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I've been asked to format a USB Drive with a larger Allocation Unit Size than the default. I'm using a Mac, Snow Leopard. In Disk Utility, I am unable to see anything to do with Allocation Unit Size. A bit of Googling suggests it might be called Cluster Size, but I can't see anything for that, either. Does anyone know if it's possible to format a drive with FAT and use a larger than default Allocation Unit Size / Cluster Size?

3 Answers 3

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You should be able to do this from a command line using the newfs_msdos command. For example:

#> newfs_msdos -F 32 -V somevolumename /dev/youdiskdevice

The command takes many arguments that you may want to explore.. -c cluster-size for example.

I am sure you could google around for newfs_msdos for some usage examples and also man newfs_msdos

Hope this helps!

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    Yep, that does appear to have the answer, thanks. The -c option says "Sectors per cluster. Acceptable values are powers of 2 in the range 1 through 128", and I had been expecting a size in bytes... so if I was to want 32KB (the value that I've been told to use), what value do I choose? 15, since 2^15 is 32,768...?
    – Kenny
    Mar 26, 2012 at 21:47
  • does not work for me. The disk hangs after typing this and 30 minutes pass, nothing happens. I don't know if it is formatting, but 30 minutes is too much.
    – Duck
    May 6, 2020 at 11:13
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For example to format FAT32 with 64kb allocation unit size:

sudo newfs_msdos -F 32 -c 128 -v VOLUMEID /dev/yourdiskdevice

with 32kb allocation unit size should be use 64 cluster size:

sudo newfs_msdos -F 32 -c 64 -v VOLUMEID /dev/yourdiskdevice

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    Because -c option means "number of sectors per cluster" with a 512bytes sector size you need 128 sectors to have 64kb allocation unit size. (just explaining the result 🙂 )
    – iGranDav
    Dec 19, 2017 at 20:53
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I didn't know that I had to unmount the disk in order to format the card. So I looked around to find an answer for the different errors, when all I actually needed to do was

diskutil unmount /dev/disk(the ident number)

I had to format my micro SD for a sports cam and the "cluster" size was wrong. I tried the -c 32 first, no joy. -c 64 Bingo!

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