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jpmackay
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Posted: Mon Nov 30, 2020 10:56 pm |
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welcoming committee |
Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2017 10:01 am Posts: 46
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I was wondering if I can shrink one volume with 541MB Healthy with the drive I on the same M.2 500 GB Drive for C: Windows. Look below:
On the same drive with Windows C:\ there are five different partitions below:
260 MB Healthy (EFI System Partition) (WINDOWS C:) 236.71 GB NTFS Healthy (Boot, Page File, Crash Dump, Basic Data Partition) (I:) 541 MB Healthy (Recovery Partition) Windows RE tools 980 MB Healthy (Recovery Partition) New Volume (A:) 227.29 GB NTFS Healthy (Basic Data Partition)
Now you see all the partitions on one M.2 SSD Drive for Windows and wondering if I can shrink one partition with (I:) 541 MB Healthy (Recovery Partition) Because of asking is that I have two Recovery Partitions in that drive. I am not sure what happen with I: partition was created last week. Must have a reason for this partition.
Let me know if I can shrink one partition into A: or C: to make a single volume.
Thank you,
John
My Windows Version number is 20H2 of Windows 10 64-bit version operating system
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jaylach
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Posted: Mon Nov 30, 2020 11:30 pm |
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Resident Geekazoid Administrator |
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Joined: Wed Mar 21, 2012 5:09 am Posts: 9455 Location: The state of confusion; I just use Wyoming for mail.
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I think that I'd advise that you leave them alone.
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jpmackay
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Posted: Tue Dec 01, 2020 12:50 am |
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welcoming committee |
Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2017 10:01 am Posts: 46
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Thank you for your reply and I think that would be best to leave them alone.
Cheers,
John
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dvair
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Posted: Tue Dec 01, 2020 4:54 am |
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welcoming committee |
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Joined: Sun Apr 15, 2012 2:39 am Posts: 680 Location: Johnstown, NY
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Yep, those are system partitions, best to not touch them.
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