Windows 10: The full capacity of my new SSD is unavailable, and it's not a partitioning issue.

Discus and support The full capacity of my new SSD is unavailable, and it's not a partitioning issue. in Windows 10 Gaming to solve the problem; Usually I never ask questions in forums, but I've been going in circles, have tried just about everything, and just need someone else to weigh in.The... Discussion in 'Windows 10 Gaming' started by Jude158, Jun 10, 2025 at 11:02 PM.

  1. Jude158 Win User

    The full capacity of my new SSD is unavailable, and it's not a partitioning issue.


    Usually I never ask questions in forums, but I've been going in circles, have tried just about everything, and just need someone else to weigh in.The other day I bought a 2TB M.2 NVME drive to upgrade my old 500GB SSD. I wanted to boot from the 2TB drive so I did a bunch of research to figure out the best way. I didn't have a large enough USB drive to do a fresh install of windows because I lost it, and I decided that cloning my 500GB drive would be the best way forward. I used Clonezilla, and successfully cloned my old drive to my new one. Everything worked, I was able to boot from my 2TB dri

    :)
     
  2. W1zzard Win User

    W7 Hard drive partition issue

    to get rid of that 100 meg windows partition that setup creates for you on a new install on a blank hdd:

    - press shift+f10 when on the partition management screen in setup <-- this opens a command prompt
    - diskpart <-- start the windows command line partition management tool
    - list disk <--- list the installed hdds in this computer for the next step
    - select disk 0 <- might have to replace 0 with the number of the correct disk
    - clean <-- this will erase all data on the disk you selected one step up- dont use the wrong disk!
    - create partition primary <- creates a primary partition taking up all space on the drive, adjust the command if necessary
    - exit, exit to exit diskpart and the command prompt
    - click refresh in partition manager and select your newly created partition and install to that
     
  3. Daniel C Win User
    Issues with installation of new MSATA SSD

    Thanks Navy, I did wonder if it had unselected the EFI partition. Edit: I used the command to list the partitions on the C: drive and select the system partition and then proceeded to format it as originally suggested. I just need the steps that followed when you happen to get that spare moment.
     
  4. Daniel C Win User

    The full capacity of my new SSD is unavailable, and it's not a partitioning issue.

    Issues with installation of new MSATA SSD

    Hello all, I recently received a new Kingston 240gb MSATA SSD (RMA replacement) for my Alienware 14 laptop. It's an SUV500MS/240G. I seem to be having a bit of a nightmare with getting it set up properly. So my intention was to set it up as the new boot drive and then have the 750GB SATA HDD that's already installed run as the secondary. After installing Windows 10 home edition via a USB drive, when entering the bios I noticed that the new SSD is listed under legacy drive in the boot options and not UEFI. In an attempt to correct this set the BIOS to only boot with UEFI and then rebooted with the installation USB drive and used disk part to clean the SSD and convert it from MBR to GPT and then reinstalled windows 10. The first attempt to reinstall seemed to get hung up and I had to repeat the process, the second attempt successfully installed and was able to boot into windows. If I go into system information, the BIOS mode is now listed as UEFI and not legacy, however the SSD still isn't listed in the BIOS as an option under UEFI boot devices. To make things even more annoying when I boot the laptop it now lists 3 different operating systems - I assume these are the one I installed in legacy, the failed one and the successful UEFI one. I read online that simply changing an SSD from MBR to GPT will not in fact dictate if the drive is seen as UEFI or legacy but instead it is based off of the type of bootloader it has installed. It goes on to say that to be UEFI it needs an EFI system partition and then lists steps to delete and replace the system partition. You may say well there is your answer but that leads me to the next step of the problem. When loading up disk management, what's listed as disk 1 is the new SSD and disk 0 is the old 750GB HDD. The 750GB drive has an associated system partition but the SSD does not even though it is the primary boot drive (CThe full capacity of my new SSD is unavailable, and it's not a partitioning issue. :) I attempted to use disk part again as the online post had suggested to create an efi partition on the SSD however disk part simply tells me that there is not enough usable space for this operation. Now that I have attempted to explain my problem I was wondering if anyone could offer up any sort of solution, my aims are to A) Add an efi partition to the SSD in the hope it will make the BIOS see it as a UEFI boot drive or if anyone simply has an alternate method to achieve this same goal that would also be appreciated. B) Remove the excess operating systems that are now listed on the laptop when booting If any additional information is required or further explanation is needed please don't hesitate to ask and I shall get back to you ASAP. Thanks Daniel Edit 1: It seems as if I have managed to remove the operating systems that were listing when starting the laptop. I used msconfig to do this, I am hoping this has actually removed it and not just hidden it, if anyone could let me know if this was the correct route to solve this issue that would be great.
     
Thema:

The full capacity of my new SSD is unavailable, and it's not a partitioning issue.

Loading...
  1. The full capacity of my new SSD is unavailable, and it's not a partitioning issue. - Similar Threads - full capacity SSD

  2. The full capacity of my new SSD is unavailable, and it's not a partitioning issue.

    in Windows 10 Software and Apps
    The full capacity of my new SSD is unavailable, and it's not a partitioning issue.: Usually I never ask questions in forums, but I've been going in circles, have tried just about everything, and just need someone else to weigh in.The other day I bought a 2TB M.2 NVME drive to upgrade my old 500GB SSD. I wanted to boot from the 2TB drive so I did a bunch of...
  3. The full capacity of my new SSD is unavailable, and it's not a partitioning issue.

    in Windows 10 Network and Sharing
    The full capacity of my new SSD is unavailable, and it's not a partitioning issue.: Usually I never ask questions in forums, but I've been going in circles, have tried just about everything, and just need someone else to weigh in.The other day I bought a 2TB M.2 NVME drive to upgrade my old 500GB SSD. I wanted to boot from the 2TB drive so I did a bunch of...
  4. Battery full charge capacity issue

    in Windows 10 BSOD Crashes and Debugging
    Battery full charge capacity issue: Hi two days ago my laptop was lasting about 3-4 hours on battery but the next day jt lasted only about 10 minutes, and full battery charge was dropped by 70% or more it went from 47000 to 4000 and cycle counts is not increasing it only shows - a dash symbol I sure hope it's...
  5. Battery full charge capacity issue

    in Windows 10 Gaming
    Battery full charge capacity issue: Hi two days ago my laptop was lasting about 3-4 hours on battery but the next day jt lasted only about 10 minutes, and full battery charge was dropped by 70% or more it went from 47000 to 4000 and cycle counts is not increasing it only shows - a dash symbol I sure hope it's...
  6. Battery full charge capacity issue

    in Windows 10 Software and Apps
    Battery full charge capacity issue: Hi two days ago my laptop was lasting about 3-4 hours on battery but the next day jt lasted only about 10 minutes, and full battery charge was dropped by 70% or more it went from 47000 to 4000 and cycle counts is not increasing it only shows - a dash symbol I sure hope it's...
  7. partitioning new SSD

    in Windows 10 Gaming
    partitioning new SSD: When setting up my new SSD with a fresh install of Windows 10, should I place Windows 10 within its own partition and if so how many GB of drive space should I allocate to that partition....
  8. partitioning new SSD

    in Windows 10 Software and Apps
    partitioning new SSD: When setting up my new SSD with a fresh install of Windows 10, should I place Windows 10 within its own partition and if so how many GB of drive space should I allocate to that partition....
  9. partitioning new SSD

    in Windows 10 Installation and Upgrade
    partitioning new SSD: When setting up my new SSD with a fresh install of Windows 10, should I place Windows 10 within its own partition and if so how many GB of drive space should I allocate to that partition....
  10. Drive not showing full capacity after installing image backup to new ssd drive.

    in Windows 10 Network and Sharing
    Drive not showing full capacity after installing image backup to new ssd drive.: Hi, I upgraded to a bigger ssd drive after the old one became quite full. I used an image backup to do this. All works well after the reinstallation of the new drive. Only problem is my new ssd drive does not show it's full capacity. I still says it is full in file explorer....