Solved Can I safely remove Drive Letters ???

BuckSkin

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I currently have four SATA hard-wired HDDs in the machine in question.
Between these four disks, there are several partitions that contain various clones of my O/S and the accompanying System Reserved and Factory Restore associated with each.
Each and every one of these partitions is assigned a drive letter.
Needless to say, in Explorer, both in the sidebar folder tree and on the computer page, every last one of these drive letters display, making for a confusing mess.

1. If I remove the drive letters for these "emergency backup" partitions, if I ever have need to access any of them, I can go back and add drive letters to them at a later time---- correct ?

2. After I remove these drive letters, then they are free to be used and assigned to other drives --- correct ?

Thanks for reading and all help is appreciated.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell Optiplex 780m "mini-tower"
OS
Windows 7 Pro x64
CPU
Intel Core Two Duo E8600 3.33 ghz
Motherboard
Whatever DELL put in it
Memory
8GB
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte Radeon R7 240
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HP 2159m
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You are correct
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
OS
win 8 32 bit
You are correct

Thank you ever so much for confirming my thoughts; I wanted to confer with an expert before I got myself in trouble.
Now I can clean up that Explorer menu and make it less of an eyestrain to find what I am looking for.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell Optiplex 780m "mini-tower"
OS
Windows 7 Pro x64
CPU
Intel Core Two Duo E8600 3.33 ghz
Motherboard
Whatever DELL put in it
Memory
8GB
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte Radeon R7 240
Monitor(s) Displays
HP 2159m
PSU
750 Watt Corsair CX750
Keyboard
Logitech Wireless
Mouse
Logitech Wireless
Browser
Chrome, Firefox, IE
You can create an empty folder on your hard drive and map a partition to it from disk management. I've done that to minimize drive letters.
 

My Computers My Computers

System One System Two

You can create an empty folder on your hard drive and map a partition to it from disk management. I've done that to minimize drive letters.

You have gotten me curious now.
I have never "mapped" anything yet; if I understand, when you map partition A to a folder on partition B, then instead of needing a drive letter for partition A, the path to said folder is the path to partition A, am I right ?

Could such be used to extend a drive letter across two separate disks; in other words, could unlettered partition B that is on disk B be mapped to a folder that resides in lettered partition A that is on disk A and then work as if disk B were just an extension of disk A ?

I know, I have even got myself confused with that one.....
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell Optiplex 780m "mini-tower"
OS
Windows 7 Pro x64
CPU
Intel Core Two Duo E8600 3.33 ghz
Motherboard
Whatever DELL put in it
Memory
8GB
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte Radeon R7 240
Monitor(s) Displays
HP 2159m
PSU
750 Watt Corsair CX750
Keyboard
Logitech Wireless
Mouse
Logitech Wireless
Browser
Chrome, Firefox, IE
yes you get to the drive/partition by browsing to the folder and yes you can do separate drives. The only caveat that I know of is that the drive you map to is an NTFS partition.
 

My Computers My Computers

System One System Two

yes you get to the drive/partition by browsing to the folder and yes you can do separate drives. The only caveat that I know of is that the drive you map to is an NTFS partition.


Thanks; I will experiment with that and it may solve a problem for me.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell Optiplex 780m "mini-tower"
OS
Windows 7 Pro x64
CPU
Intel Core Two Duo E8600 3.33 ghz
Motherboard
Whatever DELL put in it
Memory
8GB
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte Radeon R7 240
Monitor(s) Displays
HP 2159m
PSU
750 Watt Corsair CX750
Keyboard
Logitech Wireless
Mouse
Logitech Wireless
Browser
Chrome, Firefox, IE
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