Angelfood MacSpade wrote:
> Now that this has happened to two consecutive hard drives, I'm
> becoming really paranoid...
>
> Short story version: I use XP (SP2) Disk Management to format a WD
> 180GB ATA drive as a single NTFS partition using 64K clusters (for
> video recordings). I copy some data onto the drive and all appears
> fine until I power off/on. Then XP sees the drive as 100% empty with
> NO file system. I repeat the process several more times. Sometimes the
> drive survives one or two power on/off cycles. I've done full and
> quick formats. Then I try the drive in another computer running XP and
> this time it can't even be formatted. I've used this drive for over a
> year without problems (originally formatted using default clusters).
> Now it's a dead drive.
>
> So now I install a new replacement drive, a Seagate 120GB SATA drive.
> Note this is an SATA, not an ATA drive, using an entirely different
> controller. I do a full format with 64K clusters and the exact same
> scenario as before happens - XP thinks there's no file system! I try
> it again with 32K clusters and the same thing happens. I have yet to
> try it with any other cluster size.
>
> Note that Partition Magic and other disc utilities don't see any
> problem with the drive at all (i.e. see it as having an NTFS file
> system). Any ideas what's going on here?
>
Since XP is rather fond of 4KB clusters, I suggest that you format that
HD with 4KB clusters -- using XP's disk management tools. Unlike FAT32,
XP handles large HDs without resorting to large clusters.
--
Cheers, Bob
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