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William A. Huntley
May 17th 04, 09:12 PM
What is the maximum size of an IDE HD under Win98SE? I have seen something
about anything above 137 GB requires a controller card. If this is the
case, what make/model of controller card is recommended and also, if there
is an upper limit, does partitioning to <137 GB partitions solve this
problem? I am looking at a 250GB drive but don't want to buy it if I can't
access all of the physical space.

TIA!

William A. Huntley
May 17th 04, 09:34 PM
Nevermind...I read below on a related topic. Thanks.

"William A. Huntley" > wrote in message
...
> What is the maximum size of an IDE HD under Win98SE? I have seen
something
> about anything above 137 GB requires a controller card. If this is the
> case, what make/model of controller card is recommended and also, if there
> is an upper limit, does partitioning to <137 GB partitions solve this
> problem? I am looking at a 250GB drive but don't want to buy it if I
can't
> access all of the physical space.
>
> TIA!
>
>

Ron Martell
May 17th 04, 09:46 PM
"William A. Huntley" > wrote:

>What is the maximum size of an IDE HD under Win98SE? I have seen something
>about anything above 137 GB requires a controller card. If this is the
>case, what make/model of controller card is recommended and also, if there
>is an upper limit, does partitioning to <137 GB partitions solve this
>problem? I am looking at a 250GB drive but don't want to buy it if I can't
>access all of the physical space.
>
>TIA!
>

Your first concern is with the hardware in your computer. Is it
(specifically the BIOS) capable of recognizing a 200 gb hard drive?

You also need to ensure that your Windows 98 SE is fully up to date
with all of the updates in place.

And finally you need to be aware than the practical limit for a FAT32
partition in Windows 98/98SE/Me is 128 binary gigabytes (137 billion
bytes) because Scandisk and Defrag will not work on partitions that
are larger than this.

So if your hardware is fully capable of accepting the 200 gb drive
then you will have to partition it into at least two partitions in
order for it to be fully usable under Windows 98.

Good luck


Ron Martell Duncan B.C. Canada
--
Microsoft MVP
On-Line Help Computer Service
http://onlinehelp.bc.ca

"The reason computer chips are so small is computers don't eat much."