E
ey.markov@iname.com
Guest
Greetings,
Some time ago I aborted a conversion to dynamic disk in my W2K Pro
machine. I have attached a 250 Gb drive as slave, went into Disk
Management, converted it to dynamic. Then, when I issued the same
command for the first disk, the "Are you sure?" message reminded me of
the drawbacks, so I clicked "No" and reverted disk 2.
Problem is, ever since then disk 2 stubbornly shows as a 128 Gb drive
under Disk Management. DOS tools see it properly, and I was able to
partition it (32, 80, and 130 Gb), but almost every other day Windows
would tell me that the third partition (the one that crosses this
imaginary 128 Gb border) is corrupted, would run CHKDSK on it on
startup, and sometimes fix it, sometimes corrupt all the (test) data
on it beyond recognition.
I thought: "Dynamic disk info is stored in the last 1 Mb of the drive,
right?" Last night I ran Boot and Nuke and had it write zeroes to the
entire disk 2. Booted W2K after that... and what do you know - not
only did the drive show up as 128 Gb, it was once again labeled
"Dynamic"!
If anyone can shed some light on what the heck is going on, I'm sure I
will not be the only one to be enlightened. Thanks!
Yisroel
Some time ago I aborted a conversion to dynamic disk in my W2K Pro
machine. I have attached a 250 Gb drive as slave, went into Disk
Management, converted it to dynamic. Then, when I issued the same
command for the first disk, the "Are you sure?" message reminded me of
the drawbacks, so I clicked "No" and reverted disk 2.
Problem is, ever since then disk 2 stubbornly shows as a 128 Gb drive
under Disk Management. DOS tools see it properly, and I was able to
partition it (32, 80, and 130 Gb), but almost every other day Windows
would tell me that the third partition (the one that crosses this
imaginary 128 Gb border) is corrupted, would run CHKDSK on it on
startup, and sometimes fix it, sometimes corrupt all the (test) data
on it beyond recognition.
I thought: "Dynamic disk info is stored in the last 1 Mb of the drive,
right?" Last night I ran Boot and Nuke and had it write zeroes to the
entire disk 2. Booted W2K after that... and what do you know - not
only did the drive show up as 128 Gb, it was once again labeled
"Dynamic"!
If anyone can shed some light on what the heck is going on, I'm sure I
will not be the only one to be enlightened. Thanks!
Yisroel