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Windows 2000 and Basic vs Dynamic partitions
I have a Windows 2000 system on which the C: drive (system and boot) has become uncomfortably full. There is actually plenty of space on the physical disc, just that C: is too small.
Problem is that I can't change the size of C: as windows has the restrictoin that volumes originally created on a basic disk and then upgraded to dynamic discs cannot be extended. According to M'soft the only way to go back to a basic disk is to back up all the files, delete all the partitions, then convert and restore. Great for the C: drive! Norton partition magic 8 does not understand dynamic discs, so that is no help either. Any suggestions? |
You CAN actually revert to a Basic disk from a Dynamic disk. The process is not for the faint-hearted, though.
Have a look here and here. The way I see it, you would have to back up all your data anyway, so when you have done that give the above a go - what have you got to lose? The worst that happens is that you have to reformat the sisk and install from scratch. A Dynamic disk is actually a partition spanning the entire disk, which is then subdivided into the logical volumes that can be combined to span multiple disks or create software RAID. This is why a partitioning tool won't work. If you do a Google search for dynamic partition you can find more information than you ever wanted! Good luck! SD |
I forgot to add, the best way to mitigate the pain of re-installing would be to use Ghost (or other drive imaging software) to clone the existing C: drive.
Then repartition the disk, and restore the clone, ensuring that you set it to use all available space. But don't rely on this as your sole backup. SD |
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