I'm the local armchair expert on everything. Ask Moreno. IDE drives when through an evolution. Computers made before 8/94 were typically restricted in their BIOS to acknowledging 528 MB drives. After that, until about 1996 drives were only recognized in BIOS up to 2.1 gigs. Then DOS 6.X and Win 3.1 had a limit of 8.4 GB.
Any of these can cause the problem. To fix it there are a number of possible fixes. Updating your OS if it is stuck at 8.4 gig. Some computers have flash memory BIOS and just need a firmware flash upgrade which may be available at the motherboard's manufacturer's website. Some can be adjusted within BIOS and it is just a matter of changing some settings. Some computer require a literal BIOS chip replacement to make this repair in firmware. However, most hard drives today come with a small software patch on a floppy disk which allows for a software fix that loads during boot up. If your harddrive came with a manual or installation instructions check them, as this is usually discussed. If it came with some installation software, it probably has the patch with it. Some drives require different jumper settings dependent upon how you go about fixing the problem, and occasionally the patch can cause your system to hang, and you may need to contact the manufacturer of your motherboard or the drive company. Art John's ntl account wrote: > > But... some of you demonstrated recently you knew a lot about them, and > I have a (scanner related) problem. I bought a Maxtor 4D040H hard drive > as a slave to my main hard drive so as to have a giant scratch disk for > Photoshop. Trouble is, the wretched thing reports under 2Gig file space > while 38 Gb goes unallocated. Now if one of you experts would like to > tell me off list what you think I've done wrong I'd be eternally > grateful. And my scanning will improve ;-) > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Unsubscribe by mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], with 'unsubscribe filmscanners' or 'unsubscribe filmscanners_digest' (as appropriate) in the message title or body
