You need to explain the situation a little more...
Is your XP drive NTFS or Fat32?
Did you run fdisk from inside XP or from a boot disk?
Is XP currently installed on any disk? Do you want to reinstall it or simply maintain it, while adding 98SE also?
How are your two hard drives set up? (I.e. 40 gig as a single partition running XP on NTFS, 80 gig cut into 2 partitions, one of 60 gig and the other 20 gig, both fat32, etc.)
Basically, if you were starting from scratch, nothing installed. I would do the following.
Note you will need a Win 98/Me boot disk to do this.)
Assuming you have the 40 gig set up as the master and 80 gig as the slave, and you intend to keep XP as a long term OS (eventually dump Win 98SE
1) Partition your two drives into three pieces (total), one for 98SE, one for XP and one for files.
- Like cut the 40 gig drive into two 20 gig partitions for the OS's, and keep the 80 gig whole for files.
- Use fdisk to do this.
2) Format them all for FAT32, that way all files, etc can be shared back and forth, and you can access each OS from the other OS in case you didn't save something to the file drive.
- To do this from the a: prompt type 'format c:', this will bring up a couple or warning message about losing data, just procede and format the drive. Repeat this for all the other drives/partitions.
3) Install Win 98SE to the d: partition. Yes, the d: partition. - From the a:, with the Win98SE disk in the cd-rom, type setup.exe, to start the setup program. Then during the setup watch for a choice to install to a different location. When this option appears, tell it you want to install it to the d: partition (the second 20 gig partition).
- Procede to install all your drivers and programs for Win 98SE as if this was the only OS you were going to use. When you open my computer, you should have an almost empty 20 gig c: drive, a d: drive with Win 98SE, and an empty 80 gig eL: drive.
- Note: even though there are ways to install applications so that both OS's can use only one single copy (I.e. install Office once from each OS so that only one copy of Office is installed on the machine), I recommend against it. While installing programs in this way saves disk space, and is relatively easy to do, uninstalling/upgrading them is very difficult. It is a lot easier to just install them twice, you have the disk space.
4) Once you've got everything setup completely in 98SE on the d: drive (there should be nothing or almost nothing on the c: and e: drives) install XP on the c: drive.
- To do this boot into 98SE, and insert the XP disk. This should autoload and bring up a menu to upgrade or fresh install to a different drive. Select to install to a different drive, and tell it to install to the c: drive. XP will automatically make a boot loader for you, preserving settings so you can boot XP or 98SE.
- Install XP and all your applications/updates/drivers.
Now you should have a complete OS on c: (Win XP) with all needed applications, and a complete OS on d: (Win 98SE) with all needed applications, and a blank 80 gig e: drive for files.
If your not starting from scrach, there are some other things to do.