Save drive letter assignment?

SoWhy

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Hi there,

I installed Windows 7 to test it on my PC (I still use XP for most purposes). Now I want to reinstall it because I want to try a different version. Unfortunately, I would have to re-assign all drives again and I have a lot of them.

So my question is this: Is there any way to save the current assignment and restore it when I have reinstalled Windows?

TIA
SoWhy

I got access to MSDNAA through my university account. Not that that's relevant to this question ;-)
 

My Computer

OS
Win7 Pro x64 / WinXP x32
CPU
AMD Phenom II X6 1055T
Motherboard
MSI 870A-G54
Memory
2 GB PC1333 DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
XFX HD5700
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung SyncMaster 226BW + FujitsuSiemens C17-3
Screen Resolution
1680x1050 + 1280x1024
Hard Drives
Samsung HD103UJ
Samsung HD753LJ
Samsung HD154UI
Keyboard
Cherry
Mouse
Logitech MX510
Internet Speed
ADSL 16 MBit
The easiest way might be to open Regedit, navigate to the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\MountedDevices folder, make sure the MountedDevices folder is highlighted on the left, then do File->Export and save the registry keys somewhere. It should save as a .reg file. Upon reinstallation, just double click on the file and it should import them back to restore the settings.

Make SURE after you export the keys to verify that they were all saved and reflect what is currently in the registry by right clicking on the saved .reg file and opening in notepad/wordpad.

I believe this should work.

For reference, check out Option Two below:
http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/82994-drive-letter-add-change-remove-windows-7-a.html
 

My Computer

OS
XP / Win7 x64 Pro
CPU
Intel Quad-Core Q9450 @ 3.2GHz
Motherboard
Asus P5-E
Memory
2x2GB GSkill DDR2
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce 8600 GTS (EVGA)
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell 2408WFP
Screen Resolution
1920x1200
Post a screenshot of your Disk Management screen. What are all these drives that you'd have connected? Are they local hard drives? If so, disconnect them until your Windows 7 install is complete. If they are network drives, it can be done with a batch file. I'm hoping it isn't the case, but I've seen this asked before, and it was mainly due to the user over-partitioning the crap out of their drives.
 

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
Post a screenshot of your Disk Management screen. What are all these drives that you'd have connected? Are they local hard drives? If so, disconnect them until your Windows 7 install is complete. If they are network drives, it can be done with a batch file. I'm hoping it isn't the case, but I've seen this asked before, and it was mainly due to the user over-partitioning the crap out of their drives.
Unfortunately, that latter scenario is probably the case. My partition table has been the same for more than 10 years now and while I could nowadays use less partitions, most of my programs and settings are configured to this partitioning now, so changing it to less partitions would be even more work than having to re-assign all those letters xD
 

My Computer

OS
Win7 Pro x64 / WinXP x32
CPU
AMD Phenom II X6 1055T
Motherboard
MSI 870A-G54
Memory
2 GB PC1333 DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
XFX HD5700
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung SyncMaster 226BW + FujitsuSiemens C17-3
Screen Resolution
1680x1050 + 1280x1024
Hard Drives
Samsung HD103UJ
Samsung HD753LJ
Samsung HD154UI
Keyboard
Cherry
Mouse
Logitech MX510
Internet Speed
ADSL 16 MBit
Then I'm not sure my suggestion would work well, if at all.

As they say, pay now or pay later.
 

My Computer

OS
XP / Win7 x64 Pro
CPU
Intel Quad-Core Q9450 @ 3.2GHz
Motherboard
Asus P5-E
Memory
2x2GB GSkill DDR2
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce 8600 GTS (EVGA)
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell 2408WFP
Screen Resolution
1920x1200
I'm not sure what that would mean, unless you are writing your own apps for your own usage. On a new install, when you reinstall your apps, you could put them in the default directories. You'd be reinstalling all of those apps anyway.
 

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
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