deathhand Posted January 6, 2006 Share Posted January 6, 2006 hi: why driver c: is the smallest driver in all pc s?? my driver f: is 27 gb but driver c: is only 8gb !!! _ shouldnt be the other way?? since all the programs are installed on it? _ should i allwayes choose to install big game on f:? would that help saving space?? and if i did would the games work normaly? or they will be slower since they are not on system driver..best reguards Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gryphon Posted January 6, 2006 Share Posted January 6, 2006 About the size of your drives. You can set them yourself when you install Windows or put in an exra harddisk.If you have 2 hard drives. (ie. not just 2 partitions C and F on one disk but 2 disks ech one partition) it's faster to install games on the F partition. If you have just one harddrive you probably won't notice the difference.In your case I'd say install everything on the F drive to keep your C from filling up. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
deathhand Posted January 6, 2006 Author Share Posted January 6, 2006 ok. thank you. i have 1 hard disc 80 gb.. splited to 4 partetions but f is the beguest anyway when ever i try to resise c: it setup wont accept because its a system driver and i can change it.. thats the message i get// anyway installing on f; is a good thing as long as it wont effect games preformence Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
erjin999 Posted January 6, 2006 Share Posted January 6, 2006 It shouldnt make a difference if you install it to F:The way I have my HD set up:-C: = 2.5GB <=- Only Docs and setings folder and Windows Dir. My Docs moved to F: drive. Most extra files stripped out and moved to D:D: = 40GB <=- Backup HD images of C: and copy of WinXP on HD for easy access. Also things taken from C: get put here.E: = 70GB <=- Program files folder moved here. All references to C:program files changed in registry to point to E:program files.F: = 150GB <=- Backups HD, contains backup (uninstalled version) of every program I ever use on my computer, and many I havent used, but might. Also contains my music, my docs, my pics, my eBooks, and my downloaded programs. Programs backed up includew windows.iso and office.iso, as well as many other full CDs.This setup means I can install a program on my computer, into the E: programs disk, and know that if it is rubbish I can delete the folder and use an older disk image to get the registry and C:windows dir back to its normal state. The small size of the C: drive meansimaging is fast.The C: drive only ever takes up 1.3GBs at max, and minimum is about 600Megs.I manage to have an excellent level of up time with this and would recommend it to people like yourself, spizo, who end up reinstalling often. In fact, I would recommend it to most people.I have two hard drives, so a hard disk failure should not be toooooo bad. Ideally, the images would be ona server somewhere, that is itself backed up, but I havent got there yet. :P Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
veK Posted January 6, 2006 Share Posted January 6, 2006 I always set c: as the smallest partition. usually 7,5gb to 20gb depending on the hdd inside and whether games will be installed. I use c: for windows, programms (and games if setting partitions on a gaming pc). nothing else. so if it crashes (which fortunately only happened once - but it was my fault) there is no data loss.I keep all the important data I need almost every day on d: which is my data partition. this is also where all downloads go and depending on the hdd's size it also has space for music and stuff.the rest of my data is stored external: 2x200gb for the data I don't need everyday and 30gb on my mp3 player. and some stuff I also burn to dvd or cd as a second or even third backup Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gryphon Posted January 6, 2006 Share Posted January 6, 2006 ok. thank you. i have 1 hard disc 80 gb.. splited to 4 partetionswith Windows own partition tools you can never resize the root partition. You can do it with Norton Partition Magic although I highly urge you not to do it unless you know what you are doing and don't have important stuff on it.Why don't create 2 partitions, one your current C drive, the other all other space combined ?Personally I always use the whole local drive as one disk ©, install Windows, programs and everything on it. All data and email is stored on network drives. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
deathhand Posted January 7, 2006 Author Share Posted January 7, 2006 no i dont want to change anything.. i dont know haw actuly an i will end up wiith a dead hard disc. i just wanted to know why c: is allwayes the smallest driver.. and if its ok to install games files on f: i was just scared that installing the games on f: would make them lag or somthing because of the memory pageing thing.. but its ok ill move them to f: my pc is actuly like an xbox there is nothing on it but games which is my only activity on the computer. best reguardes Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Phoenix Posted January 24, 2006 Share Posted January 24, 2006 no it wont lag your games...Your xbox wont notice the difference between installing on C or installing on F. :PThe only thing is, C will get full after installing the game and F wont... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nemafakei Posted January 25, 2006 Share Posted January 25, 2006 How do you even begin to partition under windows? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gryphon Posted January 25, 2006 Share Posted January 25, 2006 fdisk of the MS diskmanager application ?if that's not enough you can use Norton Partition Magic. Just used it last night for a desaster recovery of a webserver.. . still bussy with it but the data is safe. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
erjin999 Posted January 25, 2006 Share Posted January 25, 2006 XP professional has Disk management snap in under Administrative tools. Does partitioning, but not resizing. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Phoenix Posted January 25, 2006 Share Posted January 25, 2006 partition magic is a good one..Partitioning is not that difficult in windows...but once created a partition, you cannot resize it (as erjin said, except if you move all data to an other disk, and then delete the partition, and create * new partitions... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Elec Posted February 12, 2006 Share Posted February 12, 2006 but once created a partition, you cannot resize it (as erjin said, except if you move all data to an other disk, and then delete the partition, and create * new partitions...Well, with Partition Magic is this still possible (and even more). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gryphon Posted February 12, 2006 Share Posted February 12, 2006 true, and partition magic can also move it. .. don't have your hopes to high on it to work though. .. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Phoenix Posted February 13, 2006 Share Posted February 13, 2006 Yeah, I meant windows partitioning with that you can not resize partitions... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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