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Bloody Hell!!! I have been trying to figure out my Delayed Write problem since earlier in the year and recently the problem has driven me nuts - My BIOS was correctly updated and could see my 200Gig HDD; Win XP SP1 and SP2 were loaded; Reg48bitLBA was enabled - but my PC still refused to recognise anything more than 137Gig. Until I happened upon this thread today - so I became a member so I could post my thanks to Snufkin for solving my problem. I would be interested in knowing why IAA interfered with this issue, so if anyone can enlighten me, I would be grateful. Thanks again. "Snufkin" anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com wrote in message news:aa0a01c48877$9eb0a900[/i][/color][/i][/color] $a501280a@phx.gbl...-- I am now on my second identical hard drive which has exhibited the same strange behavior: I am attempting to install a 200GB Seagate hard drive on a computer running Windows XP SP2, with a P4G8X Deluxe motherboard. Windows sees the entire hard drive--all-- 185-- GB of it. If I attempt to format (NTFS), either through disk management or by right clicking on the drive, the format plods along for a couple of hours, reaches 100%...and then reports that the format could not complete. If I attempt to access the drive, Windows informs me that the drive is not formatted (RAW), and asks if I wish to format it. As an experiment, I partitioned and formatted the first 100GB of the drive. This worked fine. I-- then-- partitioned and attempted to format the other 85GB.-- The-- format failed at 100%. If I boot to a seagate floppy and format from there, the format completes succesfully, and Windows sees the drive as fully formatted NTFS. HOWEVER, after writing a few gigabytes of data to test it, I started receiving I/O Errors trying to read some files.-- Checkdisk-- invariably failed to complete, usually at 100%. The first time this happened, I assumed-- the-- drive was faulty and returned it for replacement.-- The-- replacement is giving identical results. I initially tried this all on SP1, which-- of-- course has 48- bit LBA support. I upgraded to SP2 in the hopes that would fix things, but the upgrade made no difference. I have swapped ide cables, changed the drive from slave to master to cable select master/slave and-- back-- again, and swapped ide channels. Nothing changed the behavior of the drive. My motherboard also supports 48-bit LBA, and has the newest BIOS. Another older drive substituted in place of the new one functions correctly. I can-- only-- assume that this computer is having issues formatting above 137GB, and having mostly eliminated hardware as the culprit, it seems Windows must be glitching somehow. Anyone have any ideas? |
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