Eliminating the 100MB partition on reinstallation on SSd

merkurmaniac

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Hi,

I have been running windows7 for a year now on my pc. Its super fast and I love it. However; I have struggled to get Home Groups to work, and there are some other aggravating issues that I think I'll clear up by re-installign windows. I'll be using my family pack of Windows7 Upgrade DVDs to get it done.

Currently, I have a kingston 128 (maybe its bigger, don't recall) SSD that I keep my OS on. I have a 1TB HDD that I keep my data, user profiles, and all temp files on. So, I currently have a drive letter "D" that is the 100MB reserved partition. I already don't like keeping all my stuff on a second drive, but the idea that its on "F" is really odd to me.

I see that I can use DISKPART to re-do the partitions on my drive. I guess that I'll do that (any drawbacks ?). I'd really like to ditch the 100MB partition, as I have not had that on any of my past XP installs. I read that I do not need to re-align the SSD as I am not imaging, but rather "freshinstalling." I'll be wiping the whole SSD, and be down to one partition, if I can. The DISKPART stuff looks fairly confusing, but since I have a small drive and am not dual booting anything, hopefully its simpler.

I already checked the trim command and AHCI stuff last time, and I doubt that any of it would change.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Win 7 64 bit sp-1Intel Core i5 75016 gig Kingston 1600GeForce GTX 260 OC MaxCore 55 896MB GDDR3 PCI...
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
built
OS
Win 7 64 bit sp-1
CPU
Intel Core i5 750
Motherboard
ASROCK P55 Pro
Memory
16 gig Kingston 1600
Graphics Card(s)
GeForce GTX 260 OC MaxCore 55 896MB GDDR3 PCIe 2.0
Sound Card
on board
Hard Drives
SSD 128 Kingston V100
1 TB EcoGreen F2EG 5,400 rpm SATA
PSU
SLI Silencer 750W (610W continuous)
Case
Antec 200 ATX
Cooling
Copper CPU heat sink with adapter
System Reserved partitions do not normally have a drive letter. If it didn't have a drive letter, you could presumably assign the letter D to your 1 TB drive.

If you are going to do a clean install anyway, that doesn't matter. Yes, diskpart can bypass the creation of a System Reserved partition.

Here's the method.

Disconnect all hard drives other than the SSD.

Boot from the Windows 7 installation disc. Hit Shift F10 at the first screen where you are asked to choose a language.

A command prompt will appear. Type diskpart into that prompt.

Type in the following commands one by one, followed by the Enter key to create a partition (text in brackets are comments only):

list disk (to show the ID number of the hard disk to partition, normally Disk 0)

select disk 0 (change 0 to another number if applicable)

clean (this wipes the drive of anything on it)

create partition primary (this will create one primary partition covering the entire SSD)

select partition 1 (this selects the partition you just made)

active (this marks that partition active)

format fs=ntfs quick (this formats the drive)

exit (this quits the diskpart program)

exit (this closes the command prompt window)

Continue Windows 7 installation as usual. Remember to highlight and select the partition just created when you come to the partition screen asking "where do you want to install Windows?"
 

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Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bitIntel Skylake i5-6600K, not overclocked8 GB HyperX DDR4-2666 (2 x 4 GB)none; graphics are integrated on CPU
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PC/Desktop
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Ignatz Special; 4 speed manual gearbox; factory air conditioning; one of one
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Man, that is great ! I really appreciate the fast response. I'll follow your instructions. I don't know why the drive letter for that small reserved partition was always visible. It drove me nuts. Hopefully it won't do that again.

Have a good weekend.
Richard
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Win 7 64 bit sp-1Intel Core i5 75016 gig Kingston 1600GeForce GTX 260 OC MaxCore 55 896MB GDDR3 PCI...
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
built
OS
Win 7 64 bit sp-1
CPU
Intel Core i5 750
Motherboard
ASROCK P55 Pro
Memory
16 gig Kingston 1600
Graphics Card(s)
GeForce GTX 260 OC MaxCore 55 896MB GDDR3 PCIe 2.0
Sound Card
on board
Hard Drives
SSD 128 Kingston V100
1 TB EcoGreen F2EG 5,400 rpm SATA
PSU
SLI Silencer 750W (610W continuous)
Case
Antec 200 ATX
Cooling
Copper CPU heat sink with adapter
Thanks for that info, I'll read up on that. I found that the "extra" drive letter is actually on the HDD, not the SSD that my OS is on. I guess that when I set up windows backup a long time ago, it created that. I don't mind keeping it if its needed, and I would prefer to hide that letter, as your link suggests.

Thanks again,
I appreciate it,
Richard
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Win 7 64 bit sp-1Intel Core i5 75016 gig Kingston 1600GeForce GTX 260 OC MaxCore 55 896MB GDDR3 PCI...
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
built
OS
Win 7 64 bit sp-1
CPU
Intel Core i5 750
Motherboard
ASROCK P55 Pro
Memory
16 gig Kingston 1600
Graphics Card(s)
GeForce GTX 260 OC MaxCore 55 896MB GDDR3 PCIe 2.0
Sound Card
on board
Hard Drives
SSD 128 Kingston V100
1 TB EcoGreen F2EG 5,400 rpm SATA
PSU
SLI Silencer 750W (610W continuous)
Case
Antec 200 ATX
Cooling
Copper CPU heat sink with adapter
Please post back a screenshot of your maximized Disk Management drive map and listings:

1. Type Disk Management in Start Search box.
2. Open Disk Mgmt. window and maximize it.
3. Type Snipping Tool in Start Search box.
4. Open Snipping Tool, choose Rectangular Snip, draw a box around full map and all listings.
5, Save Snip, attach using paper clip in Reply Box.

Tell us what is on each partition.

You have a System Reserved partition on another HD from the OS HD? In Disk Mgmt is it marked with the System Active flag? What is the Win7 (C) partition marked with?
 
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