Getting my 4TB to be recognized on XP


  1. Posts : 56
    Windows 7
       #1

    Getting my 4TB to be recognized on XP


    I just got a new 4TB drive
    My Book Studio Edition II 4 TB

    Now apparently Windows XP can only recognize drives upto 2TB so a single 4TB drive isn't recognizable.

    Now while I use Windows 7 at home, my school computers all use XP.
    So I need to find a way to get these computers to recognize the drive.

    I tried making two seperate partition using Dsk Manger (1.90 TB each) and still it didn't get recognized.

    Is there any way to solve this problem without losing the ability to use the drive to its fullest?
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 990
    Windows 7 Home Premium x64
       #2

    Correction - that document refers to NT4.0. You need to have a cluster size of 2048 byte (8,796,093,020,160 (8TB)) for Win7.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 7,878
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #3

    I'm not aware of any way past this limitation. It's listed right in the spec sheet that this drive will only work on Windows Vista and up.
    Welcome to Western Digital US Online Store

    wow 4 TB. I wonder what average consumers do with so much disk space.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 56
    Windows 7
    Thread Starter
       #4

    Captain Zero said:
    Refer to this document for additional info.

    Cluster sizes need to be less that 32k for TB+ drives to be recognized. Bear in mind that 7.8 TB is the limit for NT.
    So would this make it so the drive could be recognized?
    How do I do this. I'm using NTFS
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 990
    Windows 7 Home Premium x64
       #5

    Duckling said:
    I'm using NTFS
    Was the drive partitioned/formatted under XP? If so, it should have allocated 32k blocks already and be available to both OS'. Otherwise, Win7 may have formatted using 64k blocks, in which case you will need to reformat/recreate the partitions.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 28,845
    Win 8 Release candidate 8400
       #6

    Duckling said:
    I just got a new 4TB drive
    My Book Studio Edition II 4 TB

    Now apparently Windows XP can only recognize drives upto 2TB so a single 4TB drive isn't recognizable.

    Now while I use Windows 7 at home, my school computers all use XP.
    So I need to find a way to get these computers to recognize the drive.

    I tried making two seperate partition using Dsk Manger (1.90 TB each) and still it didn't get recognized.

    Is there any way to solve this problem without losing the ability to use the drive to its fullest?
    Duckling

    Thats a lot of songs and videos. My question is what are you going to back that up to?

    Ken
      My Computer


  7. DJG
    Posts : 1,008
    Windows 7 RTM x64
       #7

    pparks1 said:
    I'm not aware of any way past this limitation. It's listed right in the spec sheet that this drive will only work on Windows Vista and up.
    Welcome to Western Digital US Online Store

    wow 4 TB. I wonder what average consumers do with so much disk space.
    Backups - lots of backups .
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 990
    Windows 7 Home Premium x64
       #8

    Apologies, I had a pretty bad typo in my earlier post, it should be 7.8GB - not 7.8TB.

    Big difference.

    As I mention, use a cluster size of 2048 bytes (8,796,093,020,160 (8TB)).
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 7,878
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #9

    DJG said:
    Backups - lots of backups .
    Do you guys really keep so many backups of data? I'm all about backups. My server has 2 drivers that are synchronized to each other every 2 hours with robocopy. In addition, I run a robocopy job to 2 external hard drives on a regular basis and 1 drive stays at home, while the other one stays in my office. I certainly wouldn't advise storing all of these backups on one physical device like this either. It's far better to have the data in multiple places in case of fire, or theft.
      My Computer


  10. DJG
    Posts : 1,008
    Windows 7 RTM x64
       #10

    I have two disk drive sets, call them System and Data.

    The System drive set is 4x 1.5TB on the on-board ICH10R controller, and has a 300GB RAID 0 array with two 100GB system and one 100GB app temp partitions, and a 2.7TB RAID 10 array all used for data image backup.

    The Data drive set is 6x 500GB on an Areca ARC-1220 PCI-E controller, and has a 100GB RAID 0 array for sys Temp & pagefile, and a 1400GB RAID 10 array with a 780GB Data partition and 570GB Sys Backup & Stuff partitons.

    So each drive set provides fault-tolerant backup image storage for the other.

    From the Data and System image backup areas I copy to a single harddrive (currently 750GB or 1TB) on a hot-swapable bay for external backup using a script that also copies real-time versions of special dynamic files, such as mail.

    I use Paragon Drive Backup Pro to create the backup images. Creating a System image (~25GB) takes about 2.5 minutes. Creating a Data image (~500GB) takes about 55 minutes. Copying to the external storage drive on the on-board Marvell controller takes about 2 hours, but is not too intrusive as the images are static.
      My Computer


 

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