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Adding old 2nd disc with XP
Paul Busby wrote in message ... If a larger h/d disc is added to a system running WinXP & the old partitions copied across, what happens to the drive letter assignments of the new disc - does the original C drive as an active partition try to grab the D drive letter? Depends on how you do the copy. If you use a dos based copy like Ghost or Drive Image, the crucial thing to do is to make the copy, AND THEN TURN THE SYSTEM OFF AND RESET THE MASTER AND SLAVE before you let XP boot again. If you do it that way, XP wont even notice that its been copied to a larger drive and you can then put the original drive back in again after its booted once off the copy and do what you like to the original like format it etc. XP can get royally confused if you boot off the original again after you have made a copy behind XP's back with both drives visible on the first XP boot after the copy. If Win98 is also present, would its drive letters remain the same? Yes, if you are careful about the detail just after the copy. I ask for academic reasons 'cos I would always reformat as an extended partition containing logical volumes. Thats not necessarily the best approach. The new drive is likely to be rather faster than the original and so there is a lot to be said for making the new drive the boot drive. |
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Rod Speed - typed:
Depends on how you do the copy. If you use a dos based copy like Ghost or Drive Image, the crucial thing to do is to make the copy, AND THEN TURN THE SYSTEM OFF AND RESET THE MASTER AND SLAVE before you let XP boot again. That goes without saying. I've asked the wrong question. I'll rephrase it. Will WinXP try to reassign drive letters if it sees a 2nd active partition has been added? Other versions of Windows (DOS, W3.1, W9x) would assign the letter D to any new active partition, incrementing the other drive letters in the process IIRC. I ask for academic reasons 'cos I would always reformat as an extended partition containing logical volumes. Thats not necessarily the best approach. The new drive is likely to be rather faster than the original and so there is a lot to be said for making the new drive the boot drive. I presume you're referring to the good sense of running the OS off the fastest disc rather than formatting any 2nd disc as an extended partition. Paul |
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Paul Busby wrote in message ... Rod Speed - typed: Depends on how you do the copy. If you use a dos based copy like Ghost or Drive Image, the crucial thing to do is to make the copy, AND THEN TURN THE SYSTEM OFF AND RESET THE MASTER AND SLAVE before you let XP boot again. That goes without saying. I've asked the wrong question. I'll rephrase it. Will WinXP try to reassign drive letters if it sees a 2nd active partition has been added? Other versions of Windows (DOS, W3.1, W9x) would assign the letter D to any new active partition, incrementing the other drive letters in the process IIRC. OK, no, the NT/2K/XP family doesnt do it like that and even if it does do something to the lettering that you dont like, you can reassign the letters, unlike with the Win9x/ME family. I ask for academic reasons 'cos I would always reformat as an extended partition containing logical volumes. Thats not necessarily the best approach. The new drive is likely to be rather faster than the original and so there is a lot to be said for making the new drive the boot drive. I presume you're referring to the good sense of running the OS off the fastest disc rather than formatting any 2nd disc as an extended partition. Yep. And there isnt any need to format the 2nd drive as an extended partition of avoid that partition lettering problem with the NT/2K/XP family. There are some advantages with having an active primary dos partition on the 2nd drive, mainly that you can have an OS installed on that and can boot off that drive if the main boot drive dies physically. Most modern motherboard bios allow you to just specify what physical drive to boot from in that situation and carry on regardless on the death of the main boot drive. |
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