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6 answers

That depends on the motherboard LBA support.

2007-03-20 21:15:42 · answer #1 · answered by d3v10u5b0y 6 · 0 0

that's type of as well the point of equipment specs... yet i have were given an acer computer, and that's been no longer some thing yet problem. that's charger (ac adapter) has damaged once, the exhibit casing is cracked so i will not close the lid, keys have damaged off, the sections in the not straightforward stress were one way or the different defective which required me to pay for a clean not straightforward stress and its gradual and heats up... all the way down to specs, i'd regrettably ought to assert the Acer seems a touch more beneficial useful. yet inspite of this i visit't truly understand the spec's of the HP.... Btw, possibly understanding what you'd be making use of the computer for may help.... eg, artwork, video games, prevalent information superhighway surfing & archives and so on....

2016-12-02 08:22:47 · answer #2 · answered by bennison 4 · 0 0

It depends on the LBA support, your pc either supports 28-bit or 48-bit. If its 28-bit then your max is 137.4 gigabytes. If its 48-bit then your max is 144 petabytes (144,000,000 gigabytes).

If your bios only supports 28-bit, then go to your manufacturers website if you bought a preassemble machine, or go to your motherboards manufacturer's website and check for bios updates, its likely they have an update to support 48-bit LBA

Good luck!

2007-03-20 21:29:45 · answer #3 · answered by skforty 2 · 2 0

IT DOES NOT MATTER ABOUT THE CPU. just what OS you are using and then it would mean that you could just partition it into a bunch of partitions of that size
IE win95 only supports up to a 8.4 GB partition so if you install a
40 GB hard drive it would only see the first 8.4 GB of it until you partitioned it into five different partitions ( i think so anyways that is the way i understand it to be ) and if you need a good piece of software to do that try partition logic it is free ( just google the name to down load it and burn it to a CD) .hope this helps

2007-03-20 21:25:02 · answer #4 · answered by dragon007dragon69 5 · 0 1

it depends on motherboard mostly motherboards supports 80 gb hdd

rockie

2007-03-24 19:09:36 · answer #5 · answered by rockie 2 · 0 0

486 gigabytes
I'm guessing.

2007-03-20 21:14:23 · answer #6 · answered by Lucy Lu 4 · 0 1

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