Unallocated Space--Cannot Extend Volume

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  1. Posts : 5
    Windows 7 Professional SP1 64-bit
       #1

    Unallocated Space--Cannot Extend Volume


    I just changed my laptop drive from a SSD 180 GB to a 500GB + 8GB NAND Flash hybrid drive. I cloned the old drive successfully and now need to extend the Windows partition to include the unallocated space. When I try to using GParted, the Disk Management tools in Windows, and Magic Partition, I get errors.

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  2. Posts : 13,576
    Windows 10 Pro x64
       #2

    Could you post a shot of disk management.

    Disk Management - Post a Screen Capture Image
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  3. Posts : 17,322
    Win 10 Pro x64
       #3

    From the original post...
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Unallocated Space--Cannot Extend Volume-disk-management.png  
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  4. Posts : 13,576
    Windows 10 Pro x64
       #4

    You can not extend the windows partition, it has to be next to the unallocated space, but you can make a logical partition with it.

    Partition / Extended : Logical Drives

    Thank You Derek
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  5. Posts : 5
    Windows 7 Professional SP1 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #5

    Sorry, however, that was not very helpful. I went with Method Two by first changing the Windows 7 partition to logical, then attempting to Shrink that volume. How, now, does this merge my unallocated and Windows 7 partition???
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  6. Posts : 13,576
    Windows 10 Pro x64
       #6

    Did you read post #4 ?

    I told you, you cannot merge them because they are not next to each other.

    I did not say to make your windows partition Logical. And why did you shrink it ?

    Make a Logical Partition out of the unallocated space.

    Whatever you do, do not try to make a 5th Primary partition.
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  7. Posts : 5
    Windows 7 Professional SP1 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #7

    I followed the link that you posted.

    The only way that I can create a new partition out of the unallocated space is by converting two other partitions from Primary to Logical.

    I can also delete the Hibernation (8 GB SSD) partition and the Lenovo Recovery partition, then easily expand the Windows partition; however, I'd have have to recreate both of those.
    Last edited by mayaiz; 22 Jul 2014 at 15:32.
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  8.    #8

    How exactly was the Lenovo Recovery partition transferred to the new HD, because unless you've tested it chances are it will not boot. I also have never heard of an 8gb flash partition so don't know what it would provide except useless confusion. To have a hybid chip to speed up a hard drive requires at least 32gb and is a hidden page file partition. So maybe you can explain those two partitions as they seem like they may be dispensable which would allow you to delete them to extend C easily.

    If not once we understand exactly how Recovery is bootable and the 8gb works, we can still show you how to extend C using the unallocated space even if partitions are in the way. How to extend partition easily with Partition Wizard - video help. But we need to know more about those two last partitions first.
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  9. Posts : 5
    Windows 7 Professional SP1 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #9

    I cloned my last drive onto this one using Clonezilla.

    I am able to press F11 on boot in order to access the Lenovo Recovery partition. Since it is not dispensible, I'd like to keep it.

    I had assumed that the 8 GB "Hibernation Partition" was the 8 GB SSD on the hybrid drive. This is probably not the case. It was likely cloned from the SSD drive.

    I do not get the option to take space from "unallocated" as shown in the video. However, if I change the Lenovo Recovery partition to logical and delete the "Hibernation" partition (since I cannot change it to logical), it appears in the drop down as an option.
    Last edited by mayaiz; 23 Jul 2014 at 12:18. Reason: Add more details
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  10.    #10

    The Recov partition may not boot if you convert it to Logical or move it by extended C into the Unallocated. Better to create a Data partition in the Unallocated space unless you want to test if the changes you discussed will work for Recovery.

    Be sure to recreate the Hiberfile on C where it normally is, by disabling and then re-enabling Hibernate. How did it get on that partition? Hibernate - Enable or Disable - Windows 7 Forums

    Not only is the Lenovo Recovery partition dispensible as I've done on mine, but the install it contains is a bloated factory preinstall which is the worst install of Win7 one can have and which no tech enthusiast would run. I would strongly consider starting fresh with the best install possible following Clean Reinstall - Factory OEM Windows 7.
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