Guest maffea tom Posted July 9, 2010 Posted July 9, 2010 you can not resize dynamic volume directly,except the simple and spanned volume.the to other volume,is impossible(except under the operating system Windows7/Vista/2008.you should read know more information--Dynamic Disk Partition Management and Extend, Shrink, Resize Dynamic Volume.http://www.dynamic-disk.com/resource/resize-dynamic-disk-partition-volume.html DerekDaSilv wrote: Extend Volume 18-Jan-08 Hi Everyone, I have a 80Gb HD. I created a C: volume of 20GB and the 50GB went to another new volume (D: drive). I have 10GB of unallocated space. I recently noticed I need more HD space on the C: drive. I went into the Disk MGMT tools and when I attempted extend the C volume the Extend operation was greyed out. How do I extend my C: drive so that the remaining 10GB of unallocated space goes to my C: d rive? Thank you, D Previous Posts In This Thread: On Friday, January 18, 2008 10:51 AM DerekDaSilv wrote: Extend Volume Hi Everyone, I have a 80Gb HD. I created a C: volume of 20GB and the 50GB went to another new volume (D: drive). I have 10GB of unallocated space. I recently noticed I need more HD space on the C: drive. I went into the Disk MGMT tools and when I attempted extend the C volume the Extend operation was greyed out. How do I extend my C: drive so that the remaining 10GB of unallocated space goes to my C: d rive? Thank you, D On Friday, January 18, 2008 11:04 AM Synapse Syndrome wrote: Re: Extend Volume "Derek Da Silva" wrote in message news:EC2D6EB7-0E68-42FF-99CD-C1A21122F74F@microsoft.com... I don't think that the Disk Management can resize system drives, but Acronis Disk Director can, as it reboots and does it outside Windows. It is possible that the trial version will be able to do this without you having to buy the full product. http://www.acronis.com/homecomputing/products/diskdirector/ ss. On Friday, January 18, 2008 11:07 AM Carey Frisch [MVP] wrote: Re: Extend Volume Working Around Windows Vista's "Shrink Volume" Inadequacy Problems: http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/windows-vista/working-around-windows-vistas-shrink-volume-inadequacy-problems/ -- Carey Frisch Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User --------------------------------------------------------------- "Derek Da Silva" wrote: Hi Everyone, I have a 80Gb HD. I created a C: volume of 20GB and the 50GB went to another new volume (D: drive). I have 10GB of unallocated space. I recently noticed I need more HD space on the C: drive. I went into the Disk MGMT tools and when I attempted extend the C volume the Extend operation was greyed out. How do I extend my C: drive so that the remaining 10GB of unallocated space goes to my C: d rive? Thank you, D On Friday, January 18, 2008 11:18 AM MICHAEL wrote: Re: Extend Volume Vista's Disk Management can resize partitions. Although, I use Disk Director, too. -Michael On Friday, January 18, 2008 11:20 AM Synapse Syndrome wrote: Re: Extend Volume But he is trying to extend the volume, not shrink it, so immovable system files will not need to be moved. ss. On Friday, January 18, 2008 11:23 AM Synapse Syndrome wrote: Re: Extend Volume "MICHAEL" wrote in message news:OSp$B3eWIHA.4896@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... Yeah, I know it can resize partitions, but I meant system partitions. It seems that it can do those as well anyway, but I have never used it. I wonder how it can resize a live Windows partition without exiting Windows, like the way Partition Magic did, or Disk Director does. ss. On Friday, January 18, 2008 12:08 PM R. C. White wrote: Hi, Derek. Hi, Derek. Yes, Vista CAN extend the System Volume - IF there is CONTIGUOUS free space immediately following that volume. But the System Volume cannot be a "dynamic volume", so it can't use non-contiguous space. Depending on what is in that 50 GB Drive D:, you MAY be able to do what you want in multiple steps. For example, if only 20 GB of the 50 is used, then this plan can work, using only Disk Management and other tools built into Vista... 1. Defrag Drive D: to be sure that all that 20 GB is at the front of that volume. 2. Shrink Drive D: to 30 GB (leaving plenty of elbow room, just in case). 3. Create and format a new 30 GB Drive X: in the space following Drive D:. There was 10 GB there before, and we just freed 20 GB more in Step 2. 4. Use Xcopy.exe or Robocopy.exe or even good old Windows Explorer to MOVE everything from Drive D: to Drive X:. 5. Delete Drive X:. This will leave 30 GB of contiguous free space following Drive C:. 6. Extend Drive C:. It will default to the full 30 GB that is available, making your new Drive C: 50 GB. With your 30 GB Drive X:, you will have no free space left. 7. Rename Drive X: to Drive D:. You might prefer to limit Drive C: in Step 6 if so, be sure to note that the wizard specifies space in MEGABYTES, not GIGABYTES. To extend Drive C: by 10 GB, you must enter 10,000, not 10! (Yes, I've made this mistake - more than once.) Many variations are possible, depending on how much of Drive D: is already used, and on how far you want to extend Drive C:, and on whether you want any free space left after all this. I'll leave all those variations for your own calculations. RC -- R. C. White, CPA San Marcos, TX rc@grandecom.net Microsoft Windows MVP (Running Windows Live Mail 2008 in Vista Ultimate x64) "Derek Da Silva" wrote in message news:EC2D6EB7-0E68-42FF-99CD-C1A21122F74F@microsoft.com... On Friday, January 18, 2008 12:28 PM R. C. White wrote: Whoops! Whoops! I've edited Step 5, below. Delete Drive D:, of course, not Drive X:. RC -- R. C. White, CPA San Marcos, TX rc@grandecom.net Microsoft Windows MVP (Running Windows Live Mail 2008 in Vista Ultimate x64) "R. C. White" wrote in message news:BA87B668-7A85-4F20-90C4-41A128739AC0@microsoft.com... On Friday, January 18, 2008 8:16 PM Kerry Brown wrote: Re: Extend Volume "Derek Da Silva" wrote in message news:EC2D6EB7-0E68-42FF-99CD-C1A21122F74F@microsoft.com... Backup C: and D:. Test the backup. Back everything up again to different media. Defrag C:. Delete the partition D: resides in. Leave the space as unallocated. Reboot. Extend the C: partition by 10 GB. I'd actually recommend more than that if Vista resides on this partition. 40 GB would be a better number. Create a new partition in the remaining space and format it. Restore the backup to this new partition. The partition resizing features in Vista are quite primitive. The above procedure may still fail. You may have to use 3rd party software to accomplish this. It is imperative you backup before trying this no matter what software or method you use. Playing with partition tables is an open invitation to Murphy. You could easily lose either or both partitions. -- Kerry Brown Microsoft MVP - Shell/User http://www.vistahelp.ca/phpBB2/ On Wednesday, July 02, 2008 12:56 PM gurvee wrote: Re: Extend Volume "Kerry Brown" wrote: On Monday, December 21, 2009 9:12 PM Consrv wrote: Need to move partition You need to move D: drive to the end of the disk, then have 10GB unallocated space after the C: drive, now "Extend volume" option will be activated. An instruction: http://www.extend-partition.com/extend-system-boot-partition.html to help some. Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice Win a Free License of SandRibbon for Silverlight http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials/aspnet/cb3912a1-be37-4032-a71a-598cae18c0d7/win-a-free-license-of-sandribbon-for-silverlight.aspx Quote
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