WINDOWS XP DEFRAGMENT

  • Thread starter Thread starter bootlady77
  • Start date Start date
B

bootlady77

Allthough i have cleaned my system of the all the unnessary programmes i do
not use and done the cleanup checked the disc for errors and defragmented all
the 3 drives i have still only got 23% left on c drive when i normally have
got about 39%, i have done 3 system restore points recentley i have defragged
after them but it makes no difference to c drive . i have got 2 other drives
that are okay and are the same as they have always been.
There should be more space on c drive running xp professional service pack
3 installedcan anybody body help , Thanks. i have no music or photo`s on
either.
Bootlady.
 
bootlady77 said:
Allthough i have cleaned my system of the all the unnessary
programmes i do not use and done the cleanup checked the disc for
errors and defragmented all the 3 drives i have still only got 23%
left on c drive when i normally have got about 39%, i have done 3
system restore points recentley i have defragged after them but it
makes no difference to c drive . i have got 2 other drives that are
okay and are the same as they have always been. There should be more
space on c drive running xp professional service pack 3 installedcan
anybody body help , Thanks. i have no music or photo`s on either.
Bootlady.

Defragging doesn't free up disk space. If you're running low on space on
your system drive, you need to somehow delete or move files - that's the
only solution. The percentage of disk space free is a bit less important
than the *amount* free.
 
Allthough i have cleaned my system of the all the unnessary programmes i do
not use and done the cleanup checked the disc for errors and defragmented all
the 3 drives i have still only got 23% left on c drive when i normally have
got about 39%, i have done 3 system restore points recentley i have defragged
after them but it makes no difference to c drive . i have got 2 other drives
that are okay and are the same as they have always been.
There should be more space on c drive running xp professional service pack
3 installedcan anybody body help , Thanks. i have no music or photo`s on
either.
Bootlady.

I'd say give ccleaner 2.12 a shot. It's pretty good at dejunking PCs.
And for defrag, I highly recommend JK defrag 3.36. Both are free.

- Thee Chicago Wolf
 
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.

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
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
First use Windows 'Disk Cleanup' to create more space on your C: drive.
Description of the Disk Cleanup Tool in Windows XP:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310312

Next: Empty the Recycle Bin.

If you recently installed Windows XP Service Pack 3:
Look for an odd folder name which is located here
C:\WINDOWS\SoftwareDistribution\Download\cf8ec753e88561d..........\
Note: the apparent random set of letter and number may vary from my
example above but whatever the name is, it will be more than
600MB in size and can be safely deleted.
You may also see a number of other folders or files located in the:
C:\WINDOWS\SoftwareDistribution\Download\ directory
They also can be deleted.

You can also free up more disk space by reducing
the number of 'System Restore' points:
Select Start/Control Panel/System, then in the System Properties window
click on the System Restore tab.
Next select the drive letter where Windows is installed (usually C:),
Then click on the Setting button
Now in the Drive Settings window move the Disk space usage slider to the
left to reduce the amount of drive space System Restore points will use.
This will remove some of the older restore points and free up some space.

Disable Hibernation and delete hiberfil.sys file (If you have it enabled):
http://www.mydigitallife.info/2007/...sys-hibernation-file-in-windows-xp-and-vista/
and:
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/using/mobility/getstarted/hibernate.mspx

If you are using IE7 and then installed SP3 read the info below.
IE7 users will find the folders listed below on their hard drive:
$NtServicePackUninstallIDNMitigationAPIs$
$NtServicePackUninstallNLSDownlevelMapping$
They are needed to uninstall IE7. However, if you installed IE7 and
then installed XP SP3 you can no longer uninstall IE7 and these
folders can also be deleted.

Note: The recommended procedure before installing XP SP3 is to
uninstall IE7, then install XP SP3. Now you still have the ability to
install and uninstall IE7.

Next if you still need more space:
Remove the files used to uninstall updates to Windows
These folders and associated files in these folders are safe to remove,
however once deleted you will no longer be able to un-install a patch or
update that was associated with the deleted folder/files.
I would keep the most recent set (last two months just in case) of folders
and delete the older updates.
As a safety net I burned these folders to a CD before deleting them.
These files are located in the Windows folder and have folder names
like $NtUninstallKBXXXXXX$.
They are hidden folders so enable viewing of hidden files in Windows
Explorer.
Warning: One folder you should not delete is: $hf_mig$
Also See the following web pages on this issue:
http://www.pagestart.com/ntuninstall.html
http://www3.telus.net/dandemar/spack.htm
http://www.dougknox.com/xp/utils/xp_hotfix_backup.htm

You can reduce the size of the Internet Explorer Disk Cache:
How and Why to Clear Your Cache:
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/ie/ie6/using/howto/customizing/clearcache.mspx
Just follow the instructs but instead of increasing the size (as stated in
the article) decrease it.

Finally: Check the Recycle Bin one more time and empty it
if necessary as some of those files you deleted in the steps
mentioned above may find there way into the recycle bin.

If you have more than one partition or drive then:
How to Change the Default Location of Mail and News Folders:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/307971/en-us

Change the Default Location of the My Documents Folder
(Example: move it to the D drive)
See: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310147
Also:
http://www.techsupportalert.com/how_to_move_my_documents.htm

How to move the Spool folder in Windows XP
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;Q308666

Can I move or delete my C:\I386 directory to free up some space?
See:
http://ask-leo.com/can_i_move_or_delete_my_i386_directory_to_free_up_some_space.html
Note: C:\i386 is not to be confused with the
C:\Windows\ServicePackFiles\i386 folder which should not
be moved or deleted as Windows File Protection needs those files

JS
http://www.pagestart.com
 
=?Utf-8?B?Ym9vdGxhZHk3Nw==?= said:
Allthough i have cleaned my system of the all the unnessary programmes i do
not use and done the cleanup checked the disc for errors and defragmented all
the 3 drives i have still only got 23% left on c drive when i normally have
got about 39%, i have done 3 system restore points recentley i have defragged

Time for a way larger HDD.
 
Back
Top