|
Re: New Hard Drive = simple volume
You can do all the disk management with the drive being in the USB
enclosure. Just make sure the jumper is set right on the drive per
manufacturer's specifications.
Put the drive in the enclosure, start disk management, find the drive,
delete the partition and then recreate the partition and then format.
Nothing to it.
"Big_Al" <BigAl@MD.com> wrote in message
news:di%3k.40268$Xu2.34212@trnddc04...
> I just purchased a new IDE HD and installed it in my desktop to format it.
> I want to take it out and put it in my USB enclosure for a larger backup.
>
> Normally Windows will see the new hardware and walk me through setting it
> up. And it did. Since it was an IDE and all of my other drives are SATA
> it came up as Drive 0. Not Drive 2 (3rd).
> Anyway XP saw the drive, ask me if I wanted to convert and initialize it
> (convert was a bit odd, I've never seen it, but I accepted it). I Okay'd
> that and then it gave me only one option for 'volume'. I clicked on that
> and it let me determine the size (full size used) and label and NTFS
> format. I did and its working fine.
>
> The question is, the SATA drives are #1) split into 2 partitions, logical
> and Primary, #2) is just a primary partition. This new one came out
> as a 'simple volume'. First time I've seen this, what is a simple
> volume and what is it going to do when put in the USB enclosure?
>
> I've looked at google and I see that its a valid format, and it calls it a
> dynamic disk, simple volume. I still don't see much explanation of the
> pros and cons of such a format. Would I be better off trying to get this
> back to a primary partition and how can that be done?
|