<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>I have a new ATA drive I've mounted - but the damn thing mounts as a D:
> drive - skipping the C: entirely... from what i've read in forums, you
> can't just change the drive letter since the D: lettering gets
> hard-wired into the registry after XP's installation. I don't mind
> re-installing XP, but how do I assure that the drive will mount as C:
> and not pick it's own drive letter? Looking for a listing of steps
> that I can follow to assure it mounts as C:
>
> Little background:
> - Used Norton Ghost to clone IDE drive (which I want to replace with
> the ATA drive)
> - Used my XP install disc to repair the XP installation
> - Windows comes up fine - but half my stuff isn't working because the
> drive mounted as D:, and it's not finding things it expects on the C:
> drive.
>
> Help!
> (Please reply to (E-Mail Removed) if it's not too much trouble)
> Thanks!
mcintoshdrew:
I would guess that after you cloned your old HDD to the new one you failed
to disconnect the source (your old) HDD and make that *initial* boot *only*
with the destination (the newly-cloned) HDD connected, i.e., you made that
initial boot with both the source & destination drives connected. Does that
sound like what might have happened?
I'm assuming in all this that...
1. Your old HDD was assigned the C: drive letter, booted without incident,
and functioned without any problems, and,
2. The only two storage devices connected during the disk-cloning operation
was the source & destination drives. That's right, isn't it?
Anna