Partitions on Win 7 laptop

dreward

New member
Yesterday I bought a Samsung laptop with Win 7.

During the installation of Win 7 I got asked if I wanted 2 partitions – I wanted more but said yes. Normally in XP I would then start up Partition Magic and add the rest of my partitions.

But what came out was the enclosed attachment. This is the first time I have ever heard of Dynamic (disc). Not understanding why I could not add any further partition apart from the installed C and D and the E which I did add, I went back to the shop who happily told me that laptop Dynamic discs cannot be converted to Basic!

Now I don’t understand the purpose of the Dynamic disc and why during installation only Basic can’t be installed.

I am perhaps not explaining this very well but hope some one can put me out my misery either confirming or denying what the shop said and if it is possible to change to Basic what would be the best program to do this would be.

My thanks

Dave
 

Attachments

My Computer

OS
Windows XP

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self Built
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate 64bit
CPU
AMD Phenom Quad core 9950 black edition
Motherboard
Gigabyte
Memory
16Gb
Graphics Card(s)
2x XFX Radeon 5850
Sound Card
PCI Express X-Fi Titanium / Logitech G35
Monitor(s) Displays
2x HP 2410i
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
2x 500Gb Seagate
1x 300Gb Seagate
1x 1Tb Seagate
2x 1Tb Hitatchi
PSU
Jean Tech Storm 700W
Case
Cooler Master COSMOS S
Cooling
Akasa Evo Blue Pro
Keyboard
Logitech G15
Mouse
Mad Catz M.M.O. 7
Internet Speed
12mb
Yesterday I bought a Samsung laptop with Win 7.

During the installation of Win 7 I got asked if I wanted 2 partitions – I wanted more but said yes. Normally in XP I would then start up Partition Magic and add the rest of my partitions.

But what came out was the enclosed attachment. This is the first time I have ever heard of Dynamic (disc). Not understanding why I could not add any further partition apart from the installed C and D and the E which I did add, I went back to the shop who happily told me that laptop Dynamic discs cannot be converted to Basic!

Now I don’t understand the purpose of the Dynamic disc and why during installation only Basic can’t be installed.

I am perhaps not explaining this very well but hope some one can put me out my misery either confirming or denying what the shop said and if it is possible to change to Basic what would be the best program to do this would be.

My thanks

Dave

Why didn't you use the partitioning tool in the Win7 installer?

When you get to the part about where to install, there's a "more options" button that allows you to trash your old partitions, create new ones, format etc, before you install...

There is also a partitioning tool in the XP, installer...
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Homebrew
OS
XP Pro SP3 X86 / Win7 Pro X86
CPU
Amd 64 x2 4200 (2.4ghz)
Motherboard
Asus M2N-MX SE Plus
Memory
Kingston DDR2 800 2gb
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia GF-8400
Sound Card
Realtek on Motherboard
Monitor(s) Displays
Acer x-193bw
Screen Resolution
1440 x 900
Hard Drives
Western Digital 500g
PSU
350watt In-Win
Case
In-Win
Cooling
Air
Keyboard
yes
Mouse
yes
Internet Speed
5mpbs
Other Info
Also ASRock ION 330 as HTPC (on XP).
Acer Aspire as GP netbook (on XP).
You also could have made the WIn7 partition the size you wanted it to be in the long run and made the secondary partition the size of all other partitions put together. Once you get into Win7 you just use Partition Wizard to split the secondary disk.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Apple Macbook Pro (April 2009)
OS
W7 Ult. x64 | OS X
CPU
Intel Mobile Core 2 Duo 2.93Ghz [T9800 Penryn]
Motherboard
NVIDIA nForce 730i Rev. B1 [Mac-F2268EC8 (U2E1)]
Memory
4096MB Samsung DDR3 Dual Channel [PC3-8500F 1066Mhz]
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce 9600M GT 512MB [G96M Rev. C1]
Sound Card
SB X-Fi Surround 5.1 USB | Onboard Realtek (Disabled)
Monitor(s) Displays
Acer x223wbd 22" | Apple Anti-Glare 17" (Disabled)
Screen Resolution
{Current} 1440x900 {Acer} 1680x1050 {Apple} 1920x1200
Hard Drives
{Internal}
Seagate Momentus 320GB 2.5" 7200RPM [ST9320421AS]

{Externals}
LaCie 320GB USB 2.0 HDD [301284UR]
LaCie 750GB USB 2.0 FW400 eSATA HDD [301314U]
LaCie 1TB USB 2.0 HDD [301304UR]
PSU
Magsafe
Case
Aluminum/Unibody (MBP52)
Cooling
2 x 6000 RPM Fans
Keyboard
Logitech G-15v2 [PN 920-000379]
Mouse
Logitech G-9 [PN 910-000338]
Internet Speed
12Mbps/2.5Mbps w/ 24Mbps Speed Boost [Comcast]
Other Info
Logitech X-540 Speakers [PN 970223-0122]
Sennheiser PC-151 Headset
Was this a Samsung installer app which (possibly) boxed you into Dynamic disk? I would call them and insist they undo it, help you reconfigure as you want it, or RMA the machine.

The best approach is to use Win7 Disk Management for pre-installs to shrink as necessary, then for what it can't do (without risk) use free Partiton Wizard bootable CD which we have found works best for Win7, having never failed in helping 100+ Resizing/Moving/Conversion operations here.

If you want to take it on yourself, you can remove the data and convert the disk - others may know better but I have never heard of a Dynamic disk than cannot be converted to Basic. Then reinstall from a clean copy of Win7 with the partitioning you want, activating with the key on the COA sticker.
 
My thanks to all who replied to my query. I am now enlightened, perhaps to late!

CommonTater wrote:
Why didn't you use the partitioning tool in the Windows 7 installer?

When you get to the part about where to install, there's a "more options" button that allows you to trash your old partitions, create new ones, format etc, before you install...


Simple answer to your question is that I didn't know you could do that and of course didn't look further than the end of my nose.

Gregrocker wrote:
Was this a Samsung installer app which (possibly) boxed you into Dynamic disk? I would call them and insist they undo it, help you reconfigure as you want it, or RMA the machine.

The best approach is to use Windows 7 Disk Management for pre-installs to shrink as necessary, then for what it can't do (without risk) use free Partiton Wizard bootable CD which we have found works best for Windows 7, having never failed in helping 100+ Resizing/Moving/Conversion operations here.

If you want to take it on yourself, you can remove the data and convert the disk - others may know better but I have never heard of a Dynamic disk than cannot be converted to Basic. Then reinstall from a clean copy of Windows 7 with the partitioning you want, activating with the key on the COA sticker.


Whilst I can't be certain it was the Samsung installer that put Win 7 on the computer, I assume then that that maybe was why I missed the various options.

I shall ring the Samsung Tech department tomorrow to see what advice they can offer and I will report back as, when and if Samsung help out here.

Cheers

Dave
 

My Computer

OS
Windows XP
Back
Top