QuickQuestion

D

DanLB

My hd is 250gb win XP sees 232! I feel riped off!



___________________________________________________________________________
Motherbord : ABIT_NF7-S nVidia-nForce2 Ultra 400

Processor : AMD Barton XP 3200+ @ 2305 MHz

Video Card : NVIDIA GeForce4 Ti 4200 with AGP8X

RAM : 512 MByte Corsair XMS 3200 CL-2

Hard Drives :Western Digital 7200RPM 250GB hard drive with 8MB cache

Secondary :46gb IBM-DTLA-307045

CDROM : Kenwood 72X True X CD-ROM
 
C

Carey Frisch [MVP]

Did you try visiting the Western Digital website first? I guess you didn't!

From the Western Digital website:

Determining drive capacity can be confusing at times because of the different measurement standards that are often used. When dealing with Windows and Mac based systems, you will commonly see both decimal measurements and binary measurements of a drive's capacity. In either case, a drive's capacity is measured by using the total number of bytes available on the drive. As long as the drive displays the correct number of bytes (approximate), you are getting the drive's full capacity.

Decimal vs. Binary:
For simplicity and consistency, hard drive manufacturers define a megabyte as 1,000,000 bytes and a gigabyte as 1,000,000,000 bytes. This is a decimal (base 10) measurement and is the industry standard. However, certain system BIOSs, FDISK and Windows define a megabyte as 1,048,576 bytes and a gigabyte as 1,073,741,824 bytes. Mac systems also use these values. These are binary (base 2) measurements.

To Determine Decimal Capacity:
A decimal capacity is determined by dividing the total number of bytes, by the number of bytes per gigabyte (1,000,000,000 using base 10).

To Determine Binary Capacity:
A binary capacity is determined by dividing the total number of bytes, by the number of bytes per gigabyte (1,073,741,824 using base 2).
This is why different utilities will report different capacities for the same drive. The number of bytes is the same, but a different number of bytes is used to make a megabyte and a gigabyte. This is similar to the difference between 0 degrees Celsius and 32 degrees Fahrenheit. It is the same temperature, but will be reported differently depending on the scale you are using.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Various Drive Sizes and their Binary and Decimal Capacities



Drive Size in GB Approximate Total Bytes Decimal Capacity
(bytes/1,000,000,000)
Approximate Binary Capacity (bytes/1,073,724,841)
10 GB 10,000,000,000 10 GB 9.31 GB
20 GB 20,000,000,000 20 GB 18.63 GB
30 GB 30,000,000,000 30 GB 27.94 GB
40 GB 40,000,000,000 40 GB 37.25 GB
60 GB 60,000,000,000 60 GB 55.88 GB
80 GB 80,000,000,000 80 GB 74.51 GB
100 GB 100,000,000,000 100 GB 93.13 GB
120 GB 120,000,000,000 120 GB 111.76 GB
160 GB 160,000,000,000 160 GB 149.01 GB
180 GB 180,000,000,000 180 GB 167.64 GB
200 GB 200,000,000,000 200 GB 186.26 GB
250 GB 250,000,000,000 250 GB 232.83 GB


--
Carey Frisch
Microsoft MVP
Windows XP - Shell/User

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


| My hd is 250gb win XP sees 232! I feel riped off!
|
|
|
| ___________________________________________________________________________
| Motherbord : ABIT_NF7-S nVidia-nForce2 Ultra 400
|
| Processor : AMD Barton XP 3200+ @ 2305 MHz
|
| Video Card : NVIDIA GeForce4 Ti 4200 with AGP8X
|
| RAM : 512 MByte Corsair XMS 3200 CL-2
|
| Hard Drives :Western Digital 7200RPM 250GB hard drive with 8MB cache
|
| Secondary :46gb IBM-DTLA-307045
|
| CDROM : Kenwood 72X True X CD-ROM
|
|
 
P

Pete Baker

DanLB

Well apart from not asking a question.... the people you need to talk to are
Western Digital and every other hard drive manufacturer.

Because you are not missing any space, although the drive manufacturer could
be clearer.

In XP, open My Computer, select the appropriate drive and right-click,
select properties... beside 'capacity' you will see the total number of
bytes on your disk and to the right the number of Gigabytes.

For example, on my 120 Gb drive I have 120,023,252,992 bytes... which is
also listed in disk properties as a capacity of 111 Gb.

The Hard Drive manufacturer refers to the 'bytes' total in my case as 120
Gb... and, in purely decimal terms, it is - 120,000,000,000 bytes.

The 111 Gb is what the operating system (XP) 'sees'... because the OS
calculates 1024 bytes as 1 Kb, 1024 Kb as 1 Mb, and 1024 MB as 1 Gb.....

so in my case 120023252992 / 1024 / 1024 / 1024 (that's bytes => Kilobytes
=> Megabytes => Gigabytes) is 111 Gigabytes as far as the computer is
concerned.

Neither calculation of the disk size is 'wrong' ...... they are equivalent.

In your case the drive capacity - it will be around a figure of
250,048,443,734 bytes - will be referred to by the computer as 232.875 Gb.
(The drive capacity may only show the first 3 digits.)

Hope that helps
Pete
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top