Extend volume
Some time ago I installed win7 proffesional (msdn) on a small partition, since I installed it I dindt have enough time to instal al programma's I wanted, but yesterday I did :) I saved al my files from vista on a external hdd and deleted vista, then I formatted the partition vista. But my problem is I cant ad those un used GB to my win7 partition :s I also made a screenshot [IMG]http://img256.imageshack.us/img256/7083/naamloospa.png[/IMG][/URL] I hope you can understand my English, and help me :)
November 3rd, 2009 8:11pm

If I understand you correctly (Dutch or Flemish), you want to add unallocated space to drive C but you cannot. I think its because the spare space and drive C are not contiguous. You could delete the 14.65GB and 770.37GB partitions, set them up as one partition and then install Windows 7 on the new partition. At a later date, remove the existing Windows 7 installation.
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November 3rd, 2009 10:25pm

Thanx for your answer, but is there no way to do it without having to renstall it ? why it is not contiguous ? it cost me a couple hours to instal 7 and instal all programs I wanted, so thats the reason I hope there is a solution without renstall.
November 3rd, 2009 11:59pm

You can image the drive using Windows Backup, then restore the image to a different, larger hard drive.I have done that successfuly.
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November 4th, 2009 5:28am

Ok, I made an image of only the C:\ partition, then i formatted the harddisk, then i put the image on my pc. everything worked. but when i looked at partition manager. Nothing changed :s still cant add memory to c:\ :(
November 5th, 2009 7:07pm

You should see an unallocated section in Disk Management for the hard drive. You then right click the C: section (or other letter if its not C:)that is shown before the unallocated section and then select "Extend Volume...".The size doesn't change automaticaly when you restore an image, the original size is kept.
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November 6th, 2009 5:51am

You should see an unallocated section in Disk Management for the hard drive. You then right click the C: section (or other letter if its not C:)that is shown before the unallocated section and then select "Extend Volume...".The size doesn't change automaticaly when you restore an image, the original size is kept. I think you don't understand my problem, likeBurrWalnutthe problem isthe spare space and drive C are not contiguous. And after re-image its the same :( Whenthe spare space and drive C are not contiguous you can not add space to C:\\ So I was hoping for a solution to make it contigious.
November 6th, 2009 9:50am

I did a test using a virtual machine somewhat similar to what your image showed and I restored to a larger drive and got extra space I could expand into.Your image indicates a 1 TB drive, so using a larger disk may be difficult, for the time being. Another option besides a larger disk is to use RAID that will get you a bigger disk to restore onto.See image at...http://cid-4b6b9fffe2e23537.skydrive.live.com/self.aspx/Windows%207%20Forums/DriveAfterRestore.JPGI should have done a before image of the drive I used before using the larger drive to restore onto, but it would look the same except for the last unallocated section and the drive size would show somewhere around 931 GB.Using Hyper-V for the virtual machine in case any one is wondering.
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November 6th, 2009 1:16pm

But I only got 1 hdd... I dont think someone can help me with my problem :( Maybe the only solution is to renstall
November 6th, 2009 6:47pm

Yes, it worked, but i used Norton ghost 14. So the problem is windows back-up because it doesn't make an image, but a clone.
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November 6th, 2009 9:17pm

I did find a way to do it with windows, but it requires a second drive you can use to mirror the volume that you want to expand.After creating the mirror on the second drive, using disk manager, you can use that instead of the original. The mirrored volume will be at or near the beginning of the drive leaving room to expand into the rest of the drive.This might also involve converting your original disk to a dynamic disk which you might not want.I tested this on 64 bit Windows Ultimate, in a virtual pc (Hyper-V).As you have found a 3rd party tool to do the job, my method is redundant for you.
November 7th, 2009 5:37pm

Windows Vista/2008/Windows 7 built in tool - disk management can extend volume, but there must be some unallocated space behind this volume. If there is no unallocated space clinging to this volume, a 3rd party tool is required, EASEUS Partition Master can easily let unallocated space clinging to this volume and extend this volume without data loss, details: http://partition-tool.com/resource/expand-windows-7-partition.htm
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February 24th, 2010 9:33am

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