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#1 |
Commodore
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I just bought a new hard drive and after installing it it shows only 8 GB space but it must be 160. Did i made something wrong ?
Deamon |
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#2 |
Silent Hunter
![]() Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Germany
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Does it show up as an 8GB drive in the BIOS? Is that BIOS/mainboard maybe very, very old? Is "Auto Detection" on? Are the HD jumpers set correctly? Or if the BIOS shows 160GB maybe it´s prepartioned at 8GB for whatever reason and the rest is still unallocated!?! If everything seems to be ok try another cable.
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#3 | |||
Commodore
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Thanks Deamon |
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#4 |
Ensign
![]() Join Date: May 2004
Location: Ontario, Canada
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If you're using Windows XP you need to format the drive from my computer to NTFS if that's your format you want to use....
If you can't see the hard drive in my computer, you need to format it using the administration tools in control panel. |
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#5 | |||
Commodore
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It just remains to check the jumpers. @Hellcat: I use Win98ME. Deamon |
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#6 | ||
Silent Hunter
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#7 | |
Commodore
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Deamon |
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#8 | |
Silent Hunter
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#9 | ||
Commodore
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BTW: To hang it on one cable didn't worked. I took a look with partition magic and no luck either. Good night. Deamon |
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#10 |
Rear Admiral
![]() Join Date: Apr 2005
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Did your forget to enable large black addressing in the BIOS? The old BIOS's had limitations on how big an HD could be, and I think it was like 8 GB. THis is probably your problem.
-S |
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#11 |
Rear Admiral
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So I was right - Here it is - Change your BIOS setting and you should be OK. There are like 3 or 4 choices that you can select. If you saw 40 GB drives before, than your system definetily can see the 160 GB. Of course, only an NTFS partition or some form of Linux partition can actually be that big.
Standard - 528 MB max LBA - 8.4 GB max Large - anything bigger (I think - let me look at my own BIOS and I'll bb in a min) EIDE specifications. With the growing capacity of hard disks on desktop computers, a redefinition of IDE specifications was necessary. The old IDE specification only supported drives up to 528 megabytes, which is the Normal partition setting. In 1994, the EIDE (Enhanced IDE) protocol was designed and now all new motherboards support it. This new protocol uses the LBA (Logic Block Addressing) system which considers logic blocks instead of heads, cylinders and sectors. It can support drive up to 8.4 GB. If your BIOS does not support LBA, several hard disk manufacturers provide drivers to trick the BIOS. You will also find a Large partition setting that can accommodate drives up to 1024 cylinders, but do not support LBA. Unfortunately, many large implementations don't work correctly for drives of over 1GB (there's no good reason why it wouldn't work for much larger drives though). Note that 1024 cylinders native is 528MB. The 528MB limit is the 1024 cyl / 16 head / 63 sector limit. |
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#12 |
Rear Admiral
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Set your system to 'Auto' and that should fix your problem. That is how mine would be set if I were not using S/ATA on RAID 0.
-S |
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#13 |
The Old Man
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I agree with the concensis of flashing your BIOS! :hmm:
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#14 |
Ace of the Deep
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Gonna need more information to solve this issue. The make of the drive, chipset (or CPU socket) of your mainboard. I'm going to assume IDE, and you're trying to format it with FAT32 or NTFS (or Reiser/JFS/a decent journaling system).
If that's a Maxtor drive, then you've got a billion jumper settings on the back of the drive. Make sure it's not on something funky, like 15 heads and cable-select. Set that thing to 16 heads and master/slave. And remember that LBA32 is limited to ~130GB, or 8.5GB, depending on the cylinder size you're using (8MB/1MB). |
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#15 | ||
Commodore
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Deamon |
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