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Old October 31st 10, 05:55 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Brad B
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Posts: 2
Default 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



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