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Tcs May 6th 07 08:51 PM

What is maximum number of drives? Or maybe...
 
I have just encountered a problem, which I didn't have before...

I've just upgraded from an old PC, running Windows 2k Pro (sp4), to a
new one running XP Pro (sp2). (I have built both PCs, just as I have
always done.) My configuration is:

----+-------+-------+---+----------------------
Drv | OLD PC| NEW PC| # | description
----+-------+-------+---+----------------------
A: | x | x | - | floppy
B: | - | - | - | doesn't exist
C: | x(10) | x(35) | 0 | OS partition (active)
D: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | comm partition
E: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | graphics partition
F: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | word proc partition
G: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | database partition
H: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | various data
I: | x | x | - | CD / DVD-ROM drive
J: | x | x | - | DVD drive
K: | x | x(10) | 1 | OS partition (active)
L: | x(320)| ????? | 2 | misc
M: | | x (5) | 1 | comm partition
N: | | x (5) | 1 | graphics partition
O: | | x (5) | 1 | word proc partition
P: | | x (5) | 1 | database partition
Q: | | x (5) | 1 | various data
R: | | x | - | card read 1st drive
S: | | x | - | card read 2nd drive
T: | | x | - | card read 3rd drive
U: | | x | - | card read 4th drive
V: | | x(160)| 3 | misc

Right now, disk 1 in the new PC is my disk 0 from my old PC, while I
continue to migrate from the old to the new. *Normally*, I would only
have one, perhaps two partitions on disk 1.

Hard Disk 0 = 80gb
Hard Disk 1 = 40gb right now, but varies (win 2k hdd 0)
Hard Disk 2 = 320bg right now, but varies
Hard Disk 3 = 160gb right now, but varies

Notes:
------
1.) Disks 0, 1 & 2 are in removable cartridge/chassis.
2.) Disk 3 is an external unit with USB interface.
3.) All hard disks are IDE.
4.) Disks 0, 1 & 2 are in the chassis.
5.) Disks 0 & 1 run off the mobo's controllers.
6.) Disk 2 runs off a SIIG Ultra ATA/133 PCI controller.
7.) Drives R:, S:, T: & U: are card reader unit (Koutech F7210).

I can disable drives R:-U:, by "stopping" the USB device, although I
don't actually "remove" anything. I was able to get my system to
"see" the missing drive 2 (L:), by turning the cartridge key to "off",
then back to "on". ( I don't believe it was the "scan for hardware
changes" that worked. )

So...I'm thinking this has to do with the number of physical "disks"
in the system. ( So far I haven't been able to find anything about
what any such limit might be. ) But maybe it's a matter of the number
of "drives". Maybe some combination. Whatever it is, I would like to
know. I'm also wondering if it would be possible to script the
disabling of drives R:-U: and enabling of drive L:. And...if so, how
to do it. Can I restrict the enabling of drives R: thru U: to perhaps
just ONE (1) drive? ( I only have one Compact Flash card. )

Can anyone out there help me? Any help would be appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tom

Shenan Stanley May 6th 07 09:29 PM

What is maximum number of drives? Or maybe...
 
Tcs wrote:
I have just encountered a problem, which I didn't have before...

I've just upgraded from an old PC, running Windows 2k Pro (sp4), to
a new one running XP Pro (sp2). (I have built both PCs, just as I
have always done.) My configuration is:

----+-------+-------+---+----------------------
Drv | OLD PC| NEW PC| # | description
----+-------+-------+---+----------------------
A: | x | x | - | floppy
B: | - | - | - | doesn't exist
C: | x(10) | x(35) | 0 | OS partition (active)
D: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | comm partition
E: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | graphics partition
F: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | word proc partition
G: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | database partition
H: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | various data
I: | x | x | - | CD / DVD-ROM drive
J: | x | x | - | DVD drive
K: | x | x(10) | 1 | OS partition (active)
L: | x(320)| ????? | 2 | misc
M: | | x (5) | 1 | comm partition
N: | | x (5) | 1 | graphics partition
O: | | x (5) | 1 | word proc partition
P: | | x (5) | 1 | database partition
Q: | | x (5) | 1 | various data
R: | | x | - | card read 1st drive
S: | | x | - | card read 2nd drive
T: | | x | - | card read 3rd drive
U: | | x | - | card read 4th drive
V: | | x(160)| 3 | misc

Right now, disk 1 in the new PC is my disk 0 from my old PC, while I
continue to migrate from the old to the new. *Normally*, I would
only have one, perhaps two partitions on disk 1.

Hard Disk 0 = 80gb
Hard Disk 1 = 40gb right now, but varies (win 2k hdd 0)
Hard Disk 2 = 320bg right now, but varies
Hard Disk 3 = 160gb right now, but varies

Notes:
------
1.) Disks 0, 1 & 2 are in removable cartridge/chassis.
2.) Disk 3 is an external unit with USB interface.
3.) All hard disks are IDE.
4.) Disks 0, 1 & 2 are in the chassis.
5.) Disks 0 & 1 run off the mobo's controllers.
6.) Disk 2 runs off a SIIG Ultra ATA/133 PCI controller.
7.) Drives R:, S:, T: & U: are card reader unit (Koutech F7210).

I can disable drives R:-U:, by "stopping" the USB device, although I
don't actually "remove" anything. I was able to get my system to
"see" the missing drive 2 (L:), by turning the cartridge key to
"off", then back to "on". ( I don't believe it was the "scan for
hardware changes" that worked. )

So...I'm thinking this has to do with the number of physical "disks"
in the system. ( So far I haven't been able to find anything about
what any such limit might be. ) But maybe it's a matter of the
number of "drives". Maybe some combination. Whatever it is, I
would like to know. I'm also wondering if it would be possible to
script the disabling of drives R:-U: and enabling of drive L:.
And...if so, how to do it. Can I restrict the enabling of drives
R: thru U: to perhaps just ONE (1) drive? ( I only have one
Compact Flash card. )

Can anyone out there help me? Any help would be appreciated.


I think you have gone into overkill on the number of partitions.
You do not *need* that many.

Most get along just fine with one (1) partition per drive.
Many get along better in that way and organizing their files/installations
into folders.

You have not ran out of drive letters - but you have a riduculous number of
them.
I have systems with 2+TB of space on them and connectivity to several
external drives and network devices and seldom get over 12-15 drive letters.

Why not make an image of the old disk using somehting like Symantec Ghost,
Acronis TrueImage, BootItNG - and then read from the image to save your
machine from having to parse the abnormal number of tiny partitions? heh

--
Shenan Stanley
MS-MVP
--
How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html



Wesley Vogel May 6th 07 11:53 PM

What is maximum number of drives? Or maybe...
 
26.

quote
A computer can use up to 26 drive letters. Drive letters A and B are
reserved for floppy disk drives, but you can assign these letters to
removable drives if the computer does not have a floppy disk drive. Hard
disk drives in the computer receive letters C through Z, while mapped
network drives are assigned drive letters in reverse order (Z through B).
quote
from...
To assign, change, or remove a drive letter
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/d....mspx?mfr=true

Or paste the following line into Start | Run and click OK...

hh diskmgmt.chm::/dm_drive_letter.htm

--
Hope this helps. Let us know.

Wes
MS-MVP Windows Shell/User

In ,
Tcs hunted and pecked:
I have just encountered a problem, which I didn't have before...

I've just upgraded from an old PC, running Windows 2k Pro (sp4), to a
new one running XP Pro (sp2). (I have built both PCs, just as I have
always done.) My configuration is:

----+-------+-------+---+----------------------
Drv | OLD PC| NEW PC| # | description
----+-------+-------+---+----------------------
A: | x | x | - | floppy
B: | - | - | - | doesn't exist
C: | x(10) | x(35) | 0 | OS partition (active)
D: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | comm partition
E: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | graphics partition
F: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | word proc partition
G: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | database partition
H: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | various data
I: | x | x | - | CD / DVD-ROM drive
J: | x | x | - | DVD drive
K: | x | x(10) | 1 | OS partition (active)
L: | x(320)| ????? | 2 | misc
M: | | x (5) | 1 | comm partition
N: | | x (5) | 1 | graphics partition
O: | | x (5) | 1 | word proc partition
P: | | x (5) | 1 | database partition
Q: | | x (5) | 1 | various data
R: | | x | - | card read 1st drive
S: | | x | - | card read 2nd drive
T: | | x | - | card read 3rd drive
U: | | x | - | card read 4th drive
V: | | x(160)| 3 | misc

Right now, disk 1 in the new PC is my disk 0 from my old PC, while I
continue to migrate from the old to the new. *Normally*, I would only
have one, perhaps two partitions on disk 1.

Hard Disk 0 = 80gb
Hard Disk 1 = 40gb right now, but varies (win 2k hdd 0)
Hard Disk 2 = 320bg right now, but varies
Hard Disk 3 = 160gb right now, but varies

Notes:
------
1.) Disks 0, 1 & 2 are in removable cartridge/chassis.
2.) Disk 3 is an external unit with USB interface.
3.) All hard disks are IDE.
4.) Disks 0, 1 & 2 are in the chassis.
5.) Disks 0 & 1 run off the mobo's controllers.
6.) Disk 2 runs off a SIIG Ultra ATA/133 PCI controller.
7.) Drives R:, S:, T: & U: are card reader unit (Koutech F7210).

I can disable drives R:-U:, by "stopping" the USB device, although I
don't actually "remove" anything. I was able to get my system to
"see" the missing drive 2 (L:), by turning the cartridge key to "off",
then back to "on". ( I don't believe it was the "scan for hardware
changes" that worked. )

So...I'm thinking this has to do with the number of physical "disks"
in the system. ( So far I haven't been able to find anything about
what any such limit might be. ) But maybe it's a matter of the number
of "drives". Maybe some combination. Whatever it is, I would like to
know. I'm also wondering if it would be possible to script the
disabling of drives R:-U: and enabling of drive L:. And...if so, how
to do it. Can I restrict the enabling of drives R: thru U: to perhaps
just ONE (1) drive? ( I only have one Compact Flash card. )

Can anyone out there help me? Any help would be appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tom



Gerry May 8th 07 11:04 PM

What is maximum number of drives? Or maybe...
 
Wes

26 is not the max. You can have any number of C drives as long as the
operating system residing therein cannot see any of the other C drives.


--



Regards.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"Wesley Vogel" wrote in message
...
26.

quote
A computer can use up to 26 drive letters.




Wesley Vogel May 10th 07 01:20 AM

What is maximum number of drives? Or maybe...
 
Hi Gerry,

On one Windows operating system you can have as many drives as you like.
But you can only designate 26 of them with drive letters, from A thru Z.

--
Hope this helps. Let us know.

Wes
MS-MVP Windows Shell/User

In ,
Gerry hunted and pecked:
Wes

26 is not the max. You can have any number of C drives as long as the
operating system residing therein cannot see any of the other C drives.


--



Regards.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"Wesley Vogel" wrote in message
...
26.

quote
A computer can use up to 26 drive letters.



PVS R September 28th 10 06:09 AM

Hey Wes ....
 
Then how do we designate the rest ??

On Sunday, May 06, 2007 3:51 PM Tcs wrote:


I have just encountered a problem, which I didn't have before...

I've just upgraded from an old PC, running Windows 2k Pro (sp4), to a
new one running XP Pro (sp2). (I have built both PCs, just as I have
always done.) My configuration is:

----+-------+-------+---+----------------------
Drv | OLD PC| NEW PC| # | description
----+-------+-------+---+----------------------
A: | x | x | - | floppy
B: | - | - | - | doesn't exist
C: | x(10) | x(35) | 0 | OS partition (active)
D: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | comm partition
E: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | graphics partition
F: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | word proc partition
G: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | database partition
H: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | various data
I: | x | x | - | CD / DVD-ROM drive
J: | x | x | - | DVD drive
K: | x | x(10) | 1 | OS partition (active)
L: | x(320)| ????? | 2 | misc
M: | | x (5) | 1 | comm partition
N: | | x (5) | 1 | graphics partition
O: | | x (5) | 1 | word proc partition
P: | | x (5) | 1 | database partition
Q: | | x (5) | 1 | various data
R: | | x | - | card read 1st drive
S: | | x | - | card read 2nd drive
T: | | x | - | card read 3rd drive
U: | | x | - | card read 4th drive
V: | | x(160)| 3 | misc

Right now, disk 1 in the new PC is my disk 0 from my old PC, while I
continue to migrate from the old to the new. *Normally*, I would only
have one, perhaps two partitions on disk 1.

Hard Disk 0 = 80gb
Hard Disk 1 = 40gb right now, but varies (win 2k hdd 0)
Hard Disk 2 = 320bg right now, but varies
Hard Disk 3 = 160gb right now, but varies

Notes:
------
1.) Disks 0, 1 & 2 are in removable cartridge/chassis.
2.) Disk 3 is an external unit with USB interface.
3.) All hard disks are IDE.
4.) Disks 0, 1 & 2 are in the chassis.
5.) Disks 0 & 1 run off the mobo's controllers.
6.) Disk 2 runs off a SIIG Ultra ATA/133 PCI controller.
7.) Drives R:, S:, T: & U: are card reader unit (Koutech F7210).

I can disable drives R:-U:, by "stopping" the USB device, although I
don't actually "remove" anything. I was able to get my system to
"see" the missing drive 2 (L:), by turning the cartridge key to "off",
then back to "on". ( I don't believe it was the "scan for hardware
changes" that worked. )

So...I'm thinking this has to do with the number of physical "disks"
in the system. ( So far I haven't been able to find anything about
what any such limit might be. ) But maybe it's a matter of the number
of "drives". Maybe some combination. Whatever it is, I would like to
know. I'm also wondering if it would be possible to script the
disabling of drives R:-U: and enabling of drive L:. And...if so, how
to do it. Can I restrict the enabling of drives R: thru U: to perhaps
just ONE (1) drive? ( I only have one Compact Flash card. )

Can anyone out there help me? Any help would be appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tom



On Sunday, May 06, 2007 4:29 PM Shenan Stanley wrote:


Tcs wrote:

I think you have gone into overkill on the number of partitions.
You do not *need* that many.

Most get along just fine with one (1) partition per drive.
Many get along better in that way and organizing their files/installations
into folders.

You have not ran out of drive letters - but you have a riduculous number of
them.
I have systems with 2+TB of space on them and connectivity to several
external drives and network devices and seldom get over 12-15 drive letters.

Why not make an image of the old disk using somehting like Symantec Ghost,
Acronis TrueImage, BootItNG - and then read from the image to save your
machine from having to parse the abnormal number of tiny partitions? heh

--
Shenan Stanley
MS-MVP
--
How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html



On Sunday, May 06, 2007 6:53 PM Wesley Vogel wrote:


26.

quote
A computer can use up to 26 drive letters. Drive letters A and B are
reserved for floppy disk drives, but you can assign these letters to
removable drives if the computer does not have a floppy disk drive. Hard
disk drives in the computer receive letters C through Z, while mapped
network drives are assigned drive letters in reverse order (Z through B).
quote
from...
To assign, change, or remove a drive letter
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/d....mspx?mfr=true

Or paste the following line into Start | Run and click OK...

hh diskmgmt.chm::/dm_drive_letter.htm

--
Hope this helps. Let us know.

Wes
MS-MVP Windows Shell/User

In ,
Tcs hunted and pecked:



On Tuesday, May 08, 2007 6:04 PM Gerry wrote:


Wes

26 is not the max. You can have any number of C drives as long as the
operating system residing therein cannot see any of the other C drives.


--



Regards.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"Wesley Vogel" wrote in message
...



On Wednesday, May 09, 2007 8:20 PM Wesley Vogel wrote:


Hi Gerry,

On one Windows operating system you can have as many drives as you like.
But you can only designate 26 of them with drive letters, from A thru Z.

--
Hope this helps. Let us know.

Wes
MS-MVP Windows Shell/User

In ,
Gerry hunted and pecked:



Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice
Why GUIDs are not a good idea for SQL Server Primary Keys
http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...mary-keys.aspx


Richard Pounder September 28th 10 01:43 PM

Hey Wes ....
 
You HoopleHeaded Eggheader...do you think the OP is coming back to read a
reply to his post from 2007 after all these years? And, since you changed
the subject? What a Doofus.
"PVS R" wrote in message
...
Then how do we designate the rest ??

On Sunday, May 06, 2007 3:51 PM Tcs wrote:


I have just encountered a problem, which I didn't have before...

I've just upgraded from an old PC, running Windows 2k Pro (sp4), to a
new one running XP Pro (sp2). (I have built both PCs, just as I have
always done.) My configuration is:

----+-------+-------+---+----------------------
Drv | OLD PC| NEW PC| # | description
----+-------+-------+---+----------------------
A: | x | x | - | floppy
B: | - | - | - | doesn't exist
C: | x(10) | x(35) | 0 | OS partition (active)
D: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | comm partition
E: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | graphics partition
F: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | word proc partition
G: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | database partition
H: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | various data
I: | x | x | - | CD / DVD-ROM drive
J: | x | x | - | DVD drive
K: | x | x(10) | 1 | OS partition (active)
L: | x(320)| ????? | 2 | misc
M: | | x (5) | 1 | comm partition
N: | | x (5) | 1 | graphics partition
O: | | x (5) | 1 | word proc partition
P: | | x (5) | 1 | database partition
Q: | | x (5) | 1 | various data
R: | | x | - | card read 1st drive
S: | | x | - | card read 2nd drive
T: | | x | - | card read 3rd drive
U: | | x | - | card read 4th drive
V: | | x(160)| 3 | misc

Right now, disk 1 in the new PC is my disk 0 from my old PC, while I
continue to migrate from the old to the new. *Normally*, I would only
have one, perhaps two partitions on disk 1.

Hard Disk 0 = 80gb
Hard Disk 1 = 40gb right now, but varies (win 2k hdd 0)
Hard Disk 2 = 320bg right now, but varies
Hard Disk 3 = 160gb right now, but varies

Notes:
------
1.) Disks 0, 1 & 2 are in removable cartridge/chassis.
2.) Disk 3 is an external unit with USB interface.
3.) All hard disks are IDE.
4.) Disks 0, 1 & 2 are in the chassis.
5.) Disks 0 & 1 run off the mobo's controllers.
6.) Disk 2 runs off a SIIG Ultra ATA/133 PCI controller.
7.) Drives R:, S:, T: & U: are card reader unit (Koutech F7210).

I can disable drives R:-U:, by "stopping" the USB device, although I
don't actually "remove" anything. I was able to get my system to
"see" the missing drive 2 (L:), by turning the cartridge key to "off",
then back to "on". ( I don't believe it was the "scan for hardware
changes" that worked. )

So...I'm thinking this has to do with the number of physical "disks"
in the system. ( So far I haven't been able to find anything about
what any such limit might be. ) But maybe it's a matter of the number
of "drives". Maybe some combination. Whatever it is, I would like to
know. I'm also wondering if it would be possible to script the
disabling of drives R:-U: and enabling of drive L:. And...if so, how
to do it. Can I restrict the enabling of drives R: thru U: to perhaps
just ONE (1) drive? ( I only have one Compact Flash card. )

Can anyone out there help me? Any help would be appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tom



On Sunday, May 06, 2007 4:29 PM Shenan Stanley wrote:


Tcs wrote:

I think you have gone into overkill on the number of partitions.
You do not *need* that many.

Most get along just fine with one (1) partition per drive.
Many get along better in that way and organizing their
files/installations
into folders.

You have not ran out of drive letters - but you have a riduculous number
of
them.
I have systems with 2+TB of space on them and connectivity to several
external drives and network devices and seldom get over 12-15 drive
letters.

Why not make an image of the old disk using somehting like Symantec
Ghost,
Acronis TrueImage, BootItNG - and then read from the image to save your
machine from having to parse the abnormal number of tiny partitions? heh

--
Shenan Stanley
MS-MVP
--
How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html



On Sunday, May 06, 2007 6:53 PM Wesley Vogel wrote:


26.

quote
A computer can use up to 26 drive letters. Drive letters A and B are
reserved for floppy disk drives, but you can assign these letters to
removable drives if the computer does not have a floppy disk drive.
Hard
disk drives in the computer receive letters C through Z, while mapped
network drives are assigned drive letters in reverse order (Z through
B).
quote
from...
To assign, change, or remove a drive letter
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/d....mspx?mfr=true

Or paste the following line into Start | Run and click OK...

hh diskmgmt.chm::/dm_drive_letter.htm

--
Hope this helps. Let us know.

Wes
MS-MVP Windows Shell/User

In ,
Tcs hunted and pecked:



On Tuesday, May 08, 2007 6:04 PM Gerry wrote:


Wes

26 is not the max. You can have any number of C drives as long as the
operating system residing therein cannot see any of the other C
drives.


--



Regards.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"Wesley Vogel" wrote in message
...



On Wednesday, May 09, 2007 8:20 PM Wesley Vogel wrote:


Hi Gerry,

On one Windows operating system you can have as many drives as you
like.
But you can only designate 26 of them with drive letters, from A thru
Z.

--
Hope this helps. Let us know.

Wes
MS-MVP Windows Shell/User

In ,
Gerry hunted and pecked:



Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice
Why GUIDs are not a good idea for SQL Server Primary Keys
http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...mary-keys.aspx




VanguardLH[_2_] September 30th 10 01:18 PM

Hey Wes ....
 
Richard Pounder wrote:

PVS R wrote ...

On Sunday, May 06, 2007 3:51 PM Tcs wrote:
snipped the ancient thread


Then how do we designate the rest ??


You HoopleHeaded Eggheader...do you think the OP is coming back to read a
reply to his post from 2007 after all these years? And, since you changed
the subject? What a Doofus.


Tis the stupidity common to the boobs using web-based forums (along with
Egghead's ****ed up gateway to Usenet) that are too lazy or stupid to
bother looking at datestamps.

Brad B October 31st 10 06:52 PM

Hey Wes ....
 
An explanation of one way to do it he

http://ask-leo.com/26_drives_is_ther...n_windows.html



On Sunday, May 06, 2007 3:51 PM Tcs wrote:


I have just encountered a problem, which I didn't have before...

I've just upgraded from an old PC, running Windows 2k Pro (sp4), to a
new one running XP Pro (sp2). (I have built both PCs, just as I have
always done.) My configuration is:

----+-------+-------+---+----------------------
Drv | OLD PC| NEW PC| # | description
----+-------+-------+---+----------------------
A: | x | x | - | floppy
B: | - | - | - | doesn't exist
C: | x(10) | x(35) | 0 | OS partition (active)
D: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | comm partition
E: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | graphics partition
F: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | word proc partition
G: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | database partition
H: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | various data
I: | x | x | - | CD / DVD-ROM drive
J: | x | x | - | DVD drive
K: | x | x(10) | 1 | OS partition (active)
L: | x(320)| ????? | 2 | misc
M: | | x (5) | 1 | comm partition
N: | | x (5) | 1 | graphics partition
O: | | x (5) | 1 | word proc partition
P: | | x (5) | 1 | database partition
Q: | | x (5) | 1 | various data
R: | | x | - | card read 1st drive
S: | | x | - | card read 2nd drive
T: | | x | - | card read 3rd drive
U: | | x | - | card read 4th drive
V: | | x(160)| 3 | misc

Right now, disk 1 in the new PC is my disk 0 from my old PC, while I
continue to migrate from the old to the new. *Normally*, I would only
have one, perhaps two partitions on disk 1.

Hard Disk 0 = 80gb
Hard Disk 1 = 40gb right now, but varies (win 2k hdd 0)
Hard Disk 2 = 320bg right now, but varies
Hard Disk 3 = 160gb right now, but varies

Notes:
------
1.) Disks 0, 1 & 2 are in removable cartridge/chassis.
2.) Disk 3 is an external unit with USB interface.
3.) All hard disks are IDE.
4.) Disks 0, 1 & 2 are in the chassis.
5.) Disks 0 & 1 run off the mobo's controllers.
6.) Disk 2 runs off a SIIG Ultra ATA/133 PCI controller.
7.) Drives R:, S:, T: & U: are card reader unit (Koutech F7210).

I can disable drives R:-U:, by "stopping" the USB device, although I
don't actually "remove" anything. I was able to get my system to
"see" the missing drive 2 (L:), by turning the cartridge key to "off",
then back to "on". ( I don't believe it was the "scan for hardware
changes" that worked. )

So...I'm thinking this has to do with the number of physical "disks"
in the system. ( So far I haven't been able to find anything about
what any such limit might be. ) But maybe it's a matter of the number
of "drives". Maybe some combination. Whatever it is, I would like to
know. I'm also wondering if it would be possible to script the
disabling of drives R:-U: and enabling of drive L:. And...if so, how
to do it. Can I restrict the enabling of drives R: thru U: to perhaps
just ONE (1) drive? ( I only have one Compact Flash card. )

Can anyone out there help me? Any help would be appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tom



On Sunday, May 06, 2007 4:29 PM Shenan Stanley wrote:


Tcs wrote:

I think you have gone into overkill on the number of partitions.
You do not *need* that many.

Most get along just fine with one (1) partition per drive.
Many get along better in that way and organizing their files/installations
into folders.

You have not ran out of drive letters - but you have a riduculous number of
them.
I have systems with 2+TB of space on them and connectivity to several
external drives and network devices and seldom get over 12-15 drive letters.

Why not make an image of the old disk using somehting like Symantec Ghost,
Acronis TrueImage, BootItNG - and then read from the image to save your
machine from having to parse the abnormal number of tiny partitions? heh

--
Shenan Stanley
MS-MVP
--
How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html



On Sunday, May 06, 2007 6:53 PM Wesley Vogel wrote:


26.

quote
A computer can use up to 26 drive letters. Drive letters A and B are
reserved for floppy disk drives, but you can assign these letters to
removable drives if the computer does not have a floppy disk drive. Hard
disk drives in the computer receive letters C through Z, while mapped
network drives are assigned drive letters in reverse order (Z through B).
quote
from...
To assign, change, or remove a drive letter
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/d....mspx?mfr=true

Or paste the following line into Start | Run and click OK...

hh diskmgmt.chm::/dm_drive_letter.htm

--
Hope this helps. Let us know.

Wes
MS-MVP Windows Shell/User

In ,
Tcs hunted and pecked:



On Tuesday, May 08, 2007 6:04 PM Gerry wrote:


Wes

26 is not the max. You can have any number of C drives as long as the
operating system residing therein cannot see any of the other C drives.


--



Regards.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"Wesley Vogel" wrote in message
...



On Wednesday, May 09, 2007 8:20 PM Wesley Vogel wrote:


Hi Gerry,

On one Windows operating system you can have as many drives as you like.
But you can only designate 26 of them with drive letters, from A thru Z.

--
Hope this helps. Let us know.

Wes
MS-MVP Windows Shell/User

In ,
Gerry hunted and pecked:



On Tuesday, September 28, 2010 1:08 AM PVS R wrote:


Then how do we designate the rest ??



Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice
SharePoint Lists In Excel Via VSTO
http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...-via-vsto.aspx


Brad B October 31st 10 06:55 PM

Hey Wes ....
 
See:

http://ask-leo.com/26_drives_is_ther...n_windows.html

On Sunday, May 06, 2007 3:51 PM Tcs wrote:


I have just encountered a problem, which I didn't have before...

I've just upgraded from an old PC, running Windows 2k Pro (sp4), to a
new one running XP Pro (sp2). (I have built both PCs, just as I have
always done.) My configuration is:

----+-------+-------+---+----------------------
Drv | OLD PC| NEW PC| # | description
----+-------+-------+---+----------------------
A: | x | x | - | floppy
B: | - | - | - | doesn't exist
C: | x(10) | x(35) | 0 | OS partition (active)
D: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | comm partition
E: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | graphics partition
F: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | word proc partition
G: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | database partition
H: | x (5) | x (8) | 0 | various data
I: | x | x | - | CD / DVD-ROM drive
J: | x | x | - | DVD drive
K: | x | x(10) | 1 | OS partition (active)
L: | x(320)| ????? | 2 | misc
M: | | x (5) | 1 | comm partition
N: | | x (5) | 1 | graphics partition
O: | | x (5) | 1 | word proc partition
P: | | x (5) | 1 | database partition
Q: | | x (5) | 1 | various data
R: | | x | - | card read 1st drive
S: | | x | - | card read 2nd drive
T: | | x | - | card read 3rd drive
U: | | x | - | card read 4th drive
V: | | x(160)| 3 | misc

Right now, disk 1 in the new PC is my disk 0 from my old PC, while I
continue to migrate from the old to the new. *Normally*, I would only
have one, perhaps two partitions on disk 1.

Hard Disk 0 = 80gb
Hard Disk 1 = 40gb right now, but varies (win 2k hdd 0)
Hard Disk 2 = 320bg right now, but varies
Hard Disk 3 = 160gb right now, but varies

Notes:
------
1.) Disks 0, 1 & 2 are in removable cartridge/chassis.
2.) Disk 3 is an external unit with USB interface.
3.) All hard disks are IDE.
4.) Disks 0, 1 & 2 are in the chassis.
5.) Disks 0 & 1 run off the mobo's controllers.
6.) Disk 2 runs off a SIIG Ultra ATA/133 PCI controller.
7.) Drives R:, S:, T: & U: are card reader unit (Koutech F7210).

I can disable drives R:-U:, by "stopping" the USB device, although I
don't actually "remove" anything. I was able to get my system to
"see" the missing drive 2 (L:), by turning the cartridge key to "off",
then back to "on". ( I don't believe it was the "scan for hardware
changes" that worked. )

So...I'm thinking this has to do with the number of physical "disks"
in the system. ( So far I haven't been able to find anything about
what any such limit might be. ) But maybe it's a matter of the number
of "drives". Maybe some combination. Whatever it is, I would like to
know. I'm also wondering if it would be possible to script the
disabling of drives R:-U: and enabling of drive L:. And...if so, how
to do it. Can I restrict the enabling of drives R: thru U: to perhaps
just ONE (1) drive? ( I only have one Compact Flash card. )

Can anyone out there help me? Any help would be appreciated.

Thanks in advance,

Tom



On Sunday, May 06, 2007 4:29 PM Shenan Stanley wrote:


Tcs wrote:

I think you have gone into overkill on the number of partitions.
You do not *need* that many.

Most get along just fine with one (1) partition per drive.
Many get along better in that way and organizing their files/installations
into folders.

You have not ran out of drive letters - but you have a riduculous number of
them.
I have systems with 2+TB of space on them and connectivity to several
external drives and network devices and seldom get over 12-15 drive letters.

Why not make an image of the old disk using somehting like Symantec Ghost,
Acronis TrueImage, BootItNG - and then read from the image to save your
machine from having to parse the abnormal number of tiny partitions? heh

--
Shenan Stanley
MS-MVP
--
How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html



On Sunday, May 06, 2007 6:53 PM Wesley Vogel wrote:


26.

quote
A computer can use up to 26 drive letters. Drive letters A and B are
reserved for floppy disk drives, but you can assign these letters to
removable drives if the computer does not have a floppy disk drive. Hard
disk drives in the computer receive letters C through Z, while mapped
network drives are assigned drive letters in reverse order (Z through B).
quote
from...
To assign, change, or remove a drive letter
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/d....mspx?mfr=true

Or paste the following line into Start | Run and click OK...

hh diskmgmt.chm::/dm_drive_letter.htm

--
Hope this helps. Let us know.

Wes
MS-MVP Windows Shell/User

In ,
Tcs hunted and pecked:



On Tuesday, May 08, 2007 6:04 PM Gerry wrote:


Wes

26 is not the max. You can have any number of C drives as long as the
operating system residing therein cannot see any of the other C drives.


--



Regards.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"Wesley Vogel" wrote in message
...



On Wednesday, May 09, 2007 8:20 PM Wesley Vogel wrote:


Hi Gerry,

On one Windows operating system you can have as many drives as you like.
But you can only designate 26 of them with drive letters, from A thru Z.

--
Hope this helps. Let us know.

Wes
MS-MVP Windows Shell/User

In ,
Gerry hunted and pecked:



On Tuesday, September 28, 2010 1:08 AM PVS R wrote:


Then how do we designate the rest ??



On Sunday, October 31, 2010 1:52 PM Brad B wrote:


An explanation of one way to do it he



http://ask-leo.com/26_drives_is_ther...n_windows.html



Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice
ASP.NET 4.0 browser capabilities
http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...abilities.aspx


Stan Brown November 1st 10 12:01 AM

Hey Wes ....
 
[This followup was posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics and a
copy was sent to the cited author.]

On Sun, 31 Oct 2010 17:52:39 GMT, Brad B wrote:

An explanation of one way to do it he

http://ask-leo.com/26_drives_is_ther...n_windows.html
On Sunday, May 06, 2007 3:51 PM Tcs wrote:

Hey Brad ...

Please don't resurrect three-and-a-half-year old threads. Or if you
feel you absolutely must, at least don't change the subject line.
Eggheadcafe now makes it possible to keep the original subject.

Please trim the material you quote, and put your comment after what
you're commenting on, not before.

Oh yes, and please don't post the same article twice.

http://oakroadsystems.com/genl/unice.htm



--
Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA
http://OakRoadSystems.com
Shikata ga nai...


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