adding WD SATA to Dell 8400

ezland00

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Jul 1, 2002
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i am trying to add WD 320gb SATA HD to my Dell 8400. How come i can't see the drive in my computer?

This is my first time installing SATA drive, Please help
 

Vegito

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Oct 16, 1999
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windows service pack 1a at least requires..

right click my computer and see what ver
 

ezland00

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I'm using windows 2000 Pro. i tried to boot directly from 320GB, in windows setup it still show 130000MB
 

mechBgon

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Oct 31, 1999
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Isn't your CPU a hyperthreading model? You'd be better off with WinXP for that reason too.
 

ezland00

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I already have sp4 installed in my system. i also just edit the registry. It still know 128GB.
 

dnuggett

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Sep 13, 2003
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Originally posted by: ezland00
I don't think its windows problem. is there anything else i can try?

Sure it is... it's a known limitation. Follow the advice above.
 

ezland00

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Jul 1, 2002
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Originally posted by: mechBgon
This article might help: 48-Bit LBA Support for ATAPI Disk Drives in Windows 2000

If your Win2000 CD is SP2 or earlier, try slipstreaming SP4 into it and burning a new installation CD. Here's help on that: link to Autostreamer

Edit: since I can see this coming... download the full SP4 file from here.


Thanks for that article, i forgot to enable the registery. but how i'm getting 298GB, the harddrive should give me 320GB. i'm missing 22GB. What sould i do now?
 

mechBgon

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I think you are all done. Windows computes GB differently than Western Digital does. Enjoy! :)
 

mechBgon

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Originally posted by: ezland00
Will seagate be better on the GB error? i'm planning to exchange it to a seagate 250gb
No. It's not an error, either, it's just two ways of defining what a "gigabyte" is.
 

Cheesetogo

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Jan 26, 2005
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There is a limitation the size of a drive with earlier forms of windows and updates. As for your "gb error", that is do to the hard drive companies calling 1 gig 1,000,000,000 bytes, while windows calculates a gig as 1,073,741,824 bytes. So if you get a 250 gb drive, windows would detect it as a 233 gig drive, but because of the limitation will still show it as 137 gb.
 

mechBgon

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Originally posted by: ezland00
so if i exchange for a new one, it will still be the same/
Yes. If you actually need 320GB by Windows' way of measuring, then buy a "400GB" hard drive and you'll be covered.
 

BOLt

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Dec 11, 2004
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Originally posted by: mechBgon
Originally posted by: ezland00
so if i exchange for a new one, it will still be the same/
Yes. If you actually need 320GB by Windows' way of measuring, then buy a "400GB" hard drive and you'll be covered.

ezland00, they're right. Fill that 320GB drive and then see if you need more.
 

ezland00

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Jul 1, 2002
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i do lots video recording, so my harddrive max out fast. Most of time i back it up with DVD-R to get more space. i though 320gb will give me more room since i have 2x120gb, but i guess thats not how HD works
 

Ronin

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Mar 3, 2001
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server.counter-strike.net
The reason you don't get 320GB is basic and simple. It's formatting space (MFT, for example). You will never, in a Windows installation, get the full advertised size of your HD.