-=PCTechTalk=- Re: Partition Drive

  • From: Gman <gman.pctt@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <pctechtalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sat, 30 May 2009 20:22:28 -0400

I've sent in several tutorials on this just over the last year.  We just got 
in from our monthly food shopping and I need to separate and repack the 
meats in a few minutes, so I have to make this quick.

Your best bet is to back up your system and then start from scratch.  After 
the backup is made and double checked, you can use the first OS install to 
recreate your partitions (Disk Manager won't be available until after the 
install).  The second, third of fourth screen you'll see includes a button 
called "Advanced".  Click on it and tell the install that you want to choose 
the partition used for the installation.  When it gets to that point in the 
install, you'll be given the option to Delete &/or create as many partitions 
as you'd like.  If the entire hard drive is already partitioned, you'll have 
to first delete that partition before you can break it up into smaller 
chunks.

Based on a 110GB drive
If your main OS is XP, I would give the first volume at least 20GB.  If it's 
Vista, I'd go with 25GB as the minimum.  These numbers assume that you will 
host your Documents folder on another partition and install all programs to 
another partition.  If this is not part of the plan, these suggested sizes 
increase dramatically.  Since this first one will always be an OS volume, 
it'll need to be designated as a Primary partition (should be the default 
option).

The next partition will hold Win7 as part of a dual-boot setup.  I don't 
know what the specific requirements or 'growth over time' patterns are for 
W7, so I'm going to assume they're similar to Vista.  Make the second volume 
at least 25GB (I'm again assuming the situation above), but this time, set 
it as a Logical drive.

You should then create a third Logical drive out of all of the remaining 
space as a host for your Docs, Program Fiels folder and anything else you 
wish to keep separated from the OS's (I try to separate a lot more than I 
usually recommend, so ask if you're not sure of something).

Then, tell the install to continue.  The moment the install is done, you'll 
want to install tell the OS to Move/use the third volume for the items 
listed above.  The methods for doing this depend on the OS, so I'll let you 
digest this much and come back when you're ready to learn more.      :)

Peace,
Gman

http://www.thevenusproject.com/index.php

"The only dumb questions are the ones we fail to ask"

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "tempting2taanzaa" <tempting2taanzaa@xxxxxxxx>
To: <pctechtalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, May 30, 2009 3:34 PM
Subject: -=PCTechTalk=- Partition Drive


> Hi:
>
> I want to try something new and want to know if I can do this.  My O/S,
> documents, programs, etc. are all on C:\ and I'd like to separate the O/S 
> to
> its drive.  I only have the one internal drive, and have read about using
> the disc management tool in windows but am unsure if I would need to start
> over fresh (do a recovery, then partition, then restore my documents,
> programs etc) or if I can partition the O/S as is.  I hope I'm making 
> sense.
> I've listed my computer specs below.  Thanks!
>
> I also have an interest in downloading the Win 7 RC as a dual boot to
> preview.  But, I'm unsure of partition allocations (how much space to
> allocate for O/S, data files, etc).  I guess a good tutorial would work if
> someone could point me in a reliable direction.  Googling gives answers, 
> but
> determining which are reliable and which would make me come back to the 
> list
> looking for help are a little difficult.
>
> Thanks again!
>
> Computer: Toshiba Satellite P105-S6147
> Processor: Intel T2300 1.67GHz
> RAM: 2GB
> O/S: Win Vista Home Premium x86 SP2 

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