- Mar 1, 2010
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Please, Delete I'll ask the question in another forum some members are to hostel here.
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Hello,
I'm about to install Windows 7 on brandnew computer with a 500GB hard drive. I would like to avoid the dreaded 200mb system recovery partition as I will never use bitlocker or the Windows 7 recovery, backup stuff stored on the partition. I was told to avoid this I would need to create my partitions with a Windows Vista DVD and then exit setup after I've partitioned. I've got no experience with Vista and I don't know how you would exit setup safely after you've finished partitioning. I know in Windows XP it's press F3 twice but not sure about Vista as I skipped it and stayed with XP. I was told another way is to create the partitions in Diskpart but I rather not go back to the Windows 98 of doing things.
You can do the same from windows 7 as well, you just have to manually create the partition first, when it asks for which drive you want to install it on you would click on the Drive Options button and manually create the partition
If you just select the drive and click next it will automatically create the system partition
Dreaded 200mb recovery partition.... any reason why you are against having single button access to repair tools?
Worrying about a minuscule detail like a 200M recovery partition is very much the "Windows 98 way of doing things." Your best bet would be to just do the install like normal and move on with your life.
If you hate Win7 so much and think so much of it is bloat, then stop using it. But either way, the 200M partition isn't doing any harm and isn't a significant percentage of your disk space even with an anemic SSD.
Apparently you also consider proper grammar and punctuation useless bloat as well...
Please, Delete I'll ask the question in another forum some members are to hostel here.
I dislike that little mini-partition that Windows 7's installer creates.
The easy workaround is, you create your primary partition, Windows 7 creates the mini-partition, you delete your main partition, and then "extend" the mini-partition to the full disk size, and then "format" it, and then install to it.
Viola, one large partition.
This is very helpful, when it comes to installing FDE, btw. Some things really don't work well with that annoying boot partition.
