Blogger WidgetsScience Education and Technology: How to Format a Hard Drive With Windows XP
Saturday, 14 December 2013
How to Format a Hard Drive With Windows XP
If you want to format a hard drive while using or installing Windows XP,
you've come to the right place. This can be very useful for clearing
everything off a secondary drive or when installing a fresh copy of
Windows. Formatting a computer hard drive is simple and can help
eliminate viruses, storage issues and other hard-to-resolve problems.
Instructions
Preparation
1
When you format a computer hard drive you will lose
everything that is on the drive. Therefore, it is very important to back
up anything you might want later. Additionally, if you are going to be
formatting and installing XP you need to make sure you have the discs
for any applications or third party hardware you use since you will need
to re-install your programs and drivers after re-installing Windows.
2
Take a moment to think of anything that you have on the
computer that you wouldn't want to lose. Generally, you probably want
everything in your My Documents folder, and you also want to save things
like your favorites or bookmarks from your Web browser. Remember that
each user on the computer has his or her own My Documents folder,
Desktop items and Favorites/Bookmarks.
3
Save everything to a CD, DVD or a hard drive that you won't be formatting.
Formatting a Secondary Hard Drive
4
Right-Click on the "My Computer" icon either on your desktop or in the Start Menu and select "Manage."
5
A new window titled "Computer Management" comes up. Select
"Storage" from the left hand side by clicking it once, then select "Disk
Management(local)" from the right side by double-clicking it.
6
Now in the lower part of the main frame (right side) of the
window you should see a nice visual of all your hard drives. Each line
is a different drive. Each box on a line (with a colored bar at the top
and a size displayed in MB or GB) is a partition on the drive.
Partitions are separations of space on a drive. Unless you are doing
something specific that requires multiple partitions, you only want one
partition per drive.
7
First you must delete any existing partitions on the drive
you are going to format. Do this by right-clicking on the partition's
box and selecting "Delete Partition..." Since you already know that you
will be deleting everything on the drive, and have already backed
everything up, you can safely say yes to any warning the computer
presents you with.
8
If there are multiple partitions make sure you have saved
everything off them since they might each have different drive letters
(i.e. "D:" or "F:"). Then repeat the above step for each of them. If
you only want to format one partition that is OK and you can continue to
the next step without deleting the other partitions.
9
The box for the drive to be formatted should now have a
black bar at the top of it and should say "Unallocated" under its size
(see picture). Right click on it and select "New Partition..." The New
Partition Wizard comes up.
10
In the New Partition Wizard click next. On the next page
make sure "Primary Partition" is selected and click next. Now make the
size equal to the maximum (it should already be set to it), and click
next again. On the next page the computer will automatically choose the
first available drive letter for the new drive. However, if you like you
can choose another drive letter from the drop-down menu, and then click
next.
11
Finally the New Partition Wizard asks if you would like to
format the new partition and if so what format. Choose "NTFS" as it is
faster and more secure. Leave the "Allocation unit size" as "Default."
In the "Volume label" field enter whatever name you want the drive to
have. Simple is better. Avoid using spaces. Lastly, if the drive is
brand new and has never been used before check the "Perform a quick
format" box. If the drive has been used before leave this box unchecked.
Leave the "Enable file and folder compression" box unchecked and click
next. Then on the next page click finish.
12
The wizard will now spend a little while formatting the
drive. On old or large drives this may take a while. Do not close the
"Computer Management" window until it finishes. You will know it is done
when the word under the size of the drive changes from "Formatting" to
"Healthy" and the name and drive letter you chose for the new drive show
up. After it is finished you can proceed to use your newly formatted
drive.
Formatting and Installing from the Windows XP CD
13
This section explains how to reformat a drive from the
Windows XP installation CD. This can be used when installing a fresh
copy of Windows onto a computer. Here it is especially important to
backup all of your important information because upon formatting you
will lose EVERYTHING that used to be on the drive. This includes all
applications and device drivers, so you must back up everything you can.
14
Insert your Windows XP installation disc into your CD drive (Home or Pro--it does not matter).
15
Now as you computer boots a little more it will say "Press any key to boot from CD.." press a key to do so.
16
The CD will load up a blue screen and then spend a while
loading files it needs. When it is finished it will list a few options,
mainly "Press ENTER to set up Windows XP." Press Enter or Return.
17
Now you will be at a screen to select where to install
Windows to. This is where you can delete old partitions and format
drives. The box in the bottom half of the screen shows all your drives
and the partitions that exist on them. Use the Up and Down arrow keys to
highlight your "C:" partition and press the 'D' key (if all that shows
up is "Unpartitioned space" and you have no C: or D: partitions, skip
this step). On the next screen press the 'L' key to finalize deleting
the partition.
18
Now you are back on the screen to choose where to install
Windows. The box on the lower half of the screen should no longer show a
partition but simply have an entry "Unpartitioned space xxxxxMB."
Select this with the arrow keys and press the 'C' key to create a
partition on the drive. The next screen tells you the minimum and
maximum sizes the partition can be and lets you pick the size. The
default size is the maximum, but double check that the number entered is
the maximum and hit enter.
19
Now you will again be back at the choose where to install
Windows screen. But this time you will have a partition that looks
something like this "C: Partition1 [New (Raw)]xxxxxxMB." Highlight this
entry and press enter.
20
The next screen lets you choose which file system to format
the drive with. Choose NTFS as it is faster and more secure. If the
drive is brand new and has never been used before then use one of the
options that ends in "(Quick)." Or, choose one of the lower down
options. Use the arrow keys to select the proper one and press Enter or
Return.
21
From here you are all set and the installation of Windows
will proceed starting with a format of your drive. This will take a
while (over half an hour) so you can take a little break.
No comments:
Post a Comment