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Under Reporting Hard Drive Size


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Guest Ugly Trick
Posted

I have a two hard drive system. One is a 12.7 Gigabyte capacity, and the

other one is and 80 gigabyte capacity. When I had Windows 98 SE, the software

put a dynamic drive overlay in the boot program. I upgraded to XP Home and

stayed with the FAT 32 file system. Now the computer is reporting the

capacity of the 80 gigabyte hard drive as 31.4 gigabyte. I have tried every

suggestion that I could find, to no avail. The 80 gigabyte hard drive is the

slave in the system, because I want to primarily use it for storage. Help! I

do not want to change the file system and have to reinstall the XP Home OS.

 

Ugly Trick

Posted

Re: Under Reporting Hard Drive Size

 

Are you able to backup the data on this drive (80GB) to another source?

 

JS

 

"Ugly Trick" <UglyTrick@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message

news:4955E0F7-E493-4F26-85CE-3A761062E622@microsoft.com...

>I have a two hard drive system. One is a 12.7 Gigabyte capacity, and the

> other one is and 80 gigabyte capacity. When I had Windows 98 SE, the

> software

> put a dynamic drive overlay in the boot program. I upgraded to XP Home and

> stayed with the FAT 32 file system. Now the computer is reporting the

> capacity of the 80 gigabyte hard drive as 31.4 gigabyte. I have tried

> every

> suggestion that I could find, to no avail. The 80 gigabyte hard drive is

> the

> slave in the system, because I want to primarily use it for storage. Help!

> I

> do not want to change the file system and have to reinstall the XP Home

> OS.

>

> Ugly Trick

Posted

Re: Under Reporting Hard Drive Size

 

I forgot to ask, when you use Windows Disk Management option, what do it

show the drive size as?

 

JS

 

"Ugly Trick" <UglyTrick@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message

news:4955E0F7-E493-4F26-85CE-3A761062E622@microsoft.com...

>I have a two hard drive system. One is a 12.7 Gigabyte capacity, and the

> other one is and 80 gigabyte capacity. When I had Windows 98 SE, the

> software

> put a dynamic drive overlay in the boot program. I upgraded to XP Home and

> stayed with the FAT 32 file system. Now the computer is reporting the

> capacity of the 80 gigabyte hard drive as 31.4 gigabyte. I have tried

> every

> suggestion that I could find, to no avail. The 80 gigabyte hard drive is

> the

> slave in the system, because I want to primarily use it for storage. Help!

> I

> do not want to change the file system and have to reinstall the XP Home

> OS.

>

> Ugly Trick

Guest NotMe
Posted

Re: Under Reporting Hard Drive Size

 

Usually with a drive overlay, it misreports the size on purpose so Windows &

older BIOS can see it.

When you say 'the computer' is reporting the size as 31.4GB, is that in BIOS

or in Windows?

You should be able to run the disk overlay software again to remove it.

Since it is a data drive and not the drive XP is installed on, removing the

overlay should not affect the installation.

Check the HDD manufacturer's site for the overlay software.

--

A Professional Amateur...If anyone knew it all, none of would be here!

CarGodZeroOne@hotmail.com

Change Alpha to Numeric to reply

"Ugly Trick" <UglyTrick@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message

news:4955E0F7-E493-4F26-85CE-3A761062E622@microsoft.com...

>I have a two hard drive system. One is a 12.7 Gigabyte capacity, and the

> other one is and 80 gigabyte capacity. When I had Windows 98 SE, the

> software

> put a dynamic drive overlay in the boot program. I upgraded to XP Home and

> stayed with the FAT 32 file system. Now the computer is reporting the

> capacity of the 80 gigabyte hard drive as 31.4 gigabyte. I have tried

> every

> suggestion that I could find, to no avail. The 80 gigabyte hard drive is

> the

> slave in the system, because I want to primarily use it for storage. Help!

> I

> do not want to change the file system and have to reinstall the XP Home

> OS.

>

> Ugly Trick

Guest Ugly Trick
Posted

RE: Under Reporting Hard Drive Size

 

The 80 Gigabyte Has nothing on it.

 

Ugly Trick

 

"Ugly Trick" wrote:

> I have a two hard drive system. One is a 12.7 Gigabyte capacity, and the

> other one is and 80 gigabyte capacity. When I had Windows 98 SE, the software

> put a dynamic drive overlay in the boot program. I upgraded to XP Home and

> stayed with the FAT 32 file system. Now the computer is reporting the

> capacity of the 80 gigabyte hard drive as 31.4 gigabyte. I have tried every

> suggestion that I could find, to no avail. The 80 gigabyte hard drive is the

> slave in the system, because I want to primarily use it for storage. Help! I

> do not want to change the file system and have to reinstall the XP Home OS.

>

> Ugly Trick

Guest Ugly Trick
Posted

Re: Under Reporting Hard Drive Size

 

It reports the hard drive to have a capacity of 31.4 Gigabytes.

 

Ugly Trick

 

"JS" wrote:

> I forgot to ask, when you use Windows Disk Management option, what do it

> show the drive size as?

>

> JS

>

> "Ugly Trick" <UglyTrick@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message

> news:4955E0F7-E493-4F26-85CE-3A761062E622@microsoft.com...

> >I have a two hard drive system. One is a 12.7 Gigabyte capacity, and the

> > other one is and 80 gigabyte capacity. When I had Windows 98 SE, the

> > software

> > put a dynamic drive overlay in the boot program. I upgraded to XP Home and

> > stayed with the FAT 32 file system. Now the computer is reporting the

> > capacity of the 80 gigabyte hard drive as 31.4 gigabyte. I have tried

> > every

> > suggestion that I could find, to no avail. The 80 gigabyte hard drive is

> > the

> > slave in the system, because I want to primarily use it for storage. Help!

> > I

> > do not want to change the file system and have to reinstall the XP Home

> > OS.

> >

> > Ugly Trick

>

>

>

Guest Ugly Trick
Posted

Re: Under Reporting Hard Drive Size

 

I have a new Abit motherboard with 3 Giga Hertz speed and 1 Gigabyte of RAM.

It worked fine with the Windows 98 SE and just the XP Home upgrade with SP2.

Then I installed the full XP Home operating System with SP2. It worked fine.

Then my 8 year old motherboard failed. I installed the new one, and I have

not been able to get it to report correctly since. In the BIOS, it shows 2.1

Gigabytes. I have the manufacturers software. I have used that software and

followed the instructions to make the change, but the Bios refuses to make

the changes. It needs to show just over 15 Gigabytes in the BIOS to make it

report correctly in Windows.

 

Ugly Trick

 

"NotMe" wrote:

> Usually with a drive overlay, it misreports the size on purpose so Windows &

> older BIOS can see it.

> When you say 'the computer' is reporting the size as 31.4GB, is that in BIOS

> or in Windows?

> You should be able to run the disk overlay software again to remove it.

> Since it is a data drive and not the drive XP is installed on, removing the

> overlay should not affect the installation.

> Check the HDD manufacturer's site for the overlay software.

> --

> A Professional Amateur...If anyone knew it all, none of would be here!

> CarGodZeroOne@hotmail.com

> Change Alpha to Numeric to reply

> "Ugly Trick" <UglyTrick@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message

> news:4955E0F7-E493-4F26-85CE-3A761062E622@microsoft.com...

> >I have a two hard drive system. One is a 12.7 Gigabyte capacity, and the

> > other one is and 80 gigabyte capacity. When I had Windows 98 SE, the

> > software

> > put a dynamic drive overlay in the boot program. I upgraded to XP Home and

> > stayed with the FAT 32 file system. Now the computer is reporting the

> > capacity of the 80 gigabyte hard drive as 31.4 gigabyte. I have tried

> > every

> > suggestion that I could find, to no avail. The 80 gigabyte hard drive is

> > the

> > slave in the system, because I want to primarily use it for storage. Help!

> > I

> > do not want to change the file system and have to reinstall the XP Home

> > OS.

> >

> > Ugly Trick

>

>

>

Posted

Re: Under Reporting Hard Drive Size

 

Disk Diagnostic Utilities:

Western Digital's Data LifeGuard Diagnostics

http://support.wdc.com/download/?cxml=n&pid=999&swid=3

 

JS

 

"Ugly Trick" <UglyTrick@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message

news:0D69DAA6-9DA8-496F-97AC-628F09C0E730@microsoft.com...

> The 80 Gigabyte Has nothing on it.

>

> Ugly Trick

>

> "Ugly Trick" wrote:

>

>> I have a two hard drive system. One is a 12.7 Gigabyte capacity, and the

>> other one is and 80 gigabyte capacity. When I had Windows 98 SE, the

>> software

>> put a dynamic drive overlay in the boot program. I upgraded to XP Home

>> and

>> stayed with the FAT 32 file system. Now the computer is reporting the

>> capacity of the 80 gigabyte hard drive as 31.4 gigabyte. I have tried

>> every

>> suggestion that I could find, to no avail. The 80 gigabyte hard drive is

>> the

>> slave in the system, because I want to primarily use it for storage.

>> Help! I

>> do not want to change the file system and have to reinstall the XP Home

>> OS.

>>

>> Ugly Trick

Guest C.Joseph Drayton
Posted

Re: Under Reporting Hard Drive Size

 

Ugly Trick wrote:

> I have a two hard drive system. One is a 12.7 Gigabyte capacity, and the

> other one is and 80 gigabyte capacity. When I had Windows 98 SE, the software

> put a dynamic drive overlay in the boot program. I upgraded to XP Home and

> stayed with the FAT 32 file system. Now the computer is reporting the

> capacity of the 80 gigabyte hard drive as 31.4 gigabyte. I have tried every

> suggestion that I could find, to no avail. The 80 gigabyte hard drive is the

> slave in the system, because I want to primarily use it for storage. Help! I

> do not want to change the file system and have to reinstall the XP Home OS.

>

> Ugly Trick

 

Off the top of my head I would say you formatted the drive

as FAT32. WindowsXP natively can only format FAT32 up to

32GB. If you format as NTFS you should get the full size.

 

If you really need to use the drive as FAT32, then there are

a couple of Freeware programs that format FAT32 larger than

32GB under WindowsXP.

 

Ciao . . . C.Joseph

 

"A promise is nothing more than an attempt

to respond to an unreasonable demand."

 

http://blog.tlerma.com/

 

A Windows professional's view of entering the World of Linux

Guest Ugly Trick
Posted

RE: Under Reporting Hard Drive Size

 

I think that it defies a solution. I have tried all solutions. It

steadfastly shows 2.1 Gigaytes in the CMOS and 31.4 in Windows. Thanks for

your suggestion.

 

"Ugly Trick" wrote:

> I have a two hard drive system. One is a 12.7 Gigabyte capacity, and the

> other one is and 80 gigabyte capacity. When I had Windows 98 SE, the software

> put a dynamic drive overlay in the boot program. I upgraded to XP Home and

> stayed with the FAT 32 file system. Now the computer is reporting the

> capacity of the 80 gigabyte hard drive as 31.4 gigabyte. I have tried every

> suggestion that I could find, to no avail. The 80 gigabyte hard drive is the

> slave in the system, because I want to primarily use it for storage. Help! I

> do not want to change the file system and have to reinstall the XP Home OS.

>

> Ugly Trick

Guest Ugly Trick
Posted

Re: Under Reporting Hard Drive Size

 

I have not data on the drive. I am trying to get it set up so that I can use

it. I used it when I had the Windows 98 Operating System. There was an

Overlay on then, and it reported the full 80 Gigabytes.

 

"JS" wrote:

> Are you able to backup the data on this drive (80GB) to another source?

>

> JS

>

> "Ugly Trick" <UglyTrick@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message

> news:4955E0F7-E493-4F26-85CE-3A761062E622@microsoft.com...

> >I have a two hard drive system. One is a 12.7 Gigabyte capacity, and the

> > other one is and 80 gigabyte capacity. When I had Windows 98 SE, the

> > software

> > put a dynamic drive overlay in the boot program. I upgraded to XP Home and

> > stayed with the FAT 32 file system. Now the computer is reporting the

> > capacity of the 80 gigabyte hard drive as 31.4 gigabyte. I have tried

> > every

> > suggestion that I could find, to no avail. The 80 gigabyte hard drive is

> > the

> > slave in the system, because I want to primarily use it for storage. Help!

> > I

> > do not want to change the file system and have to reinstall the XP Home

> > OS.

> >

> > Ugly Trick

>

>

>

Guest Ugly Trick
Posted

Re: Under Reporting Hard Drive Size

 

Thanks a lot to you C.Joseph Drayton.

 

"C.Joseph Drayton" wrote:

> Ugly Trick wrote:

> > I have a two hard drive system. One is a 12.7 Gigabyte capacity, and the

> > other one is and 80 gigabyte capacity. When I had Windows 98 SE, the software

> > put a dynamic drive overlay in the boot program. I upgraded to XP Home and

> > stayed with the FAT 32 file system. Now the computer is reporting the

> > capacity of the 80 gigabyte hard drive as 31.4 gigabyte. I have tried every

> > suggestion that I could find, to no avail. The 80 gigabyte hard drive is the

> > slave in the system, because I want to primarily use it for storage. Help! I

> > do not want to change the file system and have to reinstall the XP Home OS.

> >

> > Ugly Trick

>

> Off the top of my head I would say you formatted the drive

> as FAT32. WindowsXP natively can only format FAT32 up to

> 32GB. If you format as NTFS you should get the full size.

>

> If you really need to use the drive as FAT32, then there are

> a couple of Freeware programs that format FAT32 larger than

> 32GB under WindowsXP.

>

> Ciao . . . C.Joseph

>

> "A promise is nothing more than an attempt

> to respond to an unreasonable demand."

>

> http://blog.tlerma.com/

>

> A Windows professional's view of entering the World of Linux

>

Posted

Re: Under Reporting Hard Drive Size

 

>> Ugly Trick wrote:

>> > I have a two hard drive system. One is a 12.7 Gigabyte capacity, and

>> > the

>> > other one is and 80 gigabyte capacity. When I had Windows 98 SE, the

>> > software

>> > put a dynamic drive overlay in the boot program. I upgraded to XP Home

>> > and

>> > stayed with the FAT 32 file system. Now the computer is reporting the

>> > capacity of the 80 gigabyte hard drive as 31.4 gigabyte. I have tried

>> > every

>> > suggestion that I could find, to no avail. The 80 gigabyte hard drive

>> > is the

>> > slave in the system, because I want to primarily use it for storage.

>> > Help! I

>> > do not want to change the file system and have to reinstall the XP Home

>> > OS.

>> >

>> > Ugly Trick

 

"Ugly Trick" <UglyTrick@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message

news:25DC286D-44E8-42D1-9B33-98055CE59B11@microsoft.com...

>I have not data on the drive. I am trying to get it set up so that I can

>use

> it. I used it when I had the Windows 98 Operating System. There was an

> Overlay on then, and it reported the full 80 Gigabytes.

 

> "C.Joseph Drayton" wrote:

>> Off the top of my head I would say you formatted the drive

>> as FAT32. WindowsXP natively can only format FAT32 up to

>> 32GB. If you format as NTFS you should get the full size.

>>

>> If you really need to use the drive as FAT32, then there are

>> a couple of Freeware programs that format FAT32 larger than

>> 32GB under WindowsXP.

>>

>> Ciao . . . C.Joseph

 

 

UT:

It's hard to imagine why you would be using a 12.7 GB HDD as your XP boot

drive, but we'll let that one go...

 

Since you've indicated that there's no data on that 80 GB HDD and apparently

want to use it only for storage purposes, why don't you simply use your XP

Disk Management utility (Start > right-click My Computer > Manage > Computer

Management > Disk Management) and delete the partition(s) on that disk, then

create & format whatever partitions you wish and be done with it. It is true

that the formatting process will result in NTFS (and not FAT32) partitions.

If you can't live with that for some reason and need to create one or more

partitions > 32 GB (the max. XP will allow to be formatted FAT32), then

simply use your Win98 Startup floppy disk or whatever DOS floppy disk that

you have and format that 80 GB HDD FAT32.

 

If you go that route, the only problem you *may* run into is that DDO

program that had been previously installed on that 80 GB HDD. Those overlay

programs can be the source of miserable problems in the future even when the

disk is subsequently partitioned & formatted. Hopefully you won't run into

those problems. If need be you can use a simple program like zap.com (see

http://www.tburke.net/info/utils/) to purge the disk prior to the

partitioning/formatting process.

Anna

Guest Ugly Trick
Posted

Re: Under Reporting Hard Drive Size

 

Hello Anna and anybody else that might read this. The problem is solved. The

drive was double shunted. I disconnected the boot drive and took off the

slave shunt. The BIOS read the full size immediately. That left a cable

select shunt on the 80 Gigabyte. I changed the shunt on the boot drive to

cable select. Problem solved.

Thanks everybody.

 

Ugly Trick

 

"Anna" wrote:

>

> >> Ugly Trick wrote:

> >> > I have a two hard drive system. One is a 12.7 Gigabyte capacity, and

> >> > the

> >> > other one is and 80 gigabyte capacity. When I had Windows 98 SE, the

> >> > software

> >> > put a dynamic drive overlay in the boot program. I upgraded to XP Home

> >> > and

> >> > stayed with the FAT 32 file system. Now the computer is reporting the

> >> > capacity of the 80 gigabyte hard drive as 31.4 gigabyte. I have tried

> >> > every

> >> > suggestion that I could find, to no avail. The 80 gigabyte hard drive

> >> > is the

> >> > slave in the system, because I want to primarily use it for storage.

> >> > Help! I

> >> > do not want to change the file system and have to reinstall the XP Home

> >> > OS.

> >> >

> >> > Ugly Trick

>

> "Ugly Trick" <UglyTrick@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message

> news:25DC286D-44E8-42D1-9B33-98055CE59B11@microsoft.com...

> >I have not data on the drive. I am trying to get it set up so that I can

> >use

> > it. I used it when I had the Windows 98 Operating System. There was an

> > Overlay on then, and it reported the full 80 Gigabytes.

>

>

> > "C.Joseph Drayton" wrote:

> >> Off the top of my head I would say you formatted the drive

> >> as FAT32. WindowsXP natively can only format FAT32 up to

> >> 32GB. If you format as NTFS you should get the full size.

> >>

> >> If you really need to use the drive as FAT32, then there are

> >> a couple of Freeware programs that format FAT32 larger than

> >> 32GB under WindowsXP.

> >>

> >> Ciao . . . C.Joseph

>

>

> UT:

> It's hard to imagine why you would be using a 12.7 GB HDD as your XP boot

> drive, but we'll let that one go...

>

> Since you've indicated that there's no data on that 80 GB HDD and apparently

> want to use it only for storage purposes, why don't you simply use your XP

> Disk Management utility (Start > right-click My Computer > Manage > Computer

> Management > Disk Management) and delete the partition(s) on that disk, then

> create & format whatever partitions you wish and be done with it. It is true

> that the formatting process will result in NTFS (and not FAT32) partitions.

> If you can't live with that for some reason and need to create one or more

> partitions > 32 GB (the max. XP will allow to be formatted FAT32), then

> simply use your Win98 Startup floppy disk or whatever DOS floppy disk that

> you have and format that 80 GB HDD FAT32.

>

> If you go that route, the only problem you *may* run into is that DDO

> program that had been previously installed on that 80 GB HDD. Those overlay

> programs can be the source of miserable problems in the future even when the

> disk is subsequently partitioned & formatted. Hopefully you won't run into

> those problems. If need be you can use a simple program like zap.com (see

> http://www.tburke.net/info/utils/) to purge the disk prior to the

> partitioning/formatting process.

> Anna

>

>

>

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