Done already? That was fast!
Vista Disk Management is pretty rudimentary, but you don't need third
party software to remove a partition and extend a drive to contiguous
space. I learned how to do it only a few weeks ago.
-solon fox
On Jun 8, 7:48 am, "Ed H" <edandsa...@NOSPAMcomcast.net> wrote:
> Thank you Solon Fox, that was easy, no issues and no third party software,
> that's what I believed.
>
> Ed
>
> "solon fox" <solon...@gmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:eb3bba3a-476f-47dc-a655-374d9c5cec51@l64g2000hse.googlegroups.com...
> On Jun 8, 6:47 am, "Ed H" <edandsa...@NOSPAMcomcast.net> wrote:
>
> > Hey:
>
> > MY HDD lists the order of my partitions as D:, C:, and E:. I have Vista 64
> > set up on C: and 32-bit on E: to experiment with each. D: is a recovery
> > partition. I'm thinking of removing the data from E: and deleting it and
> > then "Stretching" C: back to it's original size. Best way to do this?
>
> > Thank you,
> > Ed
>
> I think that C and E would need to be contiguous. To increase the size
> of the C partition the space next to it has to be free. It doesn't
> sound like this is the case.
>
> If your drive is partitioned as follows: C partion - | D partion - | E
> partion
>
> Format E, copy or move D contents to E. Through Computer
> Management>Storage>Disk Management, delete the D drive, delete the
> partition and extended the C drive (as I recall, the presentation in
> the extend a drive dialog was confusing, but just next, next, take the
> defaults and finish).
>
> If there is nothing between C and E, then you simply delete the E
> drive, delete the partitin and extend the C drive.
>
> I hope this helps.
>
> -solon fox