drive that went bad was a 30GB drive, the new one is a 200GB. Everything went well with the installation of the new hard drive but now when I right-click on my "C" drive it states that it is 32GB, why is it not showing 200GB.

My system:
Dell Dimension 2350
Windows XP Home
 
New Hard Drive: Maxtor
 
I installed the new drive and proceeded to download Service Pack 2 to correct the problem as some of you suggested, that did not work. Also, the drive was formatted in the NTSF format, not Fat 32.
 
Any suggestions

9.3K Posts

October 10th, 2007 16:00

It sounds like during the install you only created a 32GB partition. Check the disk management and you'll see the unallocated space. Right click on it and select to create a new partition. This will add a D- or E-drive (depending on which drive letters you are already using).

You may also want to post this in TechTalk -> Desktops.

9 Legend

 • 

47K Posts

October 24th, 2007 17:00

Windows XP doesnt support 48 bit LBA.

Creating a partition with Non SP2 will make a bad partition.

Microsoft Windows XP Service Pack 1 (SP1)(SP2)
48-bit Logical Block Addressing (LBA) support

Fdisk Does Not Recognize Full Size of Hard Disks Larger than 64 GB
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/263044


2000/XP/2003 will only format 32 megs for a FAT32 partition.

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/305098

NOTE: If you enable 48-bit LBA ATAPI support by editing the preceding registry key, but your system does not meet the minimum requirements, you may observe the following behaviors:

• Operating systems that do not have 48-bit LBA support enabled by default (such as Microsoft Windows 98, Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition (Me), or Windows 2000) that are installed on a partition that spans beyond the 28-bit LBA boundary (137GB) will experience data corruption or data loss. • The installation of operating systems that do not have 48-bit LBA support enabled by default (such as Windows 98, Windows Me, or Windows 2000) on a partition that is beyond the 28-bit LBA boundary (137 GB) is unsuccessful and leaves behind a temporary installation folder. • If you install hotfixes that enable 48-bit LBA before you install Windows 2000 Service Pack 3 (SP3), the appropriate registry key will be automatically created during the installation of SP3 to preserve the data integrity of the hard disk. • After you enable 48-bit LBA support by adding the appropriate registry key, data corruption may occur if you remove the registry key or if you remove (uninstall) SP3 for Windows 2000. • If you install a copy of Windows 2000 that includes SP3 (SP3 integrated) on a large hard disk that has already been preformatted by using a 48-bit LBA-enabled operating system, the ATAPI subsystem may report hard-disk space greater than that which is addressable without the 48-bit LBA support (larger than approximately 137 GB) during the text-mode portion of Setup. In this case, the hard disk's partition table information has already been created. To fix the incorrect disk information, delete the partition by using either a disk partitioning utility or by deleting and then re-creating the partition during the text-mode portion of Setup. After you create the new partition, quit Setup by pressing F3, and then restart the Windows installation process. The ATAPI subsystem now correctly shows approximately 137 GB of hard disk space. • The EnableBigLba registry value is disabled:

If you have a 48-bit compatible BIOS that can support a hard disk that has a capacity of more than 137 GB, only the first 137 GB of the hard disk is addressable. The remainder of the hard disk is not used. • The operating system must be installed on the first partition that is smaller or equal to 137 GB when the EnableBigLba registry value is enabled but when you do not have a 48-bit LBA compatible BIOS.

If you enable the 48-bit LBA ATAPI support by editing the registry setting, but you lack both a 48-bit LBA compatible BIOS and a hard disk that has a capacity of more than 137 GB, the hard disk continues to function as a standard hard disk with an addressable limit of 137 GB. • The operating system must be installed on the first partition that is less than or equal to 137 GB and the rest of the hard disk divided into one or more remaining partitions when the EnableBigLba registry value is enabled on a computer without a 48-bit LBA compatible BIOS that has a hard disk with a capacity of more than 137 GB.

 

 

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