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-   -   Formatting An External HD (https://www.pprune.org/computer-internet-issues-troubleshooting/342841-formatting-external-hd.html)

MightyGem 11th September 2008 22:56

Formatting An External HD
 
Our computers at work are formatted to NTFS. We have a Maxtor 320Gb external HD that has also been formatted to NTFS. I want to reformat it to FAT16 so that I can use it with the Mac that we also have.

Now, I know how to do that using the Mac, but how would I do it using the PC, and would it still work with the PC afterwards?

Saab Dastard 11th September 2008 23:34

The maximum volume size supported by FAT16 is 4 GB, so that's a lot of partitions you will have to create!!!!:eek:

FAT32 would be a better bet. You can use Disk Manager to format the disk up to 32GB FAT32 volumes in Win2K or WinXP. That's still a lot of volumes (and a large block size).

Interestingly, Win98 supports formatting much larger FAT32 volumes - up to 127.5GB - while the theoretical maximum FAT32 size is far larger (up to 8 terabytes with 32KB clusters, but as the boot sector uses a 32-bit field for the sector count, this limits the volume size to 2 TB on a hard disk with 512 byte sectors).

To create and format larger volumes you can use a 3rd party tool (e.g. this) (or MAC OSX), or indeed the command-line Format.exe utility in any Windows > 98.

However, Mac OS X doesn't manage FAT32 volumes of more than 137GB AFAIK, but you could presumably make 3 x 106GB partitions. Also MS does not recommend FAT32 volumes larger than 32GB (for "efficiency") and does not recommend larger than 127.5GB (apparently not tested). But of course Win2K / XP can use large FAT32 volumes - MS just doesn't want you to, as it wants the world to use NTFS.

I'm sure that a MAC expert can provide more up-to-date information about MAC FAT32 / NTFS support.

If Mac OSX can now reliably write to NTFS partitions, that's probably the way to go.

SD

MightyGem 12th September 2008 02:30

Thanks, Saab. I've never owned a Windows PC so I'm not that familiar with their formatting. The reason I said FAT16 is that is what my USB stick is formatted to!

The Mac can read the Maxtor in it's present format, but can't write to it.

I shall ask on the Mac forum that I frequent.

Background Noise 12th September 2008 06:48

I have a 250GB external HDD, formatted as a single FAT32 partition, which I can read and write to in both Windows and Mac OSX.

Shunter 12th September 2008 07:56

I wouldn't bother with FAT if I were you.

A Mac can read and write NTFS discs with the correct software (free):
http://www.lifehack.org/articles/lif...-mac-os-x.html

A Windows machine can read and write HFS+ discs, using MacDrive (cheap).

Bushfiva 12th September 2008 08:38


I wouldn't bother with FAT if I were you.
Well, I would if I were you. FAT32 is simple and readily understood. Your recommended NTFS driver is a work in progress. There's a reason most devices can read NTFS but not write to it: the structure contains secrets MS cares not to divulge. Those that write use informed guesswork, but there's till risk involved.

Spui18 24th September 2008 06:33

NTFS together with FAT32?
 
I have bought an external HD for my desktop PC as it's HD is pretty much full.
The PC's HD is in NTFS, the external HD is in FAT32.
Do I need to reformat the external HD to NTFS? (Partition magic could do that for me)
I intend to store photos and music on the external HD.

Thanks in advance for your recommendations

Spui

Bushfiva 24th September 2008 07:12


Do I need to reformat the external HD to NTFS?
No.


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