Which partition can I safely delete?

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  1. Posts : 10
    Windows 7 Professional 64
       #1

    Which partition can I safely delete?


    I recently purchased a Lenovo Y470 laptop with Windows 7 Pro 64. I want to set it up to dual boot Windows XP in order to run Pro-Tools Audio Editing software (an earlier version).

    I began following the tutorial here, shrinking my main partition and deleting Lenovo's Disk Image logical drive. However, when I try to convert the free space into a new partition, it creates a new logical drive. Apparently, I can only have 3 primary partitions (and one logical drive). I also tried it using the command line method, and it failed to respond to the "create primary partition" command.

    I'm attaching a screenshot here. It looks like I have a main partition, a 200 mb "system" partition with no recognizable data, and a 14.75 GB OEM partition.

    I used a method described here to look at the OEM partition using a repair disk. The volume is labled X: Boot and it appears to contain some kind of backup disk image. I copied the contents to C, but when I tried to copy the "Windows" folder, it refused, telling me some of the contents were in use. That gave me pause.

    My question: Is it safe to delete the OEM partition (I've made system restore disks)? What about the 200mb system partition? My understanding is I can't effectively run XP from a logical disk, only a primary partition. Does that sound right?

    Thanks for any insight.
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Which partition can I safely delete?-jd_dsk_2.jpg  
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  2.    #2

    The System Reserved partition needs to stay as it contains the boot files for Win7. If you have backed up a set of Recovery disks and don't want the Recovery partition then you can delete the OEM partition.

    However you are allowed to have a fourth Primary partition and that's likely what XP will create when you boot it's CD and full format an NTFS partition in the Unallocated space. Otherwise free Partition Wizard CD can do it for you .

    One important question is if XP CD (use one with SP3) will see the partitions when you boot into it. If not you'll need to insert the SATA controller driver: SATA Drivers - Load in Windows XP Setup on Dual Boot
    SATA Drivers - Slipstream into Windows XP CD
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  3. Posts : 10
    Windows 7 Professional 64
    Thread Starter
       #3

    Thanks very much. I think my Windows XP disk is SP 2, from a now defunct computer. If it's essential, I can by SP 3 disks on ebay.
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  4.    #4

    Try it first. If it doesn't see the HD partitions then it likely needs SATA driver slipstreamed if you don't have floppy (who does?). If it sees the partiitons including the intended Unallocated Space then full format an NTFS partition there and try install.

    If you use a torrent to get an XP SP3 CD for your licensed version (must be OEM- or retail-specific, remember) then be sure to read the comments to make sure it isn't cracktivated or has anything added.
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  5. Posts : 10
    Windows 7 Professional 64
    Thread Starter
       #5

    Installation with that CD worked. The guide is super helpful--especially slipstreaming the SATA drivers. I made a new partition with partition wizard, and I had to switch the BIOS mode to "Compatibility". I'm hoping I can switch back to SATA when it runs 7.

    1 step left. I still need to run the repair with Easy BCD. The program wants to talk to the internet and I haven't got that working on XP yet. I'm trying to install a WPA 2 patch now to see if that will work. Easy BCD tells me I can manually install the .net framework, which I did, but it doesn't recognize this. If I can't get the internet to work, is there a manual way to perform that process?
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  6.    #6

    Easiest is to start up Win7 so you can install EasyBCD to add XP from 7 which works better.

    To do this, mark System Reserved partition Active: Partition - Mark as Active

    Then boot into System Recovery Options on Win7 DVD or System Repair Disk to run Startup Repair - Run 3 Separate Times until Win7 starts on its own and System Reserved correctly holds the System Active flags.

    YOu can then install EasyBCD 2.02 to Win7 to Add XP, accept offered boot files, autocompletes, Save, Reboot to Dual Boot menu.
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  7. Posts : 10
    Windows 7 Professional 64
    Thread Starter
       #7

    OK, I may try. I got the internet working on XP and succesfully ran Easy BCD in XP. Now I'm running startup repair in 7. It's chugging along.
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  8.    #8

    If Easy ran successfully in XP to create the Dual Boot menu, then you don't need to start Win7.

    Start Win7 by marking Active and running Startup Repair x3 to install EasyBCD only if necessary to add XP.
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  9. Posts : 10
    Windows 7 Professional 64
    Thread Starter
       #9

    I used command line to make the Windows 7 partition active. Booted again and got "BOOTMGR is missing".

    I'm rooting around for my Windows 7 repair disk.
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  10. Posts : 10
    Windows 7 Professional 64
    Thread Starter
       #10

    OK, I set the system disk as active and ran startup repair about 8 times. It's not working. Neither XP or Windows 7 boots now. The diagnostic log has this clue:

    Root cause found:

    Unspecified changes to system configuration might have caused the problem.

    Repair action: System files integrity check and repair
    Result: Failed. Error code 0x490


    I can run system restore, or restore from the backup disk image, but I'd rather find a work around if possible.
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