Skip to main content

Migrate Easy ATE 100gb of my new 160gb drive!

Thread needs solution

I'm upgrading the primary 2.5" IDE (PATA) hard drive on my Dell laptop from a 60gb IDE Seagate drive to a 160gb Samsung drive.

The first time I tried the clone using the proportional setting the copy process was successful but the clone failed to boot. I concluded this was probably because the proportional setting had changed the size of Dell's 2 recovery partitions on the drive as well as the size of my NTSF data partition.

So, I tried again using the "as is" setting to confirm my suspicion the failure to boot was caused the change in the size of Dell's partitions. The clone process ran smoothly in "as is" mode and the cloned drive booted without any problems. But I soon realized I'd lost 100gb of capacity on my new hard drive because the "as is" mode had only replicated all 3 partition sizes from the old drive.

So, I went back to try a 3rd time in expert mode - intending to keep the size of the Dell paritions fixed but let the NTSF data partition to grow as needed. But I was dismayyed to find the new drive now INSISTS it's only a 60gb drive and NOT a 160gb drive -- and no matter what I do it won't let me change the settings!

I've struggled with this for hours and even downloaded Samsung's diagnostic utility from their site in an effort to fix the issue. But no matter WHAT I do, my new Samsung HM160HC drive flatly refuses to let me repartition it as a 160gb drive. Instead, it basically insists it's now a 60gb drive. In short, Migrate Easy 7.0, Windows XP SP3 and the Samsung diagnostic utility are ALL convinced my new drive has lost 100gb of capacity!

For reasons I can't explain, Migrate Easy took a HUGE 100gb bite out of my 160gb drive and no matter what I do, I can't get it back. How in the world do I fix this?

Hellllppp! 575-838-0907

0 Users found this helpful

Hello WebWitch,

Thank you for using [url="http://www.acronis.com/homecomputing/products/"]Acronis products[/url]

The issue can be caused by Host Protected Area (HPA) that is on the original drive. To be sure that the issue is caused by HPA we need a couple of diagnostic files. 

1) Could you please provide us with the screen shot of the internal Disk Management utility window (Start -> Settings -> Control Panel -> Administrative Tools -> Computer Management -> Disk Management).

If you are not familiar with making screen shots, please read the below step-by-step instructions.

- Get to the window which you want to make a screen shot of;
- Hit the (Alt+)PrintScreen button on your keyboard;
- Run Paint usually available in Start\Programs\Accessories or another graphics application;
- Choose Paste command in Edit menu;
- Save the result picture in JPEG format being preferable.

2) Please download Acronis Report utility available here and run it, create a report and attach to your post.

This would provide us with detailed information on the hard disk partition structure.

Thank you.