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Cun0144

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Jan 23, 2007
17
0
i just recently changed from using windows to mac osx. I have a external hard drive with a lot of different movies on it. When i plug this into my macbook it doesnt recognize it, when i go into disk utility it shows up but i cant do anything to it except delete everything on there. But whenever i plug this into my PC it reads it right away and i am able to access all the files on it. Help me please!!!
 

chrisdazzo

macrumors 65816
Apr 11, 2006
1,204
1,493
Mountains
:confused: could be that the drive is formatted for PC only. not sure about this, but i'd save all the data on the drive so far, like on your PC or something, and then erase the drive (and formatting). then, plug it into your mac and it should format the drive to work on a mac instead of a PC. i'm not sure you can go both ways (mac & pc) with any external drive of any size, though. :confused: :confused:
 

9Charms

macrumors regular
May 19, 2006
206
0
Vancouver, BC
What version of MacOS X are you using? I remember this being a problem in 10.3, but not 10.4, although I could be wrong....
 

plinden

macrumors 601
Apr 8, 2004
4,029
142
Is this a USB drive? Can you view the drive if you connect to a different USB port? You're not connecting it to the USB ports on the keyboard, are you?

If it's an NTFS drive, you should be able to mount and read the files, just not write to the drive.
 

Cun0144

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Jan 23, 2007
17
0
it is a external usb drive. I am plugging it into the usb port on my macbook.
 

lavrishevo

macrumors 68000
Jan 9, 2007
1,864
204
NJ
Correct me if I am wrong but OS X does not work with PC's NTFS file format. It does work with Fat 32. So if you want the drive to work with both PC and MAC then save the data on another drive and reformate FAT 32, then you should be all good.


DW
 

Cun0144

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Jan 23, 2007
17
0
it is a western digital 320gb hard drive put in an enclosure. its weird because whenever i open up utility its waitingto load up then i turn it off and back on it shows up but i cant do anything to it...other than formating it.
 

9Charms

macrumors regular
May 19, 2006
206
0
Vancouver, BC
I have definately experienced this problem before. For some reason the Mac will not recognize the NTFS volume no matter what... And it would happen a lot. Occasionally it would happen with FAT32 partitions as well, but rarely. I have never found an adequate solution.

Instead, I went the other way. I made the external HD a Mac HFS+ volume and installed MacDrive on the PC so that it reads Mac volumes. This is how I've been doing it and it's been working great.

The only other thing I can suggest is to network the PC and MacBook and, connect the hard drive to the PC and share it.
 

Killyp

macrumors 68040
Jun 14, 2006
3,859
7
The only downside to FAT32 is it won't write any file over 4GB, so if it is movies be careful they aren't over 4GB.

I'm storing 60gb + files on a FAT32 drive, I think it's FAT16 which has this limit. FAT32 is MUCH higher if I remember correctly.


OS X can recognise NTFS and FAT32 drives, the two most common PC formats, although it can only read to NTFS, not write to it.
 

9Charms

macrumors regular
May 19, 2006
206
0
Vancouver, BC
OS X can recognise NTFS and FAT32 drives, the two most common PC formats, although it can only read to NTFS, not write to it.

I understand what it should do. The problem is that the Mac isn't doing it. Sometimes it works and most times it doesn't.
 

jeremy.king

macrumors 603
Jul 23, 2002
5,479
1
Holly Springs, NC
You guys are all wrong! :D

Mac CAN read and write NTFS volumes with MacFuse and NTFS-3G. See sig for link or just google.

You won't set any land speed records however using NTFS-3G :(

*use at your own risk*
 

e12a

macrumors 68000
Oct 28, 2006
1,881
0
You guys are all wrong! :D

Mac CAN read and write NTFS volumes with MacFuse and NTFS-3G. See sig for link or just google.

You won't set any land speed records however using NTFS-3G :(

*use at your own risk*

tried this. If you want your computer to take 30 seconds to shut down, use it. Copying large files to NTFS is impossible because (1) it takes sooo long, (2) if it gets done, the file is corrupted. I see it only useful for documents or files of that size.

I couldnt take the shut down times. That was the main reason i uninstalled it.

my solution to this problem was having an external drive with 3 partitions. one was for OS X to use, one was for XP to use, and one was FAT32 so both can read and write...kinda like a liason between them.
 

theBB

macrumors 68020
Jan 3, 2006
2,453
3
I'm storing 60gb + files on a FAT32 drive, I think it's FAT16 which has this limit. FAT32 is MUCH higher if I remember correctly.
The total size of FAT32 drives can be much larger than 4GB, but it cannot handle any file bigger than 4GB.

However, Windows XP adds an artificial limit of 32GB if you try to format any drive in FAT32 format via Windows built-in utilities. Thus, if you want to format your 320GB drive in FAT32, you'll need 10 partitions. The only way to avoid this problem is to use additional software such as PartitionMagic on top of Windows.
 

mgc

macrumors newbie
Nov 30, 2005
2
0
So I just got a 500 gig external USB Western Digital Drive today solely to be able to store shared files between my mac and pc's on my network, and also to be host to my 50 gigabyte Itunes library.

How should I format it to best use?? Multiple Fat-32 partitions would drive me nuts!
 
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