1. This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Learn More.

External Hard Drive is NTFS - Wont Accept Large Files

Discussion in 'PC hardware help' started by breftayka, May 22, 2011.

  1. breftayka

    breftayka Member

    Joined:
    Jun 24, 2006
    Messages:
    3
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    11
    I have an external hard drive. I can transfer small files onto it fine, but if I try to transfer a larger file it just freezes on the screen where it counts down the time left to transfer and won't count down any more.
    I have formated it and converted it back and forth from Fat to NTFS. It is in NTFS and still does the same... I have been able to transfer large files over in, but in the last few days it hasn't let me. It is a Seagate Free Agent Go Flex 1TB. Maybe 3 weeks old.
    Any ideas?
     
  2. scorpNZ

    scorpNZ Active member

    Joined:
    Mar 23, 2005
    Messages:
    4,264
    Likes Received:
    63
    Trophy Points:
    78
    @may317
    What do you think your doing posting your crap in someone elses thread,start your own & make sure it's in the right section


    @breftayka
    If i was in your postion i'd take it back,i personally don't buy pre made hdd's i prefer to get the housing seperate of the hdd
     
  3. ddp

    ddp Moderator Staff Member

    Joined:
    Oct 15, 2004
    Messages:
    39,158
    Likes Received:
    134
    Trophy Points:
    143
    possible spammer, post deleted
     
  4. NteStlKr

    NteStlKr Member

    Joined:
    Nov 25, 2010
    Messages:
    66
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    16
    I hate seagates, especially externals. I've had nothing but trouble from them. Seagate was no help, and basically said I was lying. I took mine out of their cases (which suck and have very poor firmware), and I've done some modifications that keep the drives workable, but they are still unreliable and report good transfers of large files that actually failed, and they are randomly inaccessible for long periods of time, and randomly unmount themselves (which usually requires a power cycle or two to bring them back online). The only way to properly transfer files is to transfer them, then transfer back and confirm the file. Then I know the seagate has a good copy.

    To rule out other problems (like windows, which always seems to screw up simple things), download a linux live CD. I recommend Ubuntu (10.04). Then just boot from CD and then try transferring the same files and see what happens. With mine the problems are OS-independent.

    But I recommend you sace yourself some time and buy a decent hard drive from newegg (I like WD, but I would avoid the AFD drives, as they can be very confusing to set up, with no real gain). I know people who have good experiences with the seagate hard drives that are sold individually (not in case combos), but they left a bad taste in my mouth with their externals, so I don't do business with them. Read reviews as there are a few models of drives from certain other brands that have firmware issues that cause failed file transfers, and they refuse to fix it. Then get a good rosewill case, like the RX-358-U3B (or the slightly cheaper RX-358. The RX-358-U3B is the first Rosewill case I bought, and I haven't purchased a case from another manufacturer since. The thing is invincible and keeps even hot drives well within operating parameters for temperature. Or you can get a dual bay one like this R2-JBOD. I have one as well, and it is very easy to hot-swap drives with it. It also has very good ventilation.
     

Share This Page