steve mcknight Posted July 1, 2006 Posted July 1, 2006 I formated my D drive then booted from the Vista install dvd. I installed Vista on D drive. XP is on C. Dual boot. Now when I run Vista it calls my D drive C drive and XP's C drive is called D drive. How stupid, it would be very easy to accidently delete data that was on C because now it's D. Anybody else notice this?
nitroshift Posted July 2, 2006 Posted July 2, 2006 that's because vista renames its root drive to c: automatically.
aresgodofwar Posted July 2, 2006 Posted July 2, 2006 I agree it is bad of Vista to do this. however, microsoft probably won't be reading these boards. why don't you submit this to microsoft and they can perhaps make a change to the OS?
At0mic Posted July 2, 2006 Posted July 2, 2006 Of course it does that. Its normal for an OS to call its hardrive C:
Biohead Posted July 2, 2006 Posted July 2, 2006 You should notice the change as well to prevent you losing data becasue the "active" HD is indicated by the Windows Flag.If you ever go back into XP though, you'll notice that the HD locations. revert back to normal
RJARRRPCGP Posted July 2, 2006 Posted July 2, 2006 (edited) I formated my D drive then booted from the Vista install dvd. I installed Vista on D drive. XP is on C. Dual boot. Now when I run Vista it calls my D drive C drive and XP's C drive is called D drive. How stupid, it would be very easy to accidently delete data that was on C because now it's D. Anybody else notice this?This is a known problem with NTFS. This problem I believe existed in Windows XP and Windows 2000. A workaround is to format the boot HDD with FAT32 then convert it to NTFS after the Windows installation process is complete or disconnect all other HDDs. Edited July 2, 2006 by RJARRRPCGP
fizban2 Posted July 6, 2006 Posted July 6, 2006 I formated my D drive then booted from the Vista install dvd. I installed Vista on D drive. XP is on C. Dual boot. Now when I run Vista it calls my D drive C drive and XP's C drive is called D drive. How stupid, it would be very easy to accidently delete data that was on C because now it's D. Anybody else notice this?This is a known problem with NTFS. This problem I believe existed in Windows XP and Windows 2000. A workaround is to format the boot HDD with FAT32 then convert it to NTFS after the Windows installation process is complete or disconnect all other HDDs.This really isn't a big deal.as biohead said earlier, if you boot back into your XP configuration or other OS config, the drive letters will be what they should be, the only issue you may face is if the drives are dynamic volumes, you may have to reimport them. other then that everything will run normally. i do this with my Vista and XP drives, 1 hd for each and 2 120 drives, vista names them d and g while XP names them E and D, doesn't hurt then drives or info stored there.
Biohead Posted July 6, 2006 Posted July 6, 2006 I'm currently dual booting XP and 2k3. But unlike Vista, 2k3 still sees the partition it is on as D: - so it can't be an NTFS problem. If it really bothers you though, why not go into Disk Management and reallocate the drive letters?
RJARRRPCGP Posted July 7, 2006 Posted July 7, 2006 I'm currently dual booting XP and 2k3. But unlike Vista, 2k3 still sees the partition it is on as D: - so it can't be an NTFS problem. If it really bothers you though, why not go into Disk Management and reallocate the drive letters?Disk Management probably won't let you change the letter of the boot partition! This is why you're required to unplug other HDDs or reformat with FAT and try again.
fizban2 Posted July 7, 2006 Posted July 7, 2006 if you are booting Vista or any OS for that matter (XP 2003 for sure), you can change the letter of any other partition to what ever you would like, even if it also a boot partition, the currently used partition is the only one that cannot be change, once you try to boot the Other OS, it will boot up with C and assign the drive letters that it has setup
EchoNoise Posted July 7, 2006 Posted July 7, 2006 Of course it does that. Its normal for an OS to call its hardrive C:For a windows OS that is
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