Steve wrote:
> I have a hard disk drive that I just realized is partitioned for a C:
> drive and a D: drive. I foiund this out by doing properties on C:
> and D drives. The C: drive has all the data and software, and is 15GB
> (11GB are used).
>
> The D: drive appears to have no data and software. It is 55GB and
> says it is 99% free.
>
> I would like to have only one drive, the C: drive. I am told I can
> delete the D drive. If I delete the D drive, will my C drive
> automatically now have 70GB of data?
No. The space that D: occupied will be unusable.
What you really want to do, I assume, is not just delete the D: but change
the partition structure so that you end up with a single drive using all the
space. Unfortunately, no version of Windows 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 - Microsoft MVP Windows: Shell/User
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