Score:0

External HDD Appears Bigger (More Space) Than It Should

jp flag

I've come upon quite a weird situation.(Or maybe it's not, but it's the first time I notice something like this). I bought two 1-Tb HDDs about 6 months ago and I've been using them on both Windows and Ubuntu (for the last 4 months I have switched completely to Ubuntu), and just today I noticed the following :
Properties-1
Disks Overview-1
Properties-2
Disks Overview-2

Clearly the drives appear bigger than they should be since when I used them with Windows I remember them being around 920gb(maybe even less). Sadly I have no Windows installation right now to test it, and I'm kinda out of ideas.. I worry most about my files being corrupted.
The only solution I've been able to think is that, there is a partitioning issue and that I should slowly redistribute the contents of the drives to other drives and reformat them, which is quite impractical since I'm pretty sure I will need to buy another HDD for that. Has anyone faced a similar situation and/or know how to deal with it? Any help appreciated :).

oldfred avatar
cn flag
I do not see issue, both look like 1TB drives. But you should not use NTFS, unless you have Windows or at minimum a Windows repair disk. NTFS will need chkdsk and defrag and you cannot do either from Linux. Also suggest converting to gpt partitioning, but not requried. That will erase drive, if you just repartition with gparted. http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1457901 & https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/GUID_Partition_Table#Advantages_of_GPT Converting to or from GPT - must have good backups. http://www.rodsbooks.com/gdisk/mbr2gpt.html
PonJar avatar
in flag
I agree with @oldfred, it doesn’t look like there is anything wrong here except NTFS is not great on Linux for the reasons stated. If one of these was originally a Windows system disk you may have had a recovery partition taking up some space. Also it’s easy to confuse GB with GiB. Your disks are about 931 GiB which is the unit used on some disk utilities.
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