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After shrinking drive C, cannot allocate the new partition
After I shrunk the C drive, I got an empty 53,57 unallocated space on drive 0.
When I choose the "new simple volume" option, It proceeds normally until the last step and then I end up with the following error report: "There is not enough free space on the disk to complete this operation" Anybody can help ? By the way, I'm trying to install "Windows 2000" on a 2nd partition (actually its the fifth partition). I want to run programs that do not run properly under Vista. Thanks, Mike |
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After shrinking drive C, cannot allocate the new partition
You can only have four partitions on a drive. If you want more then one of
the four partitions has to be an extended partition which can then be divided up into logical drives. -- Kerry Brown Microsoft MVP - Shell/User http://www.vistahelp.ca "Mighty_Mike" wrote in message ... After I shrunk the C drive, I got an empty 53,57 unallocated space on drive 0. When I choose the "new simple volume" option, It proceeds normally until the last step and then I end up with the following error report: "There is not enough free space on the disk to complete this operation" Anybody can help ? By the way, I'm trying to install "Windows 2000" on a 2nd partition (actually its the fifth partition). I want to run programs that do not run properly under Vista. Thanks, Mike |
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After shrinking drive C, cannot allocate the new partition
Mike:
Be advised that installing an older OS (eg W2K) after you've installed a recent OS (eg Vista) will mean your computer won't recognize the Vista boot manager, and you won't be able to start Vista. The W2K boot manager will stomp on the Vista boot manager--it won't know what Vista is and will claim boot manager duties for itself, so to speak, which is why for multiboot scenarios MS recommends installing the oldest/earliest OS on the box first, and then later ones. (Windows is designed to recognize earlier versions of itself on the disk and let them be.) If you decide to proceed and you get in a jam, you can try running Startup Repair from the Vista disc, but it's not guaranteed to work. Others on the forum may also point you to third-party solutions, or you can refer to the Knowledge Base for help, e.g. KB 919529. Good luck. -- Andy Sweet Windows User Assistance team Microsoft Corporation |
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After shrinking drive C, cannot allocate the new partition
No, I have a 160 gB disk, of witch at 20 gig (at the most) is occupied.
Thanks, Mike "Lucvdv" wrote: Mighty_Mike wrote: After I shrunk the C drive, I got an empty 53,57 unallocated space on drive 0. When I choose the "new simple volume" option, It proceeds normally until the last step and then I end up with the following error report: "There is not enough free space on the disk to complete this operation" Anybody can help ? 57.3 what? K, M? If the system says it's too small, maybe it just is. The "last step" is usually formatting: try FAT instead of NTFS, see if that will fit. By the way, I'm trying to install "Windows 2000" on a 2nd partition (actually its the fifth partition). I want to run programs that do not run properly under Vista. Is it the 5th partition the system says there's no free space for, and is it a basic disk? You can only have 4 primary partitions on a disk. If you want more partitions, you'll have to make the 4th partition an extended one containing all the remaining space, and create the additional partitions in that extended partition. |
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After shrinking drive C, cannot allocate the new partition
Thanks Andy,
Maybe I should then reformat the whole disk, install Windows 2000 and then reinstall Vista ? I hope I don't have problems reinstalling Vista (with the reinstallation disk). Hope it works ok. What do you think ? "Andy Sweet [MSFT]" wrote: Mike: Be advised that installing an older OS (eg W2K) after you've installed a recent OS (eg Vista) will mean your computer won't recognize the Vista boot manager, and you won't be able to start Vista. The W2K boot manager will stomp on the Vista boot manager--it won't know what Vista is and will claim boot manager duties for itself, so to speak, which is why for multiboot scenarios MS recommends installing the oldest/earliest OS on the box first, and then later ones. (Windows is designed to recognize earlier versions of itself on the disk and let them be.) If you decide to proceed and you get in a jam, you can try running Startup Repair from the Vista disc, but it's not guaranteed to work. Others on the forum may also point you to third-party solutions, or you can refer to the Knowledge Base for help, e.g. KB 919529. Good luck. -- Andy Sweet Windows User Assistance team Microsoft Corporation |
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After shrinking drive C, cannot allocate the new partition
How do I create an extended partition ? Do I have to expand again my C
partition (to go back to 4 partitions) before proceeding ? Btw, the 5 partitions I have now a 1) 55MB (EISA configuration) - this one appeadered aferte shrinking 2) Recovery (D 10 gB NTSF 3) OS (C 83,43 gB NTSF 4) 53,57 gB unallocated 5) 2 gB free space - This one also appeared after shrinking. If it were not of the (1) and (5) partitions, I wouldn't have more than 4 partitons. Can I delete them - it would be simpler. Mike "Kerry Brown" wrote: You can only have four partitions on a drive. If you want more then one of the four partitions has to be an extended partition which can then be divided up into logical drives. -- Kerry Brown Microsoft MVP - Shell/User http://www.vistahelp.ca "Mighty_Mike" wrote in message ... After I shrunk the C drive, I got an empty 53,57 unallocated space on drive 0. When I choose the "new simple volume" option, It proceeds normally until the last step and then I end up with the following error report: "There is not enough free space on the disk to complete this operation" Anybody can help ? By the way, I'm trying to install "Windows 2000" on a 2nd partition (actually its the fifth partition). I want to run programs that do not run properly under Vista. Thanks, Mike |
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After shrinking drive C, cannot allocate the new partition
I don't know what 1 is. It's probably a diagnostic partition from the
manufacturer. I wouldn't delete 1 or 2 as you may need them to get back to the factory setup. Can you delete 5? This may allow you to combine 4 and 5 to create a 4th partition. You may want to use a more sophisticated partition management program like Acronis Disk Director or BootitNG. http://www.acronis.com/homecomputing.../diskdirector/ http://www.terabyteunlimited.com/bootitng.html With the disk management console in Vista your options are limited. When you shrink partitions you may end up with unusable space if there is unallocated space that is not adjacent etc.. -- Kerry Brown Microsoft MVP - Shell/User http://www.vistahelp.ca "Mighty_Mike" wrote in message ... How do I create an extended partition ? Do I have to expand again my C partition (to go back to 4 partitions) before proceeding ? Btw, the 5 partitions I have now a 1) 55MB (EISA configuration) - this one appeadered aferte shrinking 2) Recovery (D 10 gB NTSF 3) OS (C 83,43 gB NTSF 4) 53,57 gB unallocated 5) 2 gB free space - This one also appeared after shrinking. If it were not of the (1) and (5) partitions, I wouldn't have more than 4 partitons. Can I delete them - it would be simpler. Mike "Kerry Brown" wrote: You can only have four partitions on a drive. If you want more then one of the four partitions has to be an extended partition which can then be divided up into logical drives. -- Kerry Brown Microsoft MVP - Shell/User http://www.vistahelp.ca "Mighty_Mike" wrote in message ... After I shrunk the C drive, I got an empty 53,57 unallocated space on drive 0. When I choose the "new simple volume" option, It proceeds normally until the last step and then I end up with the following error report: "There is not enough free space on the disk to complete this operation" Anybody can help ? By the way, I'm trying to install "Windows 2000" on a 2nd partition (actually its the fifth partition). I want to run programs that do not run properly under Vista. Thanks, Mike |
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After shrinking drive C, cannot allocate the new partition
Mighty_Mike wrote:
No, I have a 160 gB disk, of witch at 20 gig (at the most) is occupied. Note that we're not interested in how much is used by files. We're interested in the size of the remaining space for partitions. Is that 57.3KB, 57.3MB, or 57.3GB of unallocated space? If it's 57.3KB or 57.3MB this would explain your problem. Assuming it's 57.3GB then there's another issue. You cannot have more than 4 primary partitions on a 'basic' disk. If you want more than that you'd need to either use an extended partition or dynamic disk. To make an extended partition you'd need to delete one of your primary partitions and lose all the data on it, so you might want to use a dynamic disk - although it means only Win2K, WinXP and Vista operating systems can read the disk. Alun Harford |
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After shrinking drive C, cannot allocate the newpartition - Mightymike
Sub: After shrinking drive C, cannot allocate the new partition - Mightymike
Hi Mike, I just got my new dell lap top and had the same problem, but by going through your message and other's reply on the board, I got the clue and deleted the inbuilt 4th volume. After shrinking C drive it was simple to follow the guidelines of wizard. now I have only 4 drives which include mine marked F. So far no problem. Thanks for your query which resulted in such a good response on the board. Good luck. EggHeadCafe.com - .NET Developer Portal of Choice http://www.eggheadcafe.com |
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After shrinking drive C, cannot allocate the new partition
On Friday, May 4, 2007 11:26:00 PM UTC+8, Mighty_Mike wrote:
After I shrunk the C drive, I got an empty 53,57 unallocated space on drive 0. When I choose the "new simple volume" option, It proceeds normally until the last step and then I end up with the following error report: "There is not enough free space on the disk to complete this operation" Anybody can help ? By the way, I'm trying to install "Windows 2000" on a 2nd partition (actually its the fifth partition). I want to run programs that do not run properly under Vista. Thanks, Mike Try this partition softwa http://www.disk-partition.com/help/c...partition.html it is a tutorial about create partition. |
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