2006-01-31, 09:59 PM
Can I jump in, where do you set the cluster size, and what sort of figure should it be set to??
2006-01-31, 09:59 PM
Can I jump in, where do you set the cluster size, and what sort of figure should it be set to??
2006-02-01, 12:12 AM
in the format option within the xp disk admin tool. set it to 64k, which i thin is the highest.
i would go with dfdario's recommendations, 10+70. for a barebones xp, gbpvr and a couple fo extra video related apps, 10gb sould be enough and u can use a drive imaging program to back this up onto a single dvd in case the whole thing goes pear shaped.
âIf this is the way Queen Victoria treats her prisoners, she doesn't deserve to have any.â
2006-02-01, 12:24 AM
volksman Wrote:I would break it into at least 3 partitions. good ideas, and very similar to my main rig, except i have seperate swap and temp partitions in a raid array. i prefer to keep the temp files in their own partition and periodically just delete them all. With a single 80Gb disk, with 2 partitions, you can :- defrag d: create new swap on d: and disable swap on c: reboot (check pagefile.sys on c; has been deleted, if not delete it) defrag c: create new fixed size swap on c: and disable swap on d: reboot (check pagefile.sys on d; has been deleted, if not delete it) swap file on c: will be defragmented and will remain that way. tbh: with the OP's 80GB drive, i don;t think it's worth him getting to fancy about the setup - he'll fill that puppy up within 6 weeks!!
âIf this is the way Queen Victoria treats her prisoners, she doesn't deserve to have any.â
2006-02-01, 02:43 AM
I always try to partition my HD so when I reinstall my OS it does not mess up the whole thing. I would not bother making a partition for the swap there was some tweaks posted and somebody tried all kinds of thing to see if moving the swap file would make a differance and he could not find any noticeable measured differance.
What you will probably end up doing is buying a bigger HD and making it your recording drive, this is what I did with a 160 and am looking for a 250 or 400 gig drive now.
2006-02-01, 11:14 AM
gEd Wrote:With a single 80Gb disk, with 2 partitions, you can :- You can do this simpler. Do check: http://www.sysinternals.com/Utilities/PageDefrag.html This utility defrags sysfiles and registry hives before Windows boots! (Lots of other usefull utils there.
2006-02-01, 04:00 PM
has anybody used partitonmagic to change from a small cluster size upto 64k,
I'd like to do this but am very nervous of doing it on a production disc with loads of music and recordings on it Tkgafs
2006-02-01, 04:38 PM
yep - works fine. I used version 7.0 I believe.
âIf this is the way Queen Victoria treats her prisoners, she doesn't deserve to have any.â
2006-02-02, 01:09 PM
I like to partition my first drive about 12GB for boot and the rest for data. I set my systems up so that the boot drive contains OS and programs ONLY, no data. That way I can Ghost the boot drive, and at any time if I think my system is corrupt, I can restore the C: drive, reboot, and be back in business without losing any data.
GBPVR would have to be installed somewhere else since it stores its data in the install directory, but that's not a big deal really. Most other software can go on the C: drive OK. |
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