Corvette Multibooting on one Hard Drive
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Re: Corvette Multibooting on one Hard Drive
Not really interested in seeing your woody but one thing you have to worry about is the hard disk driver you are using. The default DOS drivers often times will result in formats much less than the disk's capacity. You should pop the cover on your computer and find out what manufacturer/model of hard disk you have in there. Report back or e-mail me offline.
Chris- Top
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Re: Corvette Multibooting on one Hard Drive
Not really interested in seeing your woody but one thing you have to worry about is the hard disk driver you are using. The default DOS drivers often times will result in formats much less than the disk's capacity. You should pop the cover on your computer and find out what manufacturer/model of hard disk you have in there. Report back or e-mail me offline.
Chris- Top
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Re: Corvette Multibooting on one Hard Drive
Dr.
With the DOS commands run FDISK and you'll be able to see where all the hard disk has been allocated. You'll want to make some extended partitions, and end up with the 4 or 5 you desire. When loading in your operating systems, it is imperative to begin with the oldest OS first (3.1 then 95 then 98 and finish with XP) The partition for 3.1 should be FAT, for 95 use FAT 32, 98 FAT 32 , ME FAT32, 2000 and XP use FAT 32. Dont use NTFS for 2000 or XP unless you have security concerns, because NTFS only will allow 2000 or XP to use that file.
Regards,
Bob Magnus
Microsoft Cerified Systems Engineer- Top
Comment
-
Re: Corvette Multibooting on one Hard Drive
Dr.
With the DOS commands run FDISK and you'll be able to see where all the hard disk has been allocated. You'll want to make some extended partitions, and end up with the 4 or 5 you desire. When loading in your operating systems, it is imperative to begin with the oldest OS first (3.1 then 95 then 98 and finish with XP) The partition for 3.1 should be FAT, for 95 use FAT 32, 98 FAT 32 , ME FAT32, 2000 and XP use FAT 32. Dont use NTFS for 2000 or XP unless you have security concerns, because NTFS only will allow 2000 or XP to use that file.
Regards,
Bob Magnus
Microsoft Cerified Systems Engineer- Top
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