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Old 21st July 2012, 4:14 PM   #1
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Default Moving program files

Hi looking for some help.

My OS is on drive C: OS only drive
My Program Files are located on D:

I find D: drive running out of space and I'm wondering how I go about shifting my program files to another drive.

Can you simply copy D: to lets say X: then go to Disk Management then re-assign drive letters?

Any help would be appreciated


Thanks
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Old 21st July 2012, 4:49 PM   #2
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Is D: a separate physical hard drive, or a partition on the same drive as C:?
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Old 21st July 2012, 5:03 PM   #3
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Is D: a separate physical hard drive, or a partition on the same drive as C:?
It is on a separate HDD.

C: = 120gb SSD

D: = 1tb WD black partitioned 4 ways
E:
F:
G:

I was going to remove the partitions on D/E/F/G
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Old 21st July 2012, 5:07 PM   #4
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What's on E: F: and G:? Do you have room on those partitions? If you've got room on the disk, you could resize those to give yourself more room on D: Or you could buy a bigger disk and clone the disk containing D E F and G. Or if they just contain data, you could move E F and G to another disk.....
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Old 21st July 2012, 5:11 PM   #5
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tbh i'd uninstall the programs, then start installing on another new drive.
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Old 21st July 2012, 5:16 PM   #6
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I have just bought a couple of 2tb drives which I'm currently shifting media from E: F: and G:

Once I have moved all the data, I can just simply resize the partitions/remove?

Thankyou for the assistance
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Old 21st July 2012, 5:18 PM   #7
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tbh i'd uninstall the programs, then start installing on another new drive.
Which I could do but is also a pain one way or the other it's moving...
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Old 21st July 2012, 5:36 PM   #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BillyBro View Post
I have just bought a couple of 2tb drives which I'm currently shifting media from E: F: and G:

Once I have moved all the data, I can just simply resize the partitions/remove?

Thankyou for the assistance
Yes you can from Disk Management - delete the other partitions and then expand the first one.
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Old 21st July 2012, 5:37 PM   #9
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To answer your question, yes you can copy the program files to another drive (let's call it Z and then assign D: to some random letter and then assign Z: to D:
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Old 21st July 2012, 5:38 PM   #10
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Once I have moved all the data, I can just simply resize the partitions/remove?
If it's just straight data, and you move it off, you shouldn't have any problems just deleting the partition. Is D: the first partition on the disk?

Make sure you've got backups before you start messing about deleting anything.
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Old 21st July 2012, 7:09 PM   #11
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To answer your question, yes you can copy the program files to another drive (let's call it Z and then assign D: to some random letter and then assign Z: to D:
Yep, exactly what I was looking for. Done and all is working as it was before.




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If it's just straight data, and you move it off, you shouldn't have any problems just deleting the partition. Is D: the first partition on the disk?

Make sure you've got backups before you start messing about deleting anything.
I did manage to delete a partition then expand and it changed the disk from basic to dynamic. All is good, have got the result I was looking for. Cheers guys
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Old 24th July 2012, 7:57 PM   #12
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Partitions... A false economy, since 1876
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Old 24th July 2012, 8:22 PM   #13
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Partitions... A false economy, since 1876
werd
but op looks to have done the right thing
got bigger drives
partitions were useful back when hdds where expensive and it was a good idea to keep your data sep to winblows so u could format c: on a weekly basis and not lose ur data
those days are long gone..thank god!
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Old 24th July 2012, 8:55 PM   #14
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I like partitions I like having my data all separate and not in the clutches of the operating system. OS pisses me off - it is GONE, baby - GONE.
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Old 24th July 2012, 9:04 PM   #15
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I like having my data all separate and not in the clutches of the operating system.
data separate from os = good
on same physical hdd = bad
buy another hdd ya cheapskate
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Last edited by Creekin; 25th July 2012 at 9:35 AM.
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