Hard drive partitions

Jerry Hickman

New member
Local time
3:15 PM
Messages
1
I'm new on this forum and this question has probably been asked before, but...

I am migrating from an old computer with Windows XP to a new computer with Windows 7. My old XP has 2 physical hard drives, each with a partition, essentially giving me 4 drives. My new computer with Windows 7 has a HUGE 1.5 Terabyte hard drive. My question is: should I partition my new hard drive to create (mostly) the old configuration?

On the old machine I used Norton Partition Magic to do the job, but my understanding is that Windows 7 has a utility to do that. Another questions is: what is the best way to go (if at all).

Jerry Hickman
 

My Computer

OS
Windows XP
Hello Jerry and welcome.

If you have 2 Hds in your XP machine you have "2" partitions. 1 on each drive unless you created more. That seems unclear.

And I have always used multiple drives instead of multi partitions. Its safer. If the drive dies all your partitions go with it.

Since you have 3 drives there just use them all and use a single partition on each.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
I trust nobody!
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64/x86 Windows 7 Pro x64/x86 Windows 7 Home Premium x64/x86
CPU
Intel C2Q 9650
Motherboard
Intel
Memory
8GB DDR2800 Corsair
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA 260 GTX
Sound Card
Onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell 2409w
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
10 of em!
PSU
600 Watt FSP Group
Case
Antec
Cooling
Fresh Air
Keyboard
Microsoft
Mouse
Razer
Internet Speed
Fast enough
Let Windows install itself automatically on your drive. Make sure you have an EXTERNAL drive for backups etc.

There is nothing to be gained from setting up various partitions on a single drive machine, indeed it is detrimental to system performance, with one exception!!! That exception is; if you want to backup your system and data to separate images, then you need two partitions. One for the system, and one for your data.

When installing, Windows automatically creates a small "reserved" area for itself.


Otherwise, with a single partition, you can simply tell Windows to backup everything.

Regards....Mike Connor
 

My Computer

OS
Several, including Windows 7 x64 Ultimate
If you want to adjust your partitioning use Disk Management.

If you need to move the left side of a partition or do other things which Disk Mgmt cannot do, use free Partition Wizard bootable CD - not Partition Magic which will mess up Win7.

If you want to access your XP data, you can plug in the HD to your new machine.

If you have any more specific questions about partitioning, post back a screenshot of your full Disk Mgmt drive map with listings, maximized window, using Snipping Tool in Start Menu. Tell us what you want to do and we will give you the steps.
 
Are you installing the OS yourself?

There is no reason to partition that drive into smaller partitions unless you want to. It is a personal thing. Some like one big drive others like to have smaller partitions.
I like to have at least 3 physical drives in the system with the boot drive partitioned into 2 drives. The second disk one big drive and the third partitioned into 2 drives, one small 100GB, and the other the rest of the drive, whatever size it ends up being.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Built be Me
OS
Windows 7 Pro x64
CPU
i5 760
Motherboard
Asus P7P55D-E Pro
Memory
16GB
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia GTS450
Sound Card
On board
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell 2007WFP Dell 1800FP
Screen Resolution
1680x1050 1280x1024
Hard Drives
Seagate 250GB & 750GB
WD 1TB
PSU
Antec 750
Case
In Win
Cooling
Cooler Master Hyper 212+
Keyboard
IBM
Mouse
MS
I'll agree with most of the above. Unless it is a system like a laptop with one physical drive, I see no reason to cut drives up into smaller partitions.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
CPU
Intel Core i7-2600
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-P67A-UD3P-B3
Memory
12 GB Patriot Extreme DDR3-1333
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia GTX 470
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell UltraSharp 2209WA
Hard Drives
OCZ Agility3 240 GB, WD5001AALS, WD7501AALS
PSU
OCZ ModStream 700W
Case
CoolerMaster HAF 912 Advanced
Cooling
CoolerMaster Hyper 212 Plus
Hello Jerry Hickman, welcome to Seven Forums!


We are now seeing some have serious issues getting Windows 7 to install completely to such large spaces/partitions as 1 & 2TB Hard Disk Drives, you may have better success creating a single 100GB partition to do the install to; then you can always extend the Windows partition to include the remaining unallocated space on the HDD or create additional Primary partitions or create an Extended partition after the installation completes if you choose.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
* BFK Customs *
OS
W 7 64-bit Ultimate
CPU
Intel Q9550 Yorkfield
Motherboard
ASUS P5Q Pro
Memory
8GB Dominator 8500C5D
Graphics Card(s)
ATI : XFX 5870
Sound Card
Realtek HD Audio 7-1
Monitor(s) Displays
1x 47" LCD HDMI & 3x 26" LCD HDMI
Screen Resolution
1920x1080P & 1920x1200
Hard Drives
1x 80GB Intel X25-M G2 SSD : 1x 500GB & 1x 640GB WD Caviar Black(s)
PSU
Corsair 620HX
Case
Cooler Master RC-690
Cooling
Tuniq Tower 120, 2x 140mm and 3x 120mm case fans
Keyboard
Microsoft 500
Mouse
Razer Diamondback 3G
Internet Speed
14 Mb/s
Other Info
1x Koutech 3Gb/s SATA HDD Hot Swap Rack
Back
Top