error

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  1. Posts : 44
    Windows 7 Ultimate x86
       #1

    error


    I am facing problem with my hard drive.
    One of the drive of my hard disk (:f) doesnt work.
    After i open "MY COMPUTER" it doesnt show drive f:

    I tried to find it by booting from windows-7 dvd. There i could see drive f: in the list of other drives but i was not able to either format it or delete it or create a new partition from it. My 100 Gb space is lost. it just shows UNALLOCATED SPACE.


    The code error is Error:0x8004240f
    please help me find the solution of this
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 660
    win7
       #2

    Is this a spare drive you have just put into the machine? If so, how has it been formatted?
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 3,612
    Operating System : Windows 7 Home Premium Edition 6.01.7600 SP1 (x64)
       #3

    hi:)
    sounds as if you need to format the drive if it is empty Have you tried going to Control Panel/Admin Tools/Computer Management/Disk Management & see whether your ext HDD is present there? If it is and it is showing with a question mark above it, it may need initialized-NOT FORMATTED - initialized.

    to format
    click start, Right click the "computer" option and choose "manage" which opens the "computer management" window. On the left explorer pane, click the storage option and then choose disk management which brings you a list of all available hard drives that you are using in your system. Before doing a format, make sure you have a backup of all your files since formatting will erase the entire contents of the specified drive. Right click the drive you wish to format and choose "format" and in the window that appears, choose the type of formatting option which is either NTFS or FAT32. Choose any one of them and make sure that "perform a quick format" is checked (a tick mark should be enabled). Then finally click the OK button to start formatting and wait for a few minutes for the formatting to complete.

    See more: How to format your hard drive in Windows 7 | Video « Wonder How To How to format your hard drive in Windows 7 | Video « Wonder How To


    here is a definition of What is unallocated space?

    Unallocated space, sometimes called “free space”, is logical space on a hard drive that the operating system, e.g Windows, can write to. To put it another way it is the opposite of “allocated” space, which is where the operating system has already written files to.

    Examples.

    If the operating system writes a file to a certain space on the hard drive that part of the drive is now “allocated”, as the file is using it the space, and no other files can be written to that section. If that file is deleted then that part of the hard drive is no longer required to be “allocated” it becomes unallocated. This means that new files can now be re-written to that location.

    On a standard, working computer, files can only be written to the unallocated space.

    If a newly formatted drive is connected to a computer, virtually all of the drive space is unallocated space (a small amount of space will be taken up by files within the file system, e.g $MFT, etc). On a new drive the unallocated space is normally zeros, as files are written to the hard drive the zeros are over written with the file data

    Working Example

    Blank Drive

    A freshly formatted (NTFS) 500 GB hard drive starts with 99.9% unallocated space; we will assume its 100% to make the maths slightly easier. All of the unallocated space will be zeros, literally 00 00 00 written on the hard drives.

    If a 5 GB file, e.g a large movie, is placed on the drive, then there will be 1% (5 GB) allocated space and 99% unallocated (495 GB)

    If a 10 GB database file is now added to this hard drive there will be a total of 3 % (15 GB) of allocated space and 485 GB unallocated space. New files will only be written into the remaining unallocated space.

    What happens when a file is deleted?

    If the movie file, from the above example, is deleted the allocated space it was using will now become unallocated. I.e There will now be 2% allocated space (the 10 GB database) and 98% unallocated space.

    However the data from the movie file is still on the hard drive, it does not just disappear, it just changes its status. This means that the following situation now exists:

    There is 10 GB of allocated space and 490 GB of unallocated space.

    Of the 490 GB, 485 GB would be all zeros, however 5 GB of the unallocated space would be the old movie data.

    Until new files are written to the hard drive this movie file will remain deleted but still recoverable from the hard drive. Even if new files are written it must overwrite the same unallocated space as the movie file, before the movie file is destroyed.

    REMEMBER NTFS IS THE BEST CHOICE FOR FILE TYPE FOR THE HARD DRIVE
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 3,612
    Operating System : Windows 7 Home Premium Edition 6.01.7600 SP1 (x64)
       #4

    is this f a separate drive or a partition on a drive? can you post a screenshot like mine please
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails error-brys-snap-17-march-2011-10h03m07s.png  
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 44
    Windows 7 Ultimate x86
    Thread Starter
       #5

    It is one of the drive of my hard disk. It was working properly before. I faced the problem after my last os formatting process
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 44
    Windows 7 Ultimate x86
    Thread Starter
       #6

    When i boot from windows-7 dvd. It shows drive f: with 100 gb space but as unallocated space.
    I then formatted drive c: thinking that both drive C and F would merge together as unallocated spaces and i could make new drives from it. But they appeared separately.

    I made drive c: as new drive and i succeded but could not make drive f: so. The code error was 0x8004240f during that process
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 3,612
    Operating System : Windows 7 Home Premium Edition 6.01.7600 SP1 (x64)
       #7

    if they are separate hard drives they will not merge when you have partitions on one drive you can merge partitions you delete the partition then increase another partition with the free allocated space from the partition you deleted do you have two drives? is it one hard drive with 2 partitions you want to merge?
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 44
    Windows 7 Ultimate x86
    Thread Starter
       #8

    I have only one hard disk. I deleted both drives(c: and f:). But they did not merge. Drive f: remains unallocated but separately. I tested deleting drive c: and d: and they got merged. I successfully made new partitations from those drives(c: and d:).... but drive f: doesnot allow to make new partitation. nor gets merged to other drives.
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 44
    Windows 7 Ultimate x86
    Thread Starter
       #9

    I have already tested on control panel too. Drive f: is visible there but as unallocated space. I clicked on the right button and pressed new and then ok. It showed error.
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 3,612
    Operating System : Windows 7 Home Premium Edition 6.01.7600 SP1 (x64)
       #10

    ok fine you need to increase the size (volume) of the partition with the unallocated space. increase c volume in the disc management.
      My Computer


 
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