I would simplify further. I would end up with an 80GB system drive and a
200 GB data drive, no partitions, and let the OS take care of itself with
defaults.
--
Colin Barnhorst [MVP Windows - Virtual Machine]
(Reply to the group only unless otherwise requested)
"george" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>
> "jukebox" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:6437E084-DEA0-48CA-A264-(E-Mail Removed)...
>> Is there a simple soloution to this?
>>
>> I did a major upgrade to my PC - new 200G HDD to suppliment an existing
>> 80G
>> drive. The 80G had been partitioned 15/60, with a Windows XP Home on the
>> 20G
>> side.
>>
>> The 200G was partitioned 110/40/40, and fearing my Program Files folder
>> was
>> getting short on space within that 15G, I had committed one of the 40's
>> to a
>> reinstall of XP (by installing XP onto the 200 while the 80 was not
>> connected
>> to the motherboard).
>>
>> Somehow I have ended up with the 15 as a boot drive, the 40 as a system
>> drive, so I tried an upgrade install - which did not ask where to
>> install,
>> but it seems to have made no difference. I canot re-format either drive
>> to
>> erase the install, and cannot re-nominate one or the other as both a
>> system
>> and boot drive, to allow me to erase the bad XP install and make use of
>> the
>> space.
>>
>> system is as follows:
>>
>> bios: Award Software, Inc. ASUS P4S800MX ACPI BIOS Revision 1010
>> celeron 2.4g
>> 256M Ram
>> 200G HDD
>> 80G HDD
>> DVD-RW
>> CD-RW
>>
>> any advice or diagnosis greatly appreciated; the whole thing works - but
>> is,
>> quite frankly a dog's breakfast - coming from a rebuild I had wanted a
>> nice
>> clean config, but just have a rats nest.
>>
>> thanks
>>
>> sj
>>
>> --
>> "The dream is always the same...."
>
>
> Just my take on this.
> Going by the premiss that your 200GB is a newly installed baby, it's
> probably not yet too committed to anything and that your 80GB drive still
> holds the 'official' OS and data you started out with.
> I also go by the assumption (lacking info) that you do not have any
> particular reason to be partinioning, other than seperating OS and Data.
> Given that sscenario I would do the following.
> Get a disk imaging solution. (TrueImage, Drive Image, etc.)
> Image your 80Gb (both partitions seperately!) onto the 200GB.
> Having done that, image yout old OS partition (ie. the 15GB) back onto the
> 80GB drive, resizing the partition in the process, giving you an 80GB OS
> partition with plenty of growth for Program Files.
> Temporarily Copy your imagefile of the second partition back onto the now
> 80GB disk so you can use it in the next step.
> Now image this partition onto the 200GB and resize the partition to the
> full disk in the process.
> Now change the My Documents properties to point to the 200GB disk to
> contain all your data.
>
> It's a rough idea, but maybe it helps in the thought-process.
>
> george
>
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