Help with partitions

Wimiw

New member
Local time
4:48 PM
Messages
3
Hi, I just bought a new PC with Windows 7 installed. I have 1 hard drive with 1 TB of space. The drive has been partitioned into 4 Primary partitions:

C: BOOT (primary) with 900 GB
D: RECOVERY (primary) with 30 GB
unnamed system partition (primary) with 100 MB
unnamed OEM partition (primary) with 1 GB

This means that all the programs that I will install as well as documents, pictures, downloads, etc. will all be put on the C drive. To avoid performance issues and disk cleanup issues, I would like to have an extended partition with several logical drives, so I can easily separate the data that I store on my pc.

How can I do that? Please help....
Thanks :D
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home Premium 32 bit
Hi,

You should be able shrink the volume of the c: drive...

Click Start >> Right Click Computer >> Select Manage >> Click On Disk Management {bottom left} >> Right Click your C: drive and select shrink.

You will then be able choose how much you wish to shrink by which will in turn give you that much space unallocated, you can then right click the unallocated space an assign it a letter.

Regards,
JDobbsy1987
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self Built
OS
Windows 8.1 Pro x64
CPU
Intel Core i5-2500K @ 3.30GHz - S1155
Motherboard
Asus P8P67 LE Rev3, Intel P67, S115
Memory
8GB Corsair DDR3 XMS3, PC3-12800
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 650
Sound Card
On-Board
Monitor(s) Displays
3 x 24" {Extended Display}
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080
Hard Drives
300GB Seagate Barracuda 7200
PSU
550W Coolermaster GX550
Case
Silverstone Precision PS04B
Cooling
Stock
Keyboard
Logitech K120
Mouse
World of Warcraft Cataclysm MMO Gaming Mouse
Internet Speed
80 MB
Antivirus
MSE / Windows Defender
Browser
Chrome
Hi,

You should be able shrink the volume of the c: drive...

Click Start >> Right Click Computer >> Select Manage >> Click On Disk Management {bottom left} >> Right Click your C: drive and select shrink.

You will then be able choose how much you wish to shrink by which will in turn give you that much space unallocated, you can then right click the unallocated space an assign it a letter.

Regards,
JDobbsy1987

Hi, thanks for your reply,
If I do what you suggest, then the system warns me that the selected discs(?) will become dynamic disks and that I won't be able to boot from them anymore. So I am reluctant to continue...
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home Premium 32 bit
Alternatively, you can use MiniTool Partition Wizard. This is a free app that can manage partitions somewhat easier that the built-in Disk management tool.

But basically, you should indeed shrink the C:\ partition, then create a new partition in the free space. It might be a good idea to place your data there. I would not bother installing programs to a different partition, I keep them in C:\Program Files.

If you had two physical disks, then you could move your page file to the second disk, but there is no point in moving it to a different partition on the same disk, that would only slow you down.

I would also investigate further the unnamed 100 GB partition. What's the point of that? I also do have recovery and OEM, but your third item puzzles me.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell Inspiron 530
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate (x64)
CPU
Q6600
Memory
8 GB
Graphics Card(s)
ATI Radeon HD 2600 XT
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung Syncmaster P2450
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Samsung HD103UJ
Samsung HD501LJ
Internet Speed
25 Mb/s
Welcome to SevenForums.
While you are in your disk management window please take a snipping tool pic of it and post so we can see exactly what your config is and advise accordingly. Good luck to you with this endeavor.:D
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Gateway GT5692
OS
Windows 7 Ulti. x64
CPU
AMD Phenom 8450 triple-core 2.10 ghz
Memory
4GB
Graphics Card(s)
ATI Radion HD 3200
Monitor(s) Displays
Gateway FPD1775W
Screen Resolution
1280x720
Hard Drives
465.6613 Gibibytes
Hello Wimiw, welcome to Seven Forums!







Will you please post a snip/screen-shot of the entire disk management drive map with a full description as to which drive/partition is which, so we can see what you have going on as there may be a fairly simple way to resolve the situation.

In the Windows start menu right click computer and click manage, in the left pane of the "Computer Management" window that opens click disk management and post a snip of that.


How to Upload and Post a Screenshot and File in Seven Forums
 

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
The other partitions are the 100mb System Reserved partition which is used to boot Win7, Recovery which you should make the Recov Disk set from now, and OEM tools which relate to your Factory Utilities.

As suggested, use free Partition Wizard bootable CD to shrink C and create/format Logical NTFS data partitions as desired in the space created.

Most tech enthusiasts eventually find a clean copy installer for their Win7 version to clean reinstall Win7 to get rid of the factory bloatware and partitions, which will activate with the Product Key on COA sticker. Let us know when you are ready to do that as we have specialists for that here.
 
Last edited:
This is a very bad practice that the OEMs started with Win7 - allocating 4 primaries out of the box. The only thing you can do is to get rid of one of the partitions - the Tools and the Recovery (after burning the DVDs) are candidates. I would choose the recovery partition and make an initial image as extra safety (you never know whether those DVDs are any good).
Just make sure you do not fall into the Dynamic Paertition trap. That is not easy to correct.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
OS
Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
CPU
from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
Monitor(s) Displays
2x HP w2207
Hard Drives
5x HDD, 7x SSD, 12x Externals
Keyboard
with trackball - no mices
Mouse
Trackball mice
Internet Speed
DSL 6000

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
Disk Manager

Here it is:
 

Attachments

  • Knipsel.PNG
    Knipsel.PNG
    12.8 KB · Views: 23

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home Premium 32 bit

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