1000 gb hdd only recognizes 132 gb

H

harlan_da

I recently purchased a samsung spinpoint 1000 gb hdd (HD 103UJ) as a
replacement drive for the current system. Went thru normal windows xp pro
installation process and the drive seemed to be set up fine. But only 132 gb
are being shown for volume C. Device Manager shows capacity 954 gb,
Unallocated Space 823gb. ('my computer' shows 'local disk c' total size 127
gb). How can I go about using the total drive
 
V

VanguardLH

in
I recently purchased a samsung spinpoint 1000 gb hdd (HD 103UJ) as a
replacement drive for the current system. Went thru normal windows xp pro
installation process and the drive seemed to be set up fine. But only 132 gb
are being shown for volume C. Device Manager shows capacity 954 gb,
Unallocated Space 823gb. ('my computer' shows 'local disk c' total size 127
gb). How can I go about using the total drive

Look for replies in the other groups to which you MULTIposted.

Learn to cross-post:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crossposting
http://www.blakjak.demon.co.uk/mul_crss.htm
http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/usenet/xpost.html

A point not made is that N multiposted copies will consume N times the
disk space for each of the separate copies of the same post.
Crossposted messages have just *one* copy on the server with links in
the newsgroups back to the same single copy. Multiposting wastes disk
space on the server. Yes, your post may be small but remember that you
consume N times the space on one server and then do so again on all the
newsgroups servers worldwide. You waste more bandwidth getting N copies
of your multiposted message distributed to all the newsgroups servers
worldwide. Cross-posting has just one copy of the message on an NNTP
server, and only one copy gets propagated to other NNTP servers.

To those visiting the newsgroups, crossposting helps them see ALL the
replies from those in the other RELATED newsgroup to which you linked
your post. That way, they don't waste their time duplicating similar
replies.

Don't cross-post to more groups than needed if at all. Many consider
cross-posting to more than 4 groups as rude and may filter out your
post. The more groups you add, the less likely that they are related,
the less accurate or focused are the targeted groups, or some of the
included groups may already encompassed by another included but more
general group. If the are subgroups under a topic, choose whether you
will be specific or general in the targeted groups to which you post.
Don't go shotgunning your post across multiple groups trying to capture
as large an audience as possible as you will offend netizens with your
poor aim.
 
P

Paul

harlan_da said:
I recently purchased a samsung spinpoint 1000 gb hdd (HD 103UJ) as a
replacement drive for the current system. Went thru normal windows xp pro
installation process and the drive seemed to be set up fine. But only 132 gb
are being shown for volume C. Device Manager shows capacity 954 gb,
Unallocated Space 823gb. ('my computer' shows 'local disk c' total size 127
gb). How can I go about using the total drive

Some background info here. Resizing the partition with Partition Magic
might work, assuming you used an SP1 or SP2 version of WinXP to do the
install. Or creating a second partition in Disk Management, may give you
access to the rest of the space. In cases like this, I like to test that
all the space really works (fill the disk with test files), before I'd trust
it to hold real data. But that is just me...

http://www.seagate.com/support/kb/disc/tp/137gb.pdf

Paul
 
N

neil

If you want to use all the drive as "C:\" then you need to use XP with SP1,
SP2. If your setup disk is an original (which it sounds like it is) then you
need to slipstream a new disk with SP2 or SP3 if you are brave. The original
XP would not support hard drive larger than 132Gb.
If you just want to use all the disk and want the remaining amount as a
second drive then look at disk management to create a new partition in the
remaining space.
As already stated you could use partition magic or partition manager to
increase the drive to the full capacity.
hope that helps
Neil
 
N

News Reader

Your BIOS is out of date. Some older systems from the Pentium III era could
not use disks bigger than 132 GB but with modern dual-core platforms there
is an new version of LBA with support for larger disks.
 

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