Im puzzled.
I took about a week to play lets shuffle the hard drives. I removed old drive from other systems and archived ..... shall I say LOTS? I sawa deal for $69 at sams club last week and picked up a 250GB Western Digital. My drives had so much crap on them I was running out of places to store anything. I picked up Norton Save and Restore. I backed up all the drives and removed the "small" drives. I have one problem. My C drive which holds my system...... Well, that partition is and has been hovering about 800M-1GB of free space. I want to make the system partition 40GB. Its 10 GB right now. I thought maybe i could make a logical drive on that same hard drive. I was under the impression that a logical drive is like an extension for the MBR. I might be mistaken.
I might just make a fresh back up on an empty drive and install it as the master ( just to have something to boot to). Take the present master and wipe the C and logical drive. Make my 40GB partition and Move my back up system over to the 40. See? I just need some input
Oh another thing. Formating with NTFS... But once the files are xfered back and the drive is accessed.... it reverts back to Fat32 Bah! I tak eit there is nothing one can do about it.
If anyone has input.......
SSX-Wedge
Partitions...... and my OS
Moderators: General Forum Moderators, Global Moderators
-
- Posts: 128
- Joined: Fri Jul 28, 2006 1:32 pm
- Location: Duluth, Minnesota USA
-
- Posts: 3411
- Joined: Wed Sep 01, 2004 12:46 am
- Location: SSX
You'll have to convert the drive to NTFS after you get it all transferred. The save and restore image will be whatever it was originally, so it will keep being FAT32.
And do the C drive as the 40, a logical drive is just like another physical drive as far as that is concerned, that won't help you with your disk space issues.
And do the C drive as the 40, a logical drive is just like another physical drive as far as that is concerned, that won't help you with your disk space issues.
No signature
-
- Posts: 164
- Joined: Tue Dec 14, 2004 3:38 am
Commit this to memory:
convert x: /fs:ntfs
Where X is your drive letter.
Piece 'o cake.
I have two of those WD 250's (SATA, 16 MB cache) and they are tanks.
Personally when I get into your situation Wedge, I just backup everything I can, wipe the system drive and start over. I'd rather not put up with the hassle of having data sizes messed with and such. Maybe that's just because of my job, but I dunno... how did you manage?
convert x: /fs:ntfs
Where X is your drive letter.
Piece 'o cake.
I have two of those WD 250's (SATA, 16 MB cache) and they are tanks.
Personally when I get into your situation Wedge, I just backup everything I can, wipe the system drive and start over. I'd rather not put up with the hassle of having data sizes messed with and such. Maybe that's just because of my job, but I dunno... how did you manage?
-
- Posts: 398
- Joined: Sat Sep 04, 2004 10:36 am
- Location: MSN ssxbimbo@hotmail.com
don't forget you need to know the c drive volume numberconvert x: /fs:ntfs
it will ask for it before it converts
I am of the opinion that my life belongs to this community, and as long as I live it is my privilege to do for it whatever I can.