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Answers to ‘How can I free 'hidden' hard drive capacity?’Thursday 17th July 2008 09:28 GMT
nope..
Matthaus • Thursday 17th July 2008 09:39 GMT
No, they will be of a different density the platters, so there is nothing 'hidden' to find. Not likely to be identical
David Gosnell • Thursday 17th July 2008 09:45 GMT
Not all platters are the same, even from the same manufacturer. Different products have fundamentally different data densities, so the same size platter fundamentally holds different amounts, and the read/write hardware will be specifically made to match. It is conceivable a drive could support the data storage equivalent of overclocking. I've seen it done on floppy disks, but reliability goes through the floor, and you might be OK with risking a couple of megs but not several hundred gigs. It's not very likely to be possible on a hard disk though - unlike floppy disks, the controller is built into the unit itself, so not likely to be "hackable". It's possible
Anonymous Coward • Thursday 17th July 2008 14:39 GMT
For certain specific models manufacturers have been known to artificially restrict capacity via use of a host protected area. I had an excelstore 60GB drive which was actually 80GB. I don't think it's a very common practice though, most drives are only capable of holding their rated amount of data. The period for answering this question has finished Ask a QuestionTroubled by technology? Want to know which is the best product to buy? Need a hand getting the most out of your gadgets? Email us to submit your queries to the combined brainpower of your fellow Register Hardware readers. |
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