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I have an Acer Ferrari 3400 laptop with a 80 GB drive installed and Windows XP. I cloned the 80 GB disk to a 320 GB, but I could not boot from it. So I loaded up the Windows XP CD and at the format hard disk part I deleted the partitions, but I could only see 132 GB available.

Could I use fdisk to remove everything and install a large single partition and still only see 132GB?

Does anyone have any suggestions? I am currently formatting the 132 GB as NTFS, so I cannot check what version of BIOS is yet.

2 Answers 2

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After a bit of googling, it turns out that the culprit is not the operating system, but your old laptop. The Acer Ferrari 3400 does not support LBA mode.

Your only option for using the 320 GB drive internally is to use Disk Drive Overlay (DDO). (DDO is a TSR that loads onto sector two of the hard drive and is used for computers that do not support LBA mode.)

You can use Western Digital's Data Lifeguard Tools (or a similar tool provided by the manufacturer of your HDD) to prepare your hard disk.

Many consider DDOs as evil (like codec packs :) ... but sometimes they are a necessary evil.

As an alternative, consider buying a smaller hard drive, e.g. 120 GB (or keep the original 80 GB drive). You can get an external USB enclosure for the 320 GB drive -- but make sure the enclosure's chipset supports large-capacity drives, lest you end up with the same problem.

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  • I am only seeing 132GB and not 137GB as you mentioned. I have tried formatting the hard disk on my windows 7 as NTFS and 320GB was the formatted size. Put back into the laptop and ran XP SP2 install disk and it still onyl saw 132GB. Even in Windows XP PE I could only see 132GB!
    – Belliez
    Dec 18, 2009 at 0:33
  • ok, edited my post after your updates.
    – Molly7244
    Dec 18, 2009 at 1:20
  • Thank you. I also found similar answers via google. Will give the DDO a try. Thank you (and everyone else) for your help and efforts.
    – Belliez
    Dec 18, 2009 at 10:07
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    @Belliez: I have a feeling that 137 hard drive company GB ( 1000 x 1000 x 1000) probably equals 132 real GBs (1024 x 1024 x 1024).
    – Macha
    Dec 21, 2009 at 0:36
  • @Macha Hard Drive companies are actually correct, 1GB = (1000 x 1000 x 1000) or (10^9) while 1GiB = (1024 x 1024 x 1024) or (2^30) - There is no such thing as "Real GBs", just badly written software, confusing users - read the units(7) man page Jun 16, 2010 at 19:08
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The disk you have is probably pre-SP1. Before this, the max disk size was 137GB.

You can either get an XP disk with SP1 or higher integrated or format it as 137GB, format it in another computer or follow this MS technet article

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  • The disk I am using is XP Home SP3. Also tried from a WinPE boot disk that was built using SP2.
    – Belliez
    Dec 17, 2009 at 23:59
  • also tried a windows vista install cd and got the same problem, only recognises 132GB and not 320GB
    – Belliez
    Dec 18, 2009 at 0:14

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