STEP
24 : Prepare the Hard Drive
In order to use your
hard drive, it must be partitioned and formatted. If you are building a system
and putting a previously used hard drive into it, you may not need to perform
this step. But, on any new hard drive or one you are just trying to start over
with, you will need to do this.
Partitioning a hard
drive means that you are creating the boot sector (necessary to boot the
machine) as well as dividing the hard drive into actual drive volumes (C,D,E,
etc). This action is done using the FDISK command. FDISK should be included on
your system disk and when you use it, it will actually be run off of the floppy
drive. If, for some reason, your system disk does not have FDISK.EXE on it, get
one that does. Windows XP installation CD will have all the necessary tools
included and is menu driven so simply insert the disk, switch on the PC and
follow the instructions. Ensure the BIOS is set to boot from CD if nothing
happens.
Take a little time to
plan your partitions. Do you want one large partition for the entire drive? Or
do you want to separate it into different drive volumes? If you have FAT32, it
is very popular to create one partition for the entire drive. Otherwise, if you
are using a drive larger than 2G, you will have to separate it into more than
one partition. Also, keep in mind that smaller partitions lead to smaller
clusters, thus less slack or wasted disk space. With almost any modern
operating system (I’m thinking Windows here) you will want to use the FAT32
file system. When you go into FDISK, it will ask if you want to enable “Large
Disk Support”, and you do if you’re using any OS Windows 98 or newer.
So, start.
- Type "fdisk" at the command prompt. If it does not work,
it is because your hard drive is not attached properly or you may be
missing FDISK.EXE on your system disk.
- It will ask if you wish to enable Large Disk Support, and in most
cases, you will. Type “Y” and proceed.
- Next, you will see 4 menu options. If you already have partitions
on this hard drive, you can choose option 4 to view the current partition
setup and decide if you want to change it. For a brand new drive (which
I’m assuming for the purpose of this tutorial), you’ll need to start from
scratch.
Some information: The first partition is your primary DOS partition. This
is your C: drive and can't be divided. This is also called the active
partition. You can only have one active partition. The second partition is
optional. It is called an extended partition. This is the space left over
after the primary partition. Then, logical DOS drives are created within
the extended partition, each having a letter by which you will refer to
it.
- First you have to setup a primary DOS partition. Choose Option 1
(Create DOS partition or Logical DOS drive).
- Choose Option 1 in the next menu.
- Now you can make your entire hard drive the primary partition or
only a part of it. Many people just make the entire drive one partition
just to stay simple. If you want to break from this norm, specify the
amount of drive you want to partition in either megabytes or percentage of
total drive. If you are using a percentage, be sure to follow the number
by a "%" or the computer will think you're talking MB's. As a
tip, I generally like to have my operating system(s) stay on their own
partition, so I like to assign 2 GIG or so to the primary DOS partition,
allowing ample room for a few versions of Windows. That’s just me.
- Next, you'll need to make this partition active. Return to the main
FDISK menu and choose Option 2 (Set Active Partition). Follow the prompts.
- If you're going to create an extended partition (and you probably
will unless you’re only going to use C), choose Option 1 again, but this
time choose Option 2 in the next menu (Create Extended DOS partition).
- Plug in the percentage of drive to partition for this one. You can
use the remaining amount for simplicity. Do not make this partition
active. Only one can be active.
- After you create an extended partition, you will be given the
Create Logical Drives option in the extended partition menu. Follow the
on-screen instructions to assign drive letters to your partitions D: through
Z:.
- After all this is done, you can choose Option 4 (Display Partition
Information) and check your work.
- After the drive has been partitioned and all looks fine to you,
press to exit FDISK. You’ll be told you need to restart the machine
and that’s what you’re about to do.
- Reboot the machine with the system disk in Drive A:. If you try to
do anything on the C: drive, you may get an error about Invalid Media
Type. Don't worry about it. It’s because you haven't formatted it yet.
Now you must format the
new C: drive. At the A> prompt, type "format c: /s". The
"/s" tells it to make the disk bootable by copying some elementary
system files to the C drive. You will get a warning saying that this action
will erase all data on the drive. This is normal, and since there is no data on
the drive, just press "Y" and move on. It will show the status as it
happens. As a note, if you will be installing the OS right away and have a
system disk that provides CD-ROM support, then you don’t need to copy any
system files over to the C drive, as the OS installation will do this for you.
If you created
additional partitions on this drive, format those volumes now. Type
"format d:" or "format e:", where the letter corresponds to
the volume you wish to format. Do not type the "/s" since you only
want the C: drive bootable. Do this for all remaining partitions you created
during the partitioning process. When you are complete, you should be able to
do a directory listing to be sure it is formatted by typing “DIR” at the command
prompt. You’ll likely get a FILE NOT FOUND message, but that’s normal. At least
the drive is set up.
Reboot the system. If
you copied the system files over you can do so without the system disk. If not,
you’ll need to leave the system disk in Drive A. If using the C drive, it is
supposed to boot normally and go to the C: prompt. If you get an error like
"No boot device found" or "No ROM Basic", you probably
forgot to make the primary partition active. Run FDISK again and fix that. If
you get an error like "No Operating System", you probably forgot to
make the disk bootable. Make sure you typed "/s" at the format
command.
- STEP 1
: Purchase/Collect The Components
- STEP 2
: Remove Case Cover
- STEP 3
: Case Preparation
- STEP 4
: Configure Your Motherboard
- STEP 5
: Install the CPU
- STEP 6
: Install Heat Sink/Fan
- STEP 7
: Install the Cache Module
- STEP 8
: Install Memory
- STEP 9
: Install the Motherboard
- STEP
10 : Install the I/O Connectors & Mouse
- STEP
11: Hook the Motherboard to the Case
- STEP
12 : Install Floppy Drive
- STEP
13 : Configure the Hard Drive & CD-ROM
- STEP
14 : Mount Hard Drive
- STEP
15 : Install the CD-ROM(s)
- STEP
16 : Connect the Floppy Drive
- STEP
17 : Connect the Hard Drive
- STEP
18 : Connect the CD Drive(s)
- STEP
19 : Install The Video Card
- STEP
20 : Post-Assembly
- STEP
21 : Initial Boot-Up
- STEP
22 : Configure The BIOS
- STEP
23 : Test The System
- STEP
24 : Prepare the Hard Drive
- STEP
25 : Install The CD-ROM Driver
- STEP
26: Install The Operating System
- STEP
27: Tweak Your Creation
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