PC

My d drive shows 61 gb occupied but when i select all files and check the size, it’s only 18 gb. What is taking up the 40 gb of space?


My d drive shows 61 gb occupied but when i select all files and check the size, it’s only 18 gb. What is taking up the 40 gb of space?

12 Comments

  1. iRyanStone

    I have tried using Windirstat and space sniffer, both of them show that 18 gb is occupied

  2. Ahmetdoesreal

    Do you have hidden files enabled and if you enabled them did you disable hide important system files?
    Maybe windows just fills that space with pagefile and maybe hibernation memory

  3. Files you don’t have access to. Even if you run as admin, if you don’t have access via the NTFS ACLS, you can’t enumerate those files.

  4. iRyanStone

    Update: ran a cmd command “chkdsk D: /f /r” which seems to have corrected the issue. I don’t know what the command does (check for bad sectors or something?) but i hope it has not deleted any important stuff which i cannot see?

  5. Ro-Tang_Clan

    Download [Spacesniffer](https://github.com/redtrillix/SpaceSniffer/releases) and run as admin. That will scan the drive for all files and present it to you in a easy to interpret visual style that’s also in realtime too. The bigger the segment it takes up visually, the more space it’s occupying. I don’t know about a secondary drive, but most of the time it’s Windows occupying space automatically by things like the pagefile (which is usually at least half of your total memory capacity) and Windows Hybernate which stores your current computer state in one file called the hiberfile.sys. Both of those things usually occur on the C drive though not on a secondary drive. Either way, Spacesniffer will tell you.

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