16Gb flash drive FAT32 or NTFS?

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  1. Posts : 544
    Windows 10 Home, 64 bit
       #1

    16Gb flash drive FAT32 or NTFS?


    I'm going to use two 16Gb USB flash drives strictly for backing up data files and storing the drives alternately every month offsite. I will need to use the flash drives mainly in my Windows 7 machine, but I might need to access them with a Windows XP laptop.

    Should I format the flash drives FAT32 or NTFS?

    Thanks.
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  2. Posts : 52
    windows 7, mac os X
       #2

    doesnt really matter, depends on the data u plan to put on the drive. why not use exFAT thats what exFAT is for i thought.
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  3. Posts : 797
    Windows 7 Ultimate (x64)
       #3

    The decision largely depends on how are you planning to use the drive. Do you plan on using it with Windows machines and keep sensitive data? Then I would go with NTFS.

    Do you plan to connect it to other machines (Macs, Linux, etc)? Do you plan to use it for media files? As an example, I use my 8GB USB drive to watch video files on my Blu-Ray player. It's much better than watching anything on the PC. But, the Blu-Ray player can only read FAT32 drives, so that was the decisive factor for me. The drawback is the 4GB file size limit of FAT32, if I have a larger video file, then I have to do something else.

    So, as I said, the decision is yours and it depends on what do you want to do with the thing.
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  4. Posts : 6,668
    Windows 7 x64
       #4

    unifex said:
    The drawback is the 4GB file size limit of FAT32, if I have a larger video file, then I have to do something else.
    That's been the only deciding factor for me in this choice. In the end I wound up formatting one ntfs and leaving one fat32
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  5. Posts : 544
    Windows 10 Home, 64 bit
    Thread Starter
       #5

    Thanks, all. I will use the drives only for backup of all kinds of files and file types. But the drives will just sit in a safe deposit box as backup. No applications, no playing movies, just sitting there as backup (I'll store media files on the flash drives, but I won't be playing them from those drives). No Linux, no Mac--just Windows 7 and perhaps Windows XP computers (but mostly Windows 7).
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  6. Posts : 7,878
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #6

    Don't see a reason to use FAT32 on the drive. If you are only using it with Windows XP through Windows 7, they read/write NTFS just fine and this gets you over the 4GB max file size limitation of FAT32.
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  7. Posts : 2,566
    Win 7 Pro x64 SP1 OS X Snow Leopard 10.6.7
       #7

    gogreen said:
    Thanks, all. I will use the drives only for backup of all kinds of files and file types. But the drives will just sit in a safe deposit box as backup. No applications, no playing movies, just sitting there as backup (I'll store media files on the flash drives, but I won't be playing them from those drives). No Linux, no Mac--just Windows 7 and perhaps Windows XP computers (but mostly Windows 7).
    NTFS is likely your best option.
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  8. Posts : 258
    Win 7 Ultimate x64
       #8

    As the Folks above Suggest - NTFS

    My opinion (and from what I've read) - NTFS, the newest of the file systems, is much more stable and reliable than Fat, Fat16, or Fat32 and is far less prone to file system errors. I realize you wont need NTFS's > 4 GB memory advantages but nevertheless - I think its your best bet.
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  9. Posts : 4,280
    Windows 7 ultimate 64 bit / XP Home sp3
       #9

    Simply put NTFS or whatever your system is formatted to. Why not keep then all using the same format?
    Fabe
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 1,127
    Win7U 64 RTM
       #10

    Although NTFS has its advantages, it also performs more writes to the media and is not generally recommended for flash drives. Given that flash drives 'wear out' after so many writes, I would go FAT 32 or exFAT, which overcomes the FAT32 4GB size limitation.

    You can read about it here:

    exFAT Versus FAT32 Versus NTFS | Microsoft Vista | Tech-Recipes


    James
      My Computer


 
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