Originally posted by: MalVeauX
Heya,
If the HDD you're referring to is an external drive, taking it out of the enclosure and then plugging it internally into a computer, it will be recognized by your OS based on whether or not it is FAT, FAT32, or NTFS (or other options). If it's already formatted as NTFS and has been used as such, it will function as a physical drive and will be assigned a drive letter. It will not appear as a removable disk or anything. It will appear in My Computer (or non-windows equivalent to that) as a physical hard drive with a drive letter assigned.
Very best,
Originally posted by: Denithor
So you already have one internal drive partitioned as C (vista) & D (everything else) and you want to combine these into one partition?
Vista has tools for changing partition size or even combining partitions. What you need to do is move everything that is currently on the D partition onto your external (250GB) drive and remove it from the system. Next use the disk management tools in Vista to shrink the D partition to zero size (it will become unpartitioned space). Then simply expand the C partition to cover the unpartitioned space created in the previous step. Now you have one large C drive. Plug back in the external drive and it should be assigned the D letter. Then either copy everything onto the C drive or just use the external as the D drive.
