Re: hard drive problem

  • Thread starter Thread starter Misslead
  • Start date Start date
M

Misslead

I have this problem with my hard drive.
I have XP Pro -SP2
New Mother board, New Serial ATA Seagate 320 GB HD,
When I formated it it saw 305 GB and now I only see 127 GB.
Hard drive manager show the 127 and 170 unallocted.
The mother board make say its a OS problem that the Bois ok.
SO how do I get the 170 GB so I can use it and can I have it as one drive?
and not two partitions.

"Anna" wrote:

>
> "Elvi" <Elvi@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
> news:195ACB78-7E21-44D4-91C8-E608F8B2B161@microsoft.com...
> >I have windows xp home edition. I have a problem with it not detecting the
> > right size of my hard drive, I bought a 300 gigs hard drive and it detects
> > only 127.
> > Any help would be appreciated.

>
>
> Elvi:
> The likelihood is you've run up against the 137 GB (about 127 GB binary)
> "barrier" inherent in the original version of the XP operating system.
>
> There are two basic requirements for your system to recognize the full
> capacity of your HD...
> 1. The motherboard's BIOS must support large-capacity disks. Virtually every
> motherboard manufactured over the past four years or so has this capability.
> If your motherboard is older and doesn't have this capability, frequently
> there's a BIOS upgrade from the motherboard's manufacturer to provide it.
> 2. The XP OS must include SP1 and/or SP2.
>
> I would guess that your present XP OS does *not* include either SP1 or SP2.
> Is that right?
>
> If that is the case, install SP2 and the full capacity of the HD will be
> recognized (again assuming it's supported by your motherboard's BIOS as
> noted above). The additional disk capacity above your present 127 GB will be
> considered "unallocated" disk space - which you can partition-format using
> XP's Disk Management utility.
>
> BTW, the total disk capacity of your 300 GB advertised HD will be reflected
> by the OS as somewhat smaller since it's measured in binary terms.
> Anna
>
>
>
 
How did you initially format the drive?

--

Xandros


"Misslead" <Misslead@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:78B369F8-E12F-4E67-99BB-CC5F83E14C36@microsoft.com...
>I have this problem with my hard drive.
> I have XP Pro -SP2
> New Mother board, New Serial ATA Seagate 320 GB HD,
> When I formated it it saw 305 GB and now I only see 127 GB.
> Hard drive manager show the 127 and 170 unallocted.
> The mother board make say its a OS problem that the Bois ok.
> SO how do I get the 170 GB so I can use it and can I have it as one drive?
> and not two partitions.
>
> "Anna" wrote:
>
>>
>> "Elvi" <Elvi@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
>> news:195ACB78-7E21-44D4-91C8-E608F8B2B161@microsoft.com...
>> >I have windows xp home edition. I have a problem with it not detecting
>> >the
>> > right size of my hard drive, I bought a 300 gigs hard drive and it
>> > detects
>> > only 127.
>> > Any help would be appreciated.

>>
>>
>> Elvi:
>> The likelihood is you've run up against the 137 GB (about 127 GB binary)
>> "barrier" inherent in the original version of the XP operating system.
>>
>> There are two basic requirements for your system to recognize the full
>> capacity of your HD...
>> 1. The motherboard's BIOS must support large-capacity disks. Virtually
>> every
>> motherboard manufactured over the past four years or so has this
>> capability.
>> If your motherboard is older and doesn't have this capability, frequently
>> there's a BIOS upgrade from the motherboard's manufacturer to provide it.
>> 2. The XP OS must include SP1 and/or SP2.
>>
>> I would guess that your present XP OS does *not* include either SP1 or
>> SP2.
>> Is that right?
>>
>> If that is the case, install SP2 and the full capacity of the HD will be
>> recognized (again assuming it's supported by your motherboard's BIOS as
>> noted above). The additional disk capacity above your present 127 GB will
>> be
>> considered "unallocated" disk space - which you can partition-format
>> using
>> XP's Disk Management utility.
>>
>> BTW, the total disk capacity of your 300 GB advertised HD will be
>> reflected
>> by the OS as somewhat smaller since it's measured in binary terms.
>> Anna
>>
>>
>>
 
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