I cant seem to allocate more partition space to C drive

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  1. Posts : 7
    Windows 7 Starter
       #1

    I cant seem to allocate more partition space to C drive


    I am trying to allocate space to the C drive on the netbook I just bought. This netbook comes Windows 7 Starter edition as well as as a very annoying partition on the hard drive.

    The hard drive on this netbook is divided into 2 different partitions. C and D.

    I went into the administrative tools and disc management program where it shows the 3 partitions.

    1 is partition C with 100GB of space and the system stuff in it.

    Then there is a 15GB healthy primary partition sitting there in the middle for some reason.

    Then the Disc D with 117.86 GB of space completely empty.

    What I tried to do was to shrink disc D into like 10GB and leave 107 GB of unallocated space. Then I right clicked on disc C and the option for "extend volume...was not letting me extend the damn volume -_-" however when I did the same thing on disc D Extend volume it let me re- put the 107GB I made into unallocated space.

    Similarly if i split disc C and make some of it by shrinking volume unallocated space I can re attach it but only to disc C.....how do I add all of the space in Disc D to disc C so I can just have 1 HDD...or better yet, how do I simply make Disc D 10GB and the rest of the space placed on disc C....also what is the purpose of a 15GB "Healthy primary partition..if I already have all the windows data on disc C.. however when I open the my computer screen, I only have it showing Disc C and disc D...


    I hope I made sense about my problem. I wanted to put up pictures to make it easier to understand but I dont know how to add pictures to this post on this forum from my netbook.

    hope you guys can help me plz ^_^
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 2,686
    Windows 8.1 Pro w/Media Center 64bit, Windows 7 HP 64bit
       #2

    You can only extend a partition into unallocated space that is adjacent to the partition you want to expand. If you have a partition between C and D then it needs to be moved so you have unallocated space next to C.

    I use BEST FREE Partition Manager Software for Windows supports all 32-bit & 64 bit Windows No-server OS.
    which works great.

    I think that 15GB partition may be a recovery partition.
    Also to post pictures just click on the "paper clip" and follow the download prompts.

    Jim
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 7
    Windows 7 Starter
    Thread Starter
       #3

    This really confused me equally as much...I guess my question is how in the world do I move partition D next to partition C...if that other partition of 15Gb is in between it..I tried to combine partition D and then the 15GB into a single one...to then maybe some how transfer some of the GB to partition C but it doesnt let me add to partition 15GB that has no name (Which is prob recovery)...
    basically this is how it looks

    Partition C 100gb /Mystery 15GB partition)/ Partition D. 117gb

    That program doesn't help me much if I cant find a way to make partition C accept the open space I make from partition D...heck I even went as far as making all of partition D nothing more than unallocated space but that did not work either..
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 12,012
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
       #4

    The mystery partition is undoubtedly a recovery partition put there by the manufacturer.

    As it sits now you can't expand C or D with Windows own tools. Phone Man linked you to the best tool for the job.

    With Windows own tools, you can expand a partition ONLY into unallocated space to the IMMEDIATE right.

    So if you split C, or D, you couldn't do anything with it with Windows own tool.

    You could delete the recovery partition if you wanted. That would give you 15 unallocated between C and D. I think you can do that with Windows?

    If you have nothing on D, you can delete it and generate more unallocated space.

    You could then add the unallocated space from the mystery partition and the unallocated space from the deleted D to C

    If you want to keep the reserved mystery partition, you should move it to the far left, so it is not between the current C and the current D. Then you can operate with Windows own tools.

    Use the tool Phone Man linked if you want to keep the recovery partition.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 7
    Windows 7 Starter
    Thread Starter
       #5

    I guess I just dont know how to move it to the far left with the program..I keep dragging but nothing happens.

    When i click the move button on the wizard and drag it all the way to the left it tells me this...


    The last opperation will create an overlapping partition, it is a bug of minitool partition wizard. And your last operation will be cancelled.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 12,012
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
       #6

    Don't give up.

    Look here:

    Partition Wizard : Use the Bootable CD



    Wait for further help if you can't figure it out with the tutorial. I've never used it for your purpose.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 7
    Windows 7 Starter
    Thread Starter
       #7

    Sadly as this machine is a netbook It does not have a CD drive nor do I own an external drive.

    secondly, the only backup that came with it is that which was installed on the netbook itself, it did not come with backup discs of any kind.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 12,012
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
       #8

    Partition Wizard comes in 2 versions: the bootable disk version and the "regular install" version.

    Can you install the regular version on your netbook? Never laid eyes on one, but I assume they have drives and accept applications?

    I'm not sure where that would leave you, but it might still enable you to move that partition.
      My Computer


  9. mjf
    Posts : 5,969
    Windows 7x64 Home Premium SP1
       #9

    This will enable you to run multiple tools including partition wizard from a single USB.
    Boot Multiple ISO from USB (MultiBoot USB) | USB Pen Drive Linux
    I strongly suggest you make reliable images of your netbook before attempting any partition changes.
    For this situation I recommend Macrium Reflect and image every partition including the factory recovery partition. You will need an external USB HDD. Without recovery DVDs (& no DVD reader), the factory recovery partition (prob. the 15GB) is important.

    Edit: Note the installed version (MiniTool) of Partition Wizard can be unreliable and you are best using the bootable version. This is the version generally recommended by members.
    Last edited by mjf; 30 Dec 2010 at 04:38. Reason: Edit:
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 2,686
    Windows 8.1 Pro w/Media Center 64bit, Windows 7 HP 64bit
       #10

    Here is the tutorial for Partition Wizard.

    Resize Partition for Windows Server 2000/2003/2008 - Move/Resize Partition safely

    Basically you would select the D partition and drag the left side to the right to create unallocated space to its left. Then select the 15G partition and drag the right side up against the D and then drag the left side to the right there by creating unallocated space between the C and 15G. You could also delete D making it unallocated and then drag the 15g all the way to the right.

    Jim
      My Computer


 
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