How to make drive C as Disk 0

gilloz

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I assumed that the Disk numbers shown under Disk Management would show up as Drive C= Disk 0, Drive D= Disk 1 and Drive E would = Disk 2. I have the main system drive C and two storage drives D&E. When I went into the installation of a dual boot system with Ubuntu partitioned on the Drive C, it came out, under the Terminal in Ubuntu as sdb1 instead of what I expected to be sda. Going back to Windows 7, sure enough, Drive E= Disk 0, Drive C= Disk 1 and Drive D= Disk 2. I was trying to load the Grub boot loader in the sda drive, not the sdb drive. My workaround was to disable Drive E which caused Drive C to indicate Disk 0 in Windows and drive sda in Ubuntu. I loaded my Grub2 boot loader into sda and it all worked out fine. My dual boot works good, but reconnecting Drive E back, made it go back to Disk 0 under Disk Management. Why doesn't the system recognize Drive C as Disk 0?
 

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It is normally determined by which mobo port you use, but can also vary as discussed here: OS disk not disk 0 - Windows 7 Help Forums

If you want to post back a screenshot of Disk Management - Post a Screen Capture Image we can look it over for you. But since your using GRUB to manage the boot, the normal concerns would not apply: the System Active partition booting Windows should be first in order to avoid during repairs or reinstall derailing the boot files to a preceding Primary partition - which can also be achieved if necessary by converting preceding Primary to Logical partitions which cannot receive boot files.
 
Disk numbers are one thing. They go by the ports on the mobo. Drive letters are not for disks but for partitions or devices like optical drives or USB flash drives. Except for C (and A and B which are reserved for floppies) the drive letter assignment is pretty random. It is first come first served.

And you can have many partitions on a disk. If disk0 has 5 partitions, disk1 may have drive letter L for the first partition because F may be a USB stick, etc. And C may be on disk2 or 3 because that's how you wired the disk where you installed the OS.

Bottom line - it makes no sense to develop theories about partition lettering. Any combination is possible. Only A,B and C have a special meaning - and even then you can have an OS partition that is not C - if not active.

And if you want to get really confused, read this: https://neosmart.net/wiki/easybcd/drive-letters-and-disk-numbers/
 

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The best you can do is put the hard drive with the operating system on port #1 on the motherboard.
 

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OK, thanks guys for your responses. I'm going to look at this information and digest it for a while. In the meantime, I will do nothing because everything appears to be working fine. I just didn't get the labeling of these disk in Disk Management. Thanks again.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Built Online @ AvaDirect
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium 64-Bit
CPU
E8500 Duel core
Motherboard
Asus P5ND
Memory
8 GB G Skill
Graphics Card(s)
XFX GeForce9600 GSO
Sound Card
Intergated
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung 23"
Hard Drives
WD 320GB SATAII (2ea); 1TB WD SATA II
PSU
PC Power & Cooling 610 W
Case
NZXT Tempest Black
Cooling
Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO
Keyboard
Logitech K520
Mouse
Logitech M310 Laser
Internet Speed
3 Mbps
Antivirus
McAFee
Browser
Firefox
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