If you have better understanding of how fat has some inherent design problem, you can better know about the advantages of the FAT32 system. First, FAT16 organizes files in 32K clusters in drives over 1.2gigs, while FAT32 will use a minimum cluster size of 4K, it is very important to emphasize. Second, the biggest improvement is in FAT32 which in today's high-capacity hard disk, with the ability to effectively manage storage space, which means that a 3K file wastes only 1K of disk space on FAT32, while it wastes 29K of space on a standard FAT system. Of course, that there is two considerations:
(1) your motherboard and BIOS must not have the hard drive size, as some have developed more recent problem that Gigabyte …show more content…
So that you can expect your applications to run faster when the FAT16 system, than they do in response to at least 50%. For most unprofessional people, FAT32 will have a positive performance impact.
A larger and robust root directory
As we mentioned, FAT32 system has the capability to relocate the root directory. It is also ordinary cluster chain, so it can be abnormally large and located anywhere on the drive. FAT16 system uses 512 bytes of each 32 sectors in the root directory. Entries of the hard disk 512Kb which limits the size of the root directory. In other words, you can only have the root directory of 512 files and folders. But in the FAT32 system, as you need to the root directory as many files and folders as you want.
Well, we've given you the positives, and now there are pitfalls, the decision you make, whether it is installed or the hard drive, you should know before converting FAT32 formate.
If you choose to install Windows XP, the upgrade patches process may preserve the existing operating system files, or try and ideas from a backup, when you need it to restore, you won’t competent to do so. If you convert to FAT32, you will be unable to do this, unless your previous operating system is an old enough Windows