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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T19:28:56+00:00 2026-05-10T19:28:56+00:00

Windows XP Disk Defragmenter report shows a constant gap in disk usage on a

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Windows XP Disk Defragmenter report shows a constant gap in disk usage on a number of disk partitions on my system. I’m not referring to the little transitory gaps that occur. In disk D below, the gap in question is the one under the word ‘defragmentation’. In disk P below, the gap is the one under ‘usage before def’ the but a bigger one. The C partition doesn’t have this anomaly. The size and placement pattern isn’t obvious. It is as though there was an area, a no-man’s land, that both the file system and the defragmenter avoid. These gaps survive daily use and defragmentation. I don’t believe this is a residue from a paging file — it should show up in green, anyway. Recycle bin is empty.

Any ideas?

Disk D (20 Gig): Disk D

Disk P (40 Gig): Disk P

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  1. 2026-05-10T19:28:57+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 7:28 pm

    That is probably the space reserved for the MFT, which will only be used for files if the disk gets really full. This empty space allows it to grow for a while without getting fragmented.

    References:

    • How NTFS reserves space for its Master File Table (MFT)
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