johnoverall
Technical User
I'm hoping someone here can help me; I'm building myself a PC for the first time and have hit a stumbling block. I have installed the essential elements in the case to get the PC running: motherboard, CD Rom, PSU, Floppy disk drive, memory, GFX card and added a new keyboard and mouse. I have other cards to put in, but for the moment the system is bare bones.
The hard drive is an 80GB Western Digital 7200rpm Caviar which supposedly partitions and formats fine, as soon as I try run setup prog to install an OS (in this case Windows 98 SE) Scandisk fails saying that 'free space is being reported incorrectly' and setup cannot proceed.
The BIOS auto detects the drive and I can read and write to it from the DOS prompt. It formats at just over 76GB once system files are in place but I just can't get beyond this point and it's been three weeks of experimentation. I've had enough, here are some of the things I've tried:
Thinking it was my QDI Advance 10F motherboard that was at fault I flashed the BIOS to the latest version with no success and then bought a new replacement PIII Gigabyte board and the problem with the drive persists.
I have used the 'fixed' version of FDisk that allows drives over 64GB to be partitioned and formatted with no success
I have used Western Digital's data lifeguard disk tools to check the drive and bios settings for faults, all report back with no errors.
I've tried partitioning the drive, splitting it into two drives with 50% of the space each and FDisk reports that only 37% space is utilised per drive!
I have used Western Digital's data lifeguard tools to prep and format the drive ready to load the OS with no success.
The disk partitions and formats in my old PC, with no errors to 8GB and Scandisk doesn't complain. I just want the partition ten times bigger, that's all!
I have turned off UDMA in the BIOS settings and tried formatting etc again, with no results.
Have tried the BIOS optimised defaults with no success.
Essentially, I'm just one step away from loading the operating system and one step away from chucking the thing through the nearest window. If ever there's an advert for purchasing a complete system this is it!
Can anyone help me before I tear out what's left of my body hair.
Kind regards,
John
The hard drive is an 80GB Western Digital 7200rpm Caviar which supposedly partitions and formats fine, as soon as I try run setup prog to install an OS (in this case Windows 98 SE) Scandisk fails saying that 'free space is being reported incorrectly' and setup cannot proceed.
The BIOS auto detects the drive and I can read and write to it from the DOS prompt. It formats at just over 76GB once system files are in place but I just can't get beyond this point and it's been three weeks of experimentation. I've had enough, here are some of the things I've tried:
Thinking it was my QDI Advance 10F motherboard that was at fault I flashed the BIOS to the latest version with no success and then bought a new replacement PIII Gigabyte board and the problem with the drive persists.
I have used the 'fixed' version of FDisk that allows drives over 64GB to be partitioned and formatted with no success
I have used Western Digital's data lifeguard disk tools to check the drive and bios settings for faults, all report back with no errors.
I've tried partitioning the drive, splitting it into two drives with 50% of the space each and FDisk reports that only 37% space is utilised per drive!
I have used Western Digital's data lifeguard tools to prep and format the drive ready to load the OS with no success.
The disk partitions and formats in my old PC, with no errors to 8GB and Scandisk doesn't complain. I just want the partition ten times bigger, that's all!
I have turned off UDMA in the BIOS settings and tried formatting etc again, with no results.
Have tried the BIOS optimised defaults with no success.
Essentially, I'm just one step away from loading the operating system and one step away from chucking the thing through the nearest window. If ever there's an advert for purchasing a complete system this is it!
Can anyone help me before I tear out what's left of my body hair.
Kind regards,
John