Assign floppy drive letter windows xp


















Click Change button Step4. Select a different drive letter and click OK button Step5. Type diskpart and then type list volume Step3. Type select volume 3 suppose volume 3 is the volume that you want to change drive letter Step4.

Right click the partition and select "Change Drive Letter" option. IM-Magic Partition. How to resize system partition How to shrink a partition Read More Tips More Related Articles You May Like set active - how dou set set a partition as active partition in windows 7 8 10, vista, xp and windows server all versions Sign up or log in Sign up using Google.

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Related information How to rename or label a disk drive. How do I set up a hard drive and partition in Windows? How to merge partitions in Windows. It should show up under the volume list for sure. Using the volume number, issue the command select volume - ' ' should be your USB drive's volume number.

This should bring your USB volume into focus so any commands you type will apply to that volume only. Click to expand Still not showing Rick, thanks for the reply. The drive I'm having problems with is not a USB drive, it's an internal HD, so some of the things didn't apply in that link, but I downloaded a third party disk manager Drive Manager 3. I did some reading on diskpart. There's no volume for it, so I can't assign it a letter without that, I guess. I did make sure 'D:' was available by changing my Zip drive to G: In drivepart.

Under disk management, do you get an option to "Initialize" the disk? Normally when you add a foreign disk you must initialize the disk through disk management before you can use it, but seeing as though your disk says Active or Healthy, I think we have a problem No, no option to Initialize.

The only thing that isn't grayed out when it is Right Clicked in Disk Management is "Delete Partition" which obviously isn't a great choice. I tried disconnecting it, booting without it, then rebooting with it to see if any Initialize came up then, but it didn't.

You could try and set the jumpers to cable select instead of slave, but im not sure it will help. There are a few posts within this forum along the lines of the problem you have, but no real concrete fix.

Im sure that if you go ahead and delete the partition, the format to follow will allow you to select a drive letter for it, but you will lose your data. Have you tried it on another PC?

Redo the system, XP not seeing the drive order. I would either replace that 37GB it could be causing your problem with the system.

Only takes one HDD to knock out the others. Rick said:. Initializing a disk destroys the data on it, so this is definitely not an option. They where instantly recognized and became D and E.

I removed the 2 IDE's and connected the dvd's as Primary master and slave. They showed up in My computer as F an G. Is your situation similar in any way to start over with only adding 1 at a time? Initializing a disk does not destroy data btw, when you add a foreign or new disk into your PC without updating MBR's, the disk will not appear in My Computer, but will show up in Disk Management.



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