A 500gb model sees 465gb here. My old 250gb saw 238,4gb after the initial partitioning. The actual amount seen in bytes will be larger then 320gb there. But the coversion into gigs following some drive space used for things like the mbr and system volume information takes some from that.
The marketed figures are simply rounded off rather then seeing the actual figures for cylinders, heads, and sectors and having to calculate those. My old 120gb saw 114gb after partitioning. Apparently you haven't changed drives much since this is normal to see.

Actually, it has nothing to do with partitions, mbr and system volume information.
The harddrive manufacturers uses 1000 per unit, whereas Windows uses 1024. So when you do the math: 320000000000 / 1024^3 = 298
What? You have some far fetched stories, mr. pc eye.
The math is simple, you don't need to make it complicated![]()
I bought a Western Digital 320 Gig hard drive for my new build, but instead of having 320 it is only giving me 298. Any ideas?
It's called the difference between the decimal and binary system when calculating the total amount of bytes. A 100gb drive would seen as 100 GB= 100,000,000,000 bytes in decimal while the same drive would see 93.13 GB using the binary method. Binary would see 1,073,724,841.