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FLEX42
3rd Apr 2002, 20:54
My Laptop with XP home edition on it was installed with FAT32. Having read various blurb (not just the MS hype) I decide to convert it to NTFS (which I know is irreversible without reformatting). Having carried out speed tests on PC PITSTOP and a few others, the hard drive access time is about one quarter that using FAT32 !!! and the conversion set a unit allocation size of 512, not the default of 4096 for the hard drive size. Is there any way I can change the allocation size without reformatting in the hope it will give better speed ? Otherwise, I'll reformat and go back to FAT32

shack
4th Apr 2002, 07:49
If you decide that you want to go back to FAT 32 Partition Magic will do it without re-formatting.

FLEX42
4th Apr 2002, 15:53
Shack, thanks alot........I'll have a try

stagger
4th Apr 2002, 18:36
Flex

I knew that the conversion utility that shipped with Windows 2000 always used a 512-byte cluster size but I thought that the one with XP could use other sizes. When the partition was originally formatted as FAT32 was this done by XP format?

This from Microsoft...


Cluster Alignment for NTFS vs. FAT

On NTFS volumes, clusters start at sector zero; therefore, every cluster is aligned on the cluster boundary. For example, if the cluster size was 4K and the sector size was 512 bytes, clusters will always start at a sector number that is a multiple of 4096/512 — for example, 8.

However, FAT file system data clusters are located after the BIOS Parameter Blocks (BPB), reserved sectors, and two FAT structures. FAT formatting cannot guarantee that data clusters are aligned on a cluster boundary.

In Windows 2000, CONVERT handled this problem by forcing an NTFS cluster size of 512 bytes, which resulted in reduced performance and increased disk fragmentation. In Windows XP, CONVERT chooses the best cluster size (4K is the ideal).

To maximize NTFS performance, Windows XP FORMAT and the new OFORMAT tool format a new file system as FAT or FAT32, ensuring that the data clusters are aligned on at least a 4K boundary and that the FAT32 cluster size is 4K or larger.


Anyway, give the position you're in now I think you'll probably need to reformat.

More information here (http://www.microsoft.com/hwdev/tech/storage/ntfs-preinstall.asp)