formatting hard drive advice

Discussion in 'PC hardware help' started by jerecho, Dec 25, 2008.

  1. jerecho

    jerecho Regular member

    Joined:
    Nov 23, 2005
    Messages:
    697
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    26
    I'm getting a 1.5TB hard drive (sata) tomorrow and I am dredding formatting it because I just formatted a 1.0TB drive last weekend and it took like 9 hours! I need my new drive ready for use a.s.a.p. so my question is what can I do to speed up the process? I have a macbook pro with 4gb of RAM. Will this speed things up. (I have an usb docking station for the sata drive). The computer that i did the first drive on only has 1gb of ram. does this even matter? should i format through dos? any advice is needed. Thank you
     
  2. jerecho

    jerecho Regular member

    Joined:
    Nov 23, 2005
    Messages:
    697
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    26
    I forgot to mention that I am running vista 64 on all computers. the macbook is running vista through boot camp.
     
  3. ddp

    ddp Moderator Staff Member

    Joined:
    Oct 15, 2004
    Messages:
    39,169
    Likes Received:
    137
    Trophy Points:
    143
    presuming the drive is new then can do a quick format for ntfs as i do that when doing a fresh install of windows on a new pc. dos format will take a while tho don't think 9hrs.
     
  4. jony218

    jony218 Guest

    Just use the quick format setting. Every hard drive I've bought whether 20gb or 750gb I use the quick format, none took longer than 10 minutes to format. I use NTFS files system on all my hard drives, I don't know if that's what you are going to use. Is the USB docking station USB 2.0? I usually format mine on an external 2.0 case and it always goes quickly.

    I think what you are doing wrong is using the scandisk/slow format setting. That isn't needed especially on a new drive. I've never done a slow format on any of my new drives and they have all worked perfectly.

    9 hours is too long for a format, and put's a lot of unneeded wear and tear on your new drive.

    Years ago when the hard drives were small and unreliable, a slow format was a good idea and highly recommended. A quick format will work fine on todays drives.
     
  5. jerecho

    jerecho Regular member

    Joined:
    Nov 23, 2005
    Messages:
    697
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    26
    Sweet I'll try that. What is the difference in the fast and slow settings. Yes the drive will be new. And yes the USB is 2.0. ThNks for the responces
     
  6. ddp

    ddp Moderator Staff Member

    Joined:
    Oct 15, 2004
    Messages:
    39,169
    Likes Received:
    137
    Trophy Points:
    143
    slow format has a better chance of finding bad spots on a drive.
     

Share This Page