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C drive getting full

 
 
Kdev
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      17th Feb 2009
I'm useing XP. My C drive is full( won't even defrag ) and my D drive is
practically empty. Can I move things over to D fromC to open up some
room??Specifically Itunes takeing up alot of space along with the wifes
picture saver (KODAK). I'll take any and all Ideas on how to clean out some
space
Thanks
 
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Gerry
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      17th Feb 2009
Kdev

You can create more free space in C by
carrying any of the measures suggested below.

The default allocation to System Restore is 12% on your C partition
which is over generous. I would reduce it to 700 mb. Right click your My
Computer icon on the Desktop and select System Restore. Place the cursor
on your C drive select Settings but this time find the slider and drag
it to the left until it reads 700 mb and exit. When you get to the
Settings screen click on Apply and OK and exit.

A default setting which could be wasteful is that for temporary internet
files, especially if you do not store offline copies on disk. The
default allocation is 3% of drive. Depending on your attitude to offline
copies you could reduce this to 1% or 2%. In Internet Explorer select
Tools, Internet Options, General, Temporary Internet Files, Settings to
make the change. At the same time look at the number of days history is
held.

The default allocation for the Recycle Bin is 10 % of drive. Change to
5%, which should be sufficient. In Windows Explorer place the cursor
on your Recycle Bin, right click and select Properties, Global and
move the slider from 10% to 5%. However, try to avoid letting it get
too full as if it is full and you delete a file by mistake it will
bypass the Recycle Bin and be gone for ever.

If your drive is formatted as NTFS another potential gain arises with
your operating system on your C drive. In the Windows Directory of
your C partition you will have some Uninstall folders in your Windows
folder typically: $NtServicePackUninstall$ and $NtUninstallKB282010$
etc. These files may be compressed or not compressed. If compressed
the text of the folder name appears in blue characters. If not
compressed you can compress them. Right click on each folder and
select Properties, General, Advanced and check the box before Compress
contents to save Disk Space. On the General Tab you can see the amount
gained by deducting the size on disk from the size. Folder
compression is only an option on a NTFS formatted drive / partition.

Select Start, All Programs, Accessories, System Tools, System
Information, Tools, Dr Watson and verify that the box before "Append to
existing log" is NOT checked. This means the next time the log is
written it will overwrite rather than add to the existing file.

The default maximum size setting for Event Viewer logs is too large.
Reset the maximum for each log from 512 kb to 128 kb and set it to
overwrite.
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/308427/en-us

You can generate more space in the system partition by relocation of
folders.

For Temporary Internet Files select Start, Control Panel, Internet
Options, Temporary Internet Files. Settings, Move Folder.

To move the Outlook Express Store Folder select in Outlook Express
Tools, Options, Maintenance, Store Folder, Change.
http://www.tomsterdam.com/insideoe/files/store.htm

How to Change the Default Location of the My Documents Folder:
http://support.microsoft.com/?id=310147

You may also need to change Default File locations in the Microsoft
Office programmes you choose to move the My Documents folder. For Word
go to Tools, Options, File Locations, highlight Documents, click on
Modify and change file path. For Excel go to Tools, Options, General
and change default file path.

My Documents is one of a number of system created Special Folders
including My Pictures and My Music. These can more easily be relocated
using Tweak Ui. Download TweakUI, one of the MS powertoys, from here:
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/p.../powertoys.asp

In TweakUi select My Computer, Special Folders. You can scroll down to
see the full list of Special Folders to the left of the Change
Location button.


Select Start, All Programs, Accessories, System Tools, Disk CleanUp to
Empty your Recycle Bin and Remove Temporary Internet Files. Also
select Start, All Programs, accessories, System Tools, Disk CleanUp,
More Options, System Restore and remove all but the latest System
Restore point. Run Disk Defragmenter.



--



Hope this helps.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Kdev wrote:
> I'm useing XP. My C drive is full( won't even defrag ) and my D
> drive is practically empty. Can I move things over to D fromC to open
> up some room??Specifically Itunes takeing up alot of space along with
> the wifes picture saver (KODAK). I'll take any and all Ideas on how
> to clean out some space
> Thanks



 
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Kdev
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Posts: n/a
 
      17th Feb 2009
Thank you..

"Gerry" wrote:

> Kdev
>
> You can create more free space in C by
> carrying any of the measures suggested below.
>
> The default allocation to System Restore is 12% on your C partition
> which is over generous. I would reduce it to 700 mb. Right click your My
> Computer icon on the Desktop and select System Restore. Place the cursor
> on your C drive select Settings but this time find the slider and drag
> it to the left until it reads 700 mb and exit. When you get to the
> Settings screen click on Apply and OK and exit.
>
> A default setting which could be wasteful is that for temporary internet
> files, especially if you do not store offline copies on disk. The
> default allocation is 3% of drive. Depending on your attitude to offline
> copies you could reduce this to 1% or 2%. In Internet Explorer select
> Tools, Internet Options, General, Temporary Internet Files, Settings to
> make the change. At the same time look at the number of days history is
> held.
>
> The default allocation for the Recycle Bin is 10 % of drive. Change to
> 5%, which should be sufficient. In Windows Explorer place the cursor
> on your Recycle Bin, right click and select Properties, Global and
> move the slider from 10% to 5%. However, try to avoid letting it get
> too full as if it is full and you delete a file by mistake it will
> bypass the Recycle Bin and be gone for ever.
>
> If your drive is formatted as NTFS another potential gain arises with
> your operating system on your C drive. In the Windows Directory of
> your C partition you will have some Uninstall folders in your Windows
> folder typically: $NtServicePackUninstall$ and $NtUninstallKB282010$
> etc. These files may be compressed or not compressed. If compressed
> the text of the folder name appears in blue characters. If not
> compressed you can compress them. Right click on each folder and
> select Properties, General, Advanced and check the box before Compress
> contents to save Disk Space. On the General Tab you can see the amount
> gained by deducting the size on disk from the size. Folder
> compression is only an option on a NTFS formatted drive / partition.
>
> Select Start, All Programs, Accessories, System Tools, System
> Information, Tools, Dr Watson and verify that the box before "Append to
> existing log" is NOT checked. This means the next time the log is
> written it will overwrite rather than add to the existing file.
>
> The default maximum size setting for Event Viewer logs is too large.
> Reset the maximum for each log from 512 kb to 128 kb and set it to
> overwrite.
> http://support.microsoft.com/kb/308427/en-us
>
> You can generate more space in the system partition by relocation of
> folders.
>
> For Temporary Internet Files select Start, Control Panel, Internet
> Options, Temporary Internet Files. Settings, Move Folder.
>
> To move the Outlook Express Store Folder select in Outlook Express
> Tools, Options, Maintenance, Store Folder, Change.
> http://www.tomsterdam.com/insideoe/files/store.htm
>
> How to Change the Default Location of the My Documents Folder:
> http://support.microsoft.com/?id=310147
>
> You may also need to change Default File locations in the Microsoft
> Office programmes you choose to move the My Documents folder. For Word
> go to Tools, Options, File Locations, highlight Documents, click on
> Modify and change file path. For Excel go to Tools, Options, General
> and change default file path.
>
> My Documents is one of a number of system created Special Folders
> including My Pictures and My Music. These can more easily be relocated
> using Tweak Ui. Download TweakUI, one of the MS powertoys, from here:
> http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/p.../powertoys.asp
>
> In TweakUi select My Computer, Special Folders. You can scroll down to
> see the full list of Special Folders to the left of the Change
> Location button.
>
>
> Select Start, All Programs, Accessories, System Tools, Disk CleanUp to
> Empty your Recycle Bin and Remove Temporary Internet Files. Also
> select Start, All Programs, accessories, System Tools, Disk CleanUp,
> More Options, System Restore and remove all but the latest System
> Restore point. Run Disk Defragmenter.
>
>
>
> --
>
>
>
> Hope this helps.
>
> Gerry
> ~~~~
> FCA
> Stourport, England
> Enquire, plan and execute
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
> Kdev wrote:
> > I'm useing XP. My C drive is full( won't even defrag ) and my D
> > drive is practically empty. Can I move things over to D fromC to open
> > up some room??Specifically Itunes takeing up alot of space along with
> > the wifes picture saver (KODAK). I'll take any and all Ideas on how
> > to clean out some space
> > Thanks

>
>
>

 
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Falcon
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Posts: n/a
 
      17th Feb 2009

Kdev wrote:

> Thank you..
>
> "Gerry" wrote:
>
>> Kdev
>>
>> You can create more free space in C by
>> carrying any of the measures suggested below.[...]


And yes, you can move your entire My Documents folder to your empty D: drive
if you want to free up a lot of space.

--
Falcon:
fide, sed cui vide. (L)




 
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Ken Blake, MVP
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Posts: n/a
 
      18th Feb 2009
On Tue, 17 Feb 2009 13:56:02 -0800, Kdev
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

> I'm useing XP. My C drive is full( won't even defrag ) and my D drive is
> practically empty. Can I move things over to D fromC to open up some
> room??Specifically Itunes takeing up alot of space along with the wifes
> picture saver (KODAK). I'll take any and all Ideas on how to clean out some
> space
> Thanks



Besides the advice you've already gotten, let me ask you a different
question before you follow anyone's advice. Are C: and D: separate
physical drives or just partitions on a single hard drive?



--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience
Please Reply to the Newsgroup
 
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Kdev
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Posts: n/a
 
      18th Feb 2009
Ken,
Fiirst off thank you for responding..Now, I don't know how to tell the
answer to your question? All i know is 19.5 gig C: drive has 1% left and D:
has 18 out of 19.5 left?? Probably a easy way to look that up huh? but I
don't know it. Your help is appreciated.

"Ken Blake, MVP" wrote:

> On Tue, 17 Feb 2009 13:56:02 -0800, Kdev
> <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>
> > I'm useing XP. My C drive is full( won't even defrag ) and my D drive is
> > practically empty. Can I move things over to D fromC to open up some
> > room??Specifically Itunes takeing up alot of space along with the wifes
> > picture saver (KODAK). I'll take any and all Ideas on how to clean out some
> > space
> > Thanks

>
>
> Besides the advice you've already gotten, let me ask you a different
> question before you follow anyone's advice. Are C: and D: separate
> physical drives or just partitions on a single hard drive?
>
>
>
> --
> Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience
> Please Reply to the Newsgroup
>

 
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Ken Blake, MVP
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      18th Feb 2009
On Wed, 18 Feb 2009 12:46:09 -0800, Kdev
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

> Ken,
> Fiirst off thank you for responding..Now, I don't know how to tell the
> answer to your question? All i know is 19.5 gig C: drive has 1% left and D:
> has 18 out of 19.5 left?? Probably a easy way to look that up huh? but I
> don't know it. Your help is appreciated.



You're welcome. Glad to help.

Three points:

1. Right-click on My Computer, then click Properties, then Device
Manager. Click the plus sign to the left of Disk drives, and it will
report the *physical* drives that are there.

2. By the way, you bought the computer, didn't you? Don't you know
whether you bought a computer with one disk drive or two?

3. It's hard to imagine that you have two 19.5GB physical drives,
since that size is absolutely tiny. It's been a long time since you
could even buy a drive that small. Almost certainly you have a single
drive of 39GB, and even that is tiny by today's standards; drives that
small are no longer sold either.



> "Ken Blake, MVP" wrote:
>
> > On Tue, 17 Feb 2009 13:56:02 -0800, Kdev
> > <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> >
> > > I'm useing XP. My C drive is full( won't even defrag ) and my D drive is
> > > practically empty. Can I move things over to D fromC to open up some
> > > room??Specifically Itunes takeing up alot of space along with the wifes
> > > picture saver (KODAK). I'll take any and all Ideas on how to clean out some
> > > space
> > > Thanks

> >
> >
> > Besides the advice you've already gotten, let me ask you a different
> > question before you follow anyone's advice. Are C: and D: separate
> > physical drives or just partitions on a single hard drive?
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience
> > Please Reply to the Newsgroup
> >


--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience
Please Reply to the Newsgroup
 
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Kdev
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      21st Feb 2009
Ok. It only shows 1 drive maxtor 2f040L0 and no I didn't buy this comp. it
was given to us by wifes brother when he bought new one and yes it is older
but newer than ours (compac) was . I personaly wouldn't buy a Dell. Now back
to our pesky problem :-)..

"Ken Blake, MVP" wrote:

> On Wed, 18 Feb 2009 12:46:09 -0800, Kdev
> <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>
> > Ken,
> > Fiirst off thank you for responding..Now, I don't know how to tell the
> > answer to your question? All i know is 19.5 gig C: drive has 1% left and D:
> > has 18 out of 19.5 left?? Probably a easy way to look that up huh? but I
> > don't know it. Your help is appreciated.

>
>
> You're welcome. Glad to help.
>
> Three points:
>
> 1. Right-click on My Computer, then click Properties, then Device
> Manager. Click the plus sign to the left of Disk drives, and it will
> report the *physical* drives that are there.
>
> 2. By the way, you bought the computer, didn't you? Don't you know
> whether you bought a computer with one disk drive or two?
>
> 3. It's hard to imagine that you have two 19.5GB physical drives,
> since that size is absolutely tiny. It's been a long time since you
> could even buy a drive that small. Almost certainly you have a single
> drive of 39GB, and even that is tiny by today's standards; drives that
> small are no longer sold either.
>
>
>
> > "Ken Blake, MVP" wrote:
> >
> > > On Tue, 17 Feb 2009 13:56:02 -0800, Kdev
> > > <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> > >
> > > > I'm useing XP. My C drive is full( won't even defrag ) and my D drive is
> > > > practically empty. Can I move things over to D fromC to open up some
> > > > room??Specifically Itunes takeing up alot of space along with the wifes
> > > > picture saver (KODAK). I'll take any and all Ideas on how to clean out some
> > > > space
> > > > Thanks
> > >
> > >
> > > Besides the advice you've already gotten, let me ask you a different
> > > question before you follow anyone's advice. Are C: and D: separate
> > > physical drives or just partitions on a single hard drive?
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > --
> > > Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience
> > > Please Reply to the Newsgroup
> > >

>
> --
> Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience
> Please Reply to the Newsgroup
>

 
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Gerry
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Posts: n/a
 
      21st Feb 2009
Kdev

What exactly is the present status of your problem. How much free disk
space do you currently have on your C partition?

You should be able to use Disk Defragmenter to analyse your drive, even
if it will not defragment because of low free disk space.

I would be interested in seeing a Disk Defragmenter report . Open Disk
Defragmenter and click on Analyse. Select View Report and click on Save
As and Save. Now find VolumeC.txt in your My Documents Folder and post a
copy. Do this before running Disk Defragmenter as it is more
informative.

--



Hope this helps.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Kdev wrote:
> Ok. It only shows 1 drive maxtor 2f040L0 and no I didn't buy this
> comp. it was given to us by wifes brother when he bought new one and
> yes it is older but newer than ours (compac) was . I personaly
> wouldn't buy a Dell. Now back to our pesky problem :-)..
>
> "Ken Blake, MVP" wrote:
>
>> On Wed, 18 Feb 2009 12:46:09 -0800, Kdev
>> <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>>
>>> Ken,
>>> Fiirst off thank you for responding..Now, I don't know how to tell
>>> the answer to your question? All i know is 19.5 gig C: drive has 1%
>>> left and D: has 18 out of 19.5 left?? Probably a easy way to look
>>> that up huh? but I don't know it. Your help is appreciated.

>>
>>
>> You're welcome. Glad to help.
>>
>> Three points:
>>
>> 1. Right-click on My Computer, then click Properties, then Device
>> Manager. Click the plus sign to the left of Disk drives, and it will
>> report the *physical* drives that are there.
>>
>> 2. By the way, you bought the computer, didn't you? Don't you know
>> whether you bought a computer with one disk drive or two?
>>
>> 3. It's hard to imagine that you have two 19.5GB physical drives,
>> since that size is absolutely tiny. It's been a long time since you
>> could even buy a drive that small. Almost certainly you have a single
>> drive of 39GB, and even that is tiny by today's standards; drives
>> that small are no longer sold either.
>>
>>
>>
>>> "Ken Blake, MVP" wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Tue, 17 Feb 2009 13:56:02 -0800, Kdev
>>>> <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> I'm useing XP. My C drive is full( won't even defrag ) and my D
>>>>> drive is practically empty. Can I move things over to D fromC to
>>>>> open up some room??Specifically Itunes takeing up alot of space
>>>>> along with the wifes picture saver (KODAK). I'll take any and all
>>>>> Ideas on how to clean out some space
>>>>> Thanks
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Besides the advice you've already gotten, let me ask you a
>>>> different question before you follow anyone's advice. Are C: and
>>>> D: separate physical drives or just partitions on a single hard
>>>> drive?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience
>>>> Please Reply to the Newsgroup
>>>>

>>
>> --
>> Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience
>> Please Reply to the Newsgroup



 
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Ken Blake, MVP
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      21st Feb 2009
On Sat, 21 Feb 2009 04:46:00 -0800, Kdev
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

> Ok. It only shows 1 drive maxtor 2f040L0 and no I didn't buy this comp. it
> was given to us by wifes brother when he bought new one and yes it is older
> but newer than ours (compac) was . I personaly wouldn't buy a Dell. Now back
> to our pesky problem :-)..




OK, so you have two partitions on a single drive that's not very big.
You should consider that your best choice is likely to be combining
the two partitions as a single one.

Unfortunately, no version of Windows before Vista provides any way of
changing the existing partition structure of the drive
nondestructively. The only way to do what you want is with third-party
software. Partition Magic is the best-known such program, but there
are freeware/shareware alternatives. One such program is BootIt Next
Generation. It's shareware, but comes with a free 30-day trial, so you
should be able to do what you want within that 30 days. I haven't used
it myself (because I've never needed to use *any* such program), but
it comes highly recommended by several other MVPs here.

Whatever software you use, make sure you have a good backup before
beginning. Although there's no reason to expect a problem, things
*can* go wrong.



> "Ken Blake, MVP" wrote:
>
> > On Wed, 18 Feb 2009 12:46:09 -0800, Kdev
> > <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> >
> > > Ken,
> > > Fiirst off thank you for responding..Now, I don't know how to tell the
> > > answer to your question? All i know is 19.5 gig C: drive has 1% left and D:
> > > has 18 out of 19.5 left?? Probably a easy way to look that up huh? but I
> > > don't know it. Your help is appreciated.

> >
> >
> > You're welcome. Glad to help.
> >
> > Three points:
> >
> > 1. Right-click on My Computer, then click Properties, then Device
> > Manager. Click the plus sign to the left of Disk drives, and it will
> > report the *physical* drives that are there.
> >
> > 2. By the way, you bought the computer, didn't you? Don't you know
> > whether you bought a computer with one disk drive or two?
> >
> > 3. It's hard to imagine that you have two 19.5GB physical drives,
> > since that size is absolutely tiny. It's been a long time since you
> > could even buy a drive that small. Almost certainly you have a single
> > drive of 39GB, and even that is tiny by today's standards; drives that
> > small are no longer sold either.
> >
> >
> >
> > > "Ken Blake, MVP" wrote:
> > >
> > > > On Tue, 17 Feb 2009 13:56:02 -0800, Kdev
> > > > <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > I'm useing XP. My C drive is full( won't even defrag ) and my D drive is
> > > > > practically empty. Can I move things over to D fromC to open up some
> > > > > room??Specifically Itunes takeing up alot of space along with the wifes
> > > > > picture saver (KODAK). I'll take any and all Ideas on how to clean out some
> > > > > space
> > > > > Thanks
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > Besides the advice you've already gotten, let me ask you a different
> > > > question before you follow anyone's advice. Are C: and D: separate
> > > > physical drives or just partitions on a single hard drive?
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > --
> > > > Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience
> > > > Please Reply to the Newsgroup
> > > >

> >
> > --
> > Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience
> > Please Reply to the Newsgroup
> >


--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience
Please Reply to the Newsgroup
 
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