Double your hard drive’s space

Wiley Siler, a reader of The Inquirer, has stumbled upon a way to recover vast amounts of data from your computer’s hard drive. The technique hasn’t been verified by The Inquirer but they went ahead and posted the steps anyway. The space gains appear to be significant and varied based on the hard drive’s make and model.

Interesting results to date:
Western Digital 200GB SATA
Yield after recovery: 510GB of space
IBM Deskstar 80GB EIDE
Yield after recovery: 150GB of space
Maxtor 40GB EIDE
Yield after recovery: 80GB
Seagate 20GB EIDE
Yield after recovery: 30GB
Unknown laptop 80GB HDD
Yield: 120GB

I have included the steps in the extended section of this post or you can go the The Inquirer to check it out yourself. You will need to have a specific version of Ghost 2003 to pull this tip off. Good luck. (Click the “Read The Technical Details!” link below to see the steps.)

Required items
Ghost 2003 Build 2003.775 (Be sure not to allow patching of this software) 2 X Hard Drives (OS must be installed on both.) For sake of clarity we will call the drive we are trying to expand (T) in this document (means Target for partition recover). The drive you use every day, I assume you have one that you want to keep as mater with your current OS and data, will be the last dive we install in this process and will be called (X) as it is your original drive.

1. Install the HDD you wish to recover the hidden partitions (hard drive T) on as the master drive in your system with a second drive as a slave (you can use Hard Drive X if you want to). Any drive will do as a slave since we will not be writing data to it. However, Ghost must see a second drive in order to complete the following steps. Also, be sure hard drive T has an OS installed on it You must ensure that the file system type is the same on both drive (NTFS to NTFS or FAT32 to FAT32, etc)

2. Install Ghost 2003 build 2003.775 to hard drive T with standard settings. Reboot if required.

3. Open Ghost and select Ghost Basic. Select Backup from the shown list of options. Select C:\ (this is the drive we want to free partition on on hard drive T) as our source for the backup. Select our second drive as the target. (no data will be written so worry not). Use any name when requested as it will not matter. Press OK, Continue, or Next until you are asked to reboot.

Critical step
4. Once reboot begins, you must shutdown the PC prior to the loading of DOS or any drivers. The best method is to power down the PC manually the moment you see the BIOS load and your HDDs show as detected.

5. Now that you have shutdown prior to allowing Ghost to do its backup, you must remove the HDD we are attempting to expand (hard drive T which we had installed as master) and replace it with a drive that has an OS installed on it. (This is where having hard drive X is useful. You can use your old hard drive to complete the process.) Place hard drive T as a secondary drive in the system. Hard drive X should now be the master and you should be able to boot into the OS on it. The best method for this assuming you need to keep data from and old drive is:

Once you boot into the OS, you will see that the second drive in the system is the one we are attempting to expand (hard drive T). Go to Computer Management -> Disk Management

You should see an 8 meg partition labeled VPSGHBOOT or similar on the slave HDD (hard drive T) along with a large section of unallocated space that did not show before. DO NOT DELETE VPSGHBOOT yet.

6. Select the unallocated space on our drive T and create a new primary or extended partition. Select the file system type you prefer and format with quick format (if available). Once formatting completes, you can delete the VPSGHBOOT partition from the drive.

7. Here is what you should now see on your T drive.

a. Original partition from when the drive still had hidden partitions
b. New partition of space we just recovered.
c. 8 meg unallocated partitions.

8. Do you want to place drive T back in a PC and run it as the primary HDD? Go to Disk Management and set the original partition on T (not the new one we just formatted) to and Active Partition. It should be bootable again if no data corruption has occurred.

Caution
Do not try to delete both partitions on the drive so you can create one large partition. This will not work. You have to leave the two partitions separate in order to use them. Windows disk management will have erroneous data in that it will say drive size = manus stated drive size and then available size will equal ALL the available space with recovered partitions included.

This process can cause a loss of data on the drive that is having its partitions recovered so it is best to make sure the HDD you use is not your current working HDD that has important data. If you do this on your everyday drive and not a new drive with just junk on it, you do so at your own risk. It has worked completely fine with no loss before and it has also lost the data on the drive before. Since the idea is to yield a huge storage drive, it should not matter.

11 Responses to “Double your hard drive’s space”

  1. Chelle Says:

    If you give this a whirl, I’d love to know how it goes. The guys at hard[OCP] forums have tried it out and it seemed to be successfull but all data put on the newly gained space ends up being corrupt and unuseable. Or I can just play with it this weekend. Lord knows we have pleanty of 5-8 Gig drives laying around here…

  2. Orion Says:

    I have tried it on 2 hdds. PC shows you actual 2 partions with the size ofyour hdd. I have tried on 80 gb hdd. it showed me 2 75 gig partions. But it only shows i think. I filled up one of the partition fully. And started to put data on the other partition then my pc started having problems like freezing, or takes ages to copy or cannot read. same thing happend on both hdds. I don t believe it works. (waste of time)

  3. Richard Says:

    Stumbled accross yr website as I’d accidentally doubled my hard drive from 40 to approx 79 gig.
    I am not sure how except that I was messing about with Ranish Partion Manager. Wish I could duplicate the process. I actually manged to delete a partition on my first drive and only realized as I was reinstalling XP

  4. MnIch Says:

    The same trick you can do with an old windows fdisk [like it was in windows 95 and 98]. You just have to delete an old partition and make a new expand partition on a half size of disk[ you write it in numbers - ex: if you have hdd 40bg - you write 20000mb]. Then you choose to make an extended partition , and write a size of in in percents [ex. 50%]. It works, i tried it out! But you cannot storage data in both partitions - it will damage all data in your disk. [shit happens] blah blah

  5. Peter Friedman Says:

    I have no comeent at this thime

  6. Peter Friedman Says:

    welcome

  7. Manoj Says:

    Please give me full information how to partion my 80gb hard drive.as soon as possible.

  8. Alan Says:

    this actually works… corrupted some of my files. lost some movies, so i suggest only doing it when installing a fresh operating system in case you lose your stuff. 120 gig turned into over 200 gig. works awsome and can store lots of stuff on the second partition. 1st partition is 117.8 gigs …second partition 89.9 gigs…SWEET…

  9. James Bohner Says:

    This method which you “stumbled upon” sounds just like a corrupt MBR record to me. 2 Partitions, each the size of the actual disk, corruption when writing to both. Unfortunately this is just too good to be true.

  10. Stein Says:

    I have tested this method and the result was;
    Original HDD size 120 GB (Maxtor)
    After I gain 93 GB.
    No trouble experinced so far, but I do not store “Wont loose” data on the partition.

  11. Warren Says:

    I’ve done something similar to a Floppy Disk a long time ago, playing around with the DriveSpace32 under windows 98. I expanded the disk to appear as though you could fit several hundred MB on it. Of course this didn’t work, i just altered a setting which made the OS think it had more than it physically did.

    Now adays with the knowledge I have in computers, I don’t take these sorts of things seriously.
    “You cannot expand the hard drive space beyond its physical parameters.”

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