-- Once you convert your hard drive to FAT32 format using Drive Converter, you cannot return to using the FAT16 format unless you repartition and reformat the FAT32 drive. If you converted the drive on which Windows 98 is installed, then you must reinstall Windows 98 after repartitioning the drive.
I can't think of a reason why you would want to go back to using fat16.

-- Most disk compression software is not compatible with FAT32. If your drive is compressed, you may not be able to convert.
If you are upgrading to fat32 to increase the speed of your system than you would not want to use any disk compression software as even the best compression software on the market is still incredibly slow when compared to disk access times of an uncompressed volume. You will probably also find that most disk compression software now supports fat32. When that help file was written, that wasn't the case.

-- If you convert a removable disk and use the disk with other operating systems that are not FAT32-compatible, you cannot access the disks when running the other operating system.
So just convert your fixed disks to fat32 and do not convert any of your removable media to fat32 if you still use any win95 or earlier systems.

-- If your computer has a hibernate feature, the conversion may turn off this feature.
Wouldn't you be able to turn it back on? I've never heard of a problem using fat32 and hibernate together. I've used the hibernate function on my toshiba laptop with both Win98(fat32) and Win2k(NTFS.)

-- Because previous versions of Windows are not compatible with FAT32, you cannot uninstall Windows 98 after converting.
This would only be a problem is you had upgraded from a previous version. If you had done a clean install you wouldn't be able to uninstall to a previous operating system anyway. And would you really want to run Win95 again?

-- Although most programs are not affected by the conversion from FAT16 to FAT32, some disk utilities that depend on FAT16 do not work with FAT32 drives. You will be prompted if you are running one of these utilities.
This is only the case with older software. Given that Fat16 has not been the prominent FAT file system for quit a few years you should be able to find new versions of any software that will support fat32 if the version you have doesn't.


I would say that you should upgrade with little fear that you are going to break something that can't be fixed without a software upgrade. That help file you were reading is probably 5 years old.