The thing is, Windows XP will, by default, create one primary partition and
one extended partition with extended logical drives per physical hard disk,
if you are creating more than one partition per hard drive. Primary
partitions receive priority when assigning original drive letters, and the
primary partition on the physical disc connected as primary master will have
the lowest drive letter, followed by the primary partition on the disc
connected as secondary master, then extended logical drives on the primary
master, the secondary master, etc, etc, etc.
If you want the master disc to have four partitions with drive letters C, D,
E, F and the slave disc to have G, H, I, and J, you can either change drive
letter assignments easily form within Windows, or you can use a third party
DOS boot disc with a more robust partitioning program, such as the "gdisk"
program that is included with Norton Ghost, which will allow you to create
one extended partition without requiring a primary partition on the slave
drive, then create logical drives within that extended partition.
I hope this makes sense,
Russell
http://tastycomputers.com
"Lurker" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
> Recently upgraded WD 8 GB drive with a WD 80 GB drive. Wanted to have the
> old one available
> for files on it, etc. so configured master/slave for the two drives.
>
> Old drive was partitioned into four drives (c,d,e,f) and I also partioned
> new drive into 4 partitions.
>
> Started up and installed (new) WindowsXP Home edition. Every thing worked
> okay, but the drive
> letters were not what I expected (or wanted). I was expecting the master
> drive to be c,d,e,f and
> the slave to be g,h,i,k.
>
> Instead d was first partition of the slave drive, followed by e,f,g for
the
> master partitions, then the
> remaining 3 partitions of the slave drive.
>
> Tried for a few days and was very confusing, so I thought I would just
> uncable the slave, set the
> new drive jumper to it's default setting and I would have c,d,e,f.
>
> WRONG! I still had the c,e,f,g (no d). So I used the WD software to
> reformat, partition, etc and
> started over. Now I have the desired c,d,e,f configuration on the new
> drive.
>
> Questions:
> Did I do something wrong in the above sequence, and if so, what? (I did
copy
> all of my
> relevant data files to CD's, so the old drive was more for convenience.)
>
> Is there a correct way to configure the old drive so I can power it up
again
> without
> getting the drive letters all screwy again?
>
> If not, what drive letters would I get if I simply reformat the OLD drive
> before hooking it up
> in slave configuration? (so I could use it for backup purposes)
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
> Lurker
>
>