ok....i just reformatted my 80gig seagate barracuda through windows (was a slave drive)
after it reformatted, windows only sees it as a 74.6gig HD. Not only that...but after i reformatted it shows as already having 66.8mb used.
I didnt load anything on it yet. Just reformatted
now my question is.......why isnt it showing the full 80gig and why is there 66mb used when there is nothing on it after a reformat?
Harddrive not showing up correct size...
-
Absolut Talent
- Almighty Member
- Posts: 2868
- Joined: Mon Jan 07, 2002 12:30 pm
Harddrive not showing up correct size...
Gone for good. But never say never
- Busby
- Golden Member
- Posts: 1890
- Joined: Tue Nov 28, 2000 6:25 pm
- Location: Atlanta Area, GA, USA
- Contact:
What Filesystem?
The 66MB is probably the MFT (Master File Table) if you are using NTFS. As for why it's showing 74.6 GB, I've never had a harddrive show the advertised size. Like right now I have 2 80GB drives in a RAID array but my partition sizes according to windows only adds up to 151.67 GB. I'm sure there is an answer somewhere.
The 66MB is probably the MFT (Master File Table) if you are using NTFS. As for why it's showing 74.6 GB, I've never had a harddrive show the advertised size. Like right now I have 2 80GB drives in a RAID array but my partition sizes according to windows only adds up to 151.67 GB. I'm sure there is an answer somewhere.
<a href="mailto:busby1218@charter.net">
<img src="http://justinbusby.com:8080/signature.gif" border="0"></a>
<img src="http://justinbusby.com:8080/signature.gif" border="0"></a>
- eGoCeNTRoNiX
- Posts: 7362
- Joined: Wed Oct 23, 2002 12:51 pm
- Location: HELL
The Reason is!!
Because a megabyte is based on 1,400,000 some odd bytes, not 1,000,000..
eGo
PM before Email People!!
Heat Under eGoCeNTRoNiX
Who Farted? BEANIE!!!
!Welcome to the United States of the Offended!
Heat Under eGoCeNTRoNiX
Who Farted? BEANIE!!!
!Welcome to the United States of the Offended!
heh, about the size of the drive. From Seagate's website:
Capacity:
Capacity is the amount of data that the drive can store, after formatting. Most disc drive companies, including Seagate, calculate disc capacity based on the assumption that 1 megabyte = 1000 kilobytes and 1 gigabyte=1000 megabytes
Windows counts 1 gigabyte as 1024 megabytes (Which it really is, but for some reason hdd makers thought it'd be user to use a base 10 system instead of base 2)
81920 MB in a TRUE 80 Gigabyte drive (1024*80)
vs
80000 MB in your Seagate
So take the extra 1920 MB's your supposed to get in a true 80Gb drive and subtract it from Seagate's Base10 drive of 80,000 and you get 78080, or 78.1GB.
That extra 4GB probably got lost because of 2 things. 1. Although Seagate states 1 GB = 1000 MB it's pretty hard to actually accurately get that, so it might be 1GB = 999MB, etc and 2. Your FAT/NTFS cluster size. Fat uses larger cluster sizes, which means more disk space is lost , versus NTFS which uses smaller clusters (3k I think) but has the master file table, the MFT mirror copy, and the MFT log. If your using WinXP with it's underlying stuff in NTFS2 it'll take up a bit more room.
HTH
Capacity:
Capacity is the amount of data that the drive can store, after formatting. Most disc drive companies, including Seagate, calculate disc capacity based on the assumption that 1 megabyte = 1000 kilobytes and 1 gigabyte=1000 megabytes
Windows counts 1 gigabyte as 1024 megabytes (Which it really is, but for some reason hdd makers thought it'd be user to use a base 10 system instead of base 2)
81920 MB in a TRUE 80 Gigabyte drive (1024*80)
vs
80000 MB in your Seagate
So take the extra 1920 MB's your supposed to get in a true 80Gb drive and subtract it from Seagate's Base10 drive of 80,000 and you get 78080, or 78.1GB.
That extra 4GB probably got lost because of 2 things. 1. Although Seagate states 1 GB = 1000 MB it's pretty hard to actually accurately get that, so it might be 1GB = 999MB, etc and 2. Your FAT/NTFS cluster size. Fat uses larger cluster sizes, which means more disk space is lost , versus NTFS which uses smaller clusters (3k I think) but has the master file table, the MFT mirror copy, and the MFT log. If your using WinXP with it's underlying stuff in NTFS2 it'll take up a bit more room.
HTH
-
Absolut Talent
- Almighty Member
- Posts: 2868
- Joined: Mon Jan 07, 2002 12:30 pm
-
Absolut Talent
- Almighty Member
- Posts: 2868
- Joined: Mon Jan 07, 2002 12:30 pm
- CaterpillarAssassin
- Almighty Member
- Posts: 2252
- Joined: Wed Nov 22, 2000 11:29 am
- Location: somewhere in N.E

