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#1
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I just added a new 300GB hard drive to my Dell 8300 with Win XP professional.
When I check the capacity of the hard drive, it displays 279GB in the hard drive list. Under Properties for the drive, it shows a very small amount of used space, 279 GB free, but on the pie chart, it shows 300GB free. Do I need to break this drive up into multiple partitions? Is there a chance that the full capacity of the drive is accessible, but the display in properties is flawed? Finally, I checked computer managment under the admin tools, and it shows the drive to be 279.47 GB, and 99% free. The drive was formatted as an NTFS drive. Thanks for your help!!! |
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#2
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Because the drive manufacturer uses base 10 to figure size and Windows uses
base 2 Base 10: 1000 x 1000 x 1000 = 1,000,000,000 (1 GB) Base 2: 1024 x 1024 x1024 = 1,073,741,824 (1 GB) 279 x 1,073,741,824 = 299,573,968,896 or pretty close to 300Gb "Ticker" <Ticker@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:C7F2D955-2796-4444-A034-225CF0466953@microsoft.com... >I just added a new 300GB hard drive to my Dell 8300 with Win XP >professional. > When I check the capacity of the hard drive, it displays 279GB in the hard > drive list. Under Properties for the drive, it shows a very small amount > of > used space, 279 GB free, but on the pie chart, it shows 300GB free. > > Do I need to break this drive up into multiple partitions? Is there a > chance > that the full capacity of the drive is accessible, but the display in > properties is flawed? Finally, I checked computer managment under the > admin > tools, and it shows the drive to be 279.47 GB, and 99% free. The drive > was > formatted as an NTFS drive. > > Thanks for your help!!! |
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#3
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More a simple answer, Ticker...
If you ever read a textbook like from school, you know how it's got several pages of the 'Table of Contents"? Well a Hard Drive has to have the same thing, a ToC or FAT (File Allocation Table) The larger the drive you have, the more size the Table of Content Needs. My 200GB requires about 13GB for this. I would presume that a 300GB would require about 20-22GB But yes, Jerry's statement is also totally correct although I've never heard it explained that way. |
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#4
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All hard drives require partitioning, a corresponding filesystem, and
formatting. The master boot record, partition, and filesystem all use space. This used space becomes more apparent as a HD's capacity is increased. If you didn't write, add or copy any files to this drive, I would suspect system restore added its folder to your new hard drive. Thus 99% vice 100%. free. -- Jonny "Ticker" <Ticker@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:C7F2D955-2796-4444-A034-225CF0466953@microsoft.com... > I just added a new 300GB hard drive to my Dell 8300 with Win XP professional. > When I check the capacity of the hard drive, it displays 279GB in the hard > drive list. Under Properties for the drive, it shows a very small amount of > used space, 279 GB free, but on the pie chart, it shows 300GB free. > > Do I need to break this drive up into multiple partitions? Is there a chance > that the full capacity of the drive is accessible, but the display in > properties is flawed? Finally, I checked computer managment under the admin > tools, and it shows the drive to be 279.47 GB, and 99% free. The drive was > formatted as an NTFS drive. > > Thanks for your help!!! |
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#5
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Thank you all for your replies. I did not think there was anything wrong
with the Hard Drive, but it is really good to know why this happens. I appreciate your responses. "RothPC Support (Missouri-STL)" wrote: > More a simple answer, Ticker... > > If you ever read a textbook like from school, you know how it's got > several pages of the 'Table of Contents"? Well a Hard Drive has to have > the same thing, a ToC or FAT (File Allocation Table) The larger the > drive you have, the more size the Table of Content Needs. My 200GB > requires about 13GB for this. I would presume that a 300GB would > require about 20-22GB > > But yes, Jerry's statement is also totally correct although I've never > heard it explained that way. > > |
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