Sounds like your friend partitioned the hard drive for you. If you haven't loaded much on your hard drive, you can put the XP disk back in the CD drive, boot from it and reinstall. That's the only way to change the designated boot volume.
2006-12-12 05:11:50
·
answer #1
·
answered by Michael E 3
·
0⤊
1⤋
Open Computer Management (Local).
In the console tree, click Disk Management.
Where?
Computer Management (Local)
Storage
Disk Management
Right-click a partition, logical drive, or volume, and then click Change Drive Letter and Paths.
Do one of the following:
To assign a drive letter, click Add, click the drive letter you want to use, and then click OK.
To modify a drive letter, click it, click Change, click the drive letter you want to use, and then click OK.
To remove a drive letter, click it, and then click Remove.
Important
Be careful when making drive-letter assignments because many MS-DOS and Windows programs make references to a specific drive letter. For example, the path environment variable shows specific drive letters in conjunction with program names.
Notes
To open Computer Management, click Start, point to Settings, and then click Control Panel. Double-click Administrative Tools, and then double-click Computer Management.
You must be logged on as an administrator or a member of the Administrators group in order to complete this procedure. If your computer is connected to a network, network policy settings might also prevent you from completing this procedure.
A computer can use up to 26 drive letters. Drive letters A and B are reserved for floppy disk drives, but you can assign these letters to removable drives if the computer does not have a floppy disk drive. Hard disk drives in the computer receive letters C through Z, while mapped network drives are assigned drive letters in reverse order (Z through B).
You cannot change the drive letter of the system volume or boot volume.
An error message may appear when you attempt to assign a letter to a volume, CD-ROM drive, or other removable media device, possibly because it is in use by a program in the system. If this happens, close the program accessing the volume or drive, and then click the Change Drive Letter and Paths command again.
Windows 2000 and Windows XP allow the static assignment of drive letters on volumes, partitions, and CD-ROM drives. This means that you permanently assign a drive letter to a specific partition, volume, or CD-ROM drive. When you add a new hard disk to an existing computer system, it will not affect statically assigned drive letters.
You can also mount a local drive at an empty folder on an NTFS volume using a drive path instead of a drive letter. For more information, click Related Topics.
2006-12-12 05:13:14
·
answer #2
·
answered by Levi F 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
If you are using Windows XP, here's the steps to follow.
1. Click on Start
2. Right Click on My Computer
3. Scroll down to Manage
4. Your computer management window opens up.
5. On the Left hand bar under storage you should see an option called Disk Management.
6. Once disk manager loads up on the right hand bar, you can click right click on the drive and this will allow you to change drive letters and paths.
Good Luck!
2006-12-12 05:12:45
·
answer #3
·
answered by Shekar 1
·
0⤊
0⤋
There is more to this than changing the drive title from F:/ to C:/. If the computer set the drive title to F:/ then the Boot.ini file will also look for the F:/ drive for the necesary system files. It's one thing to right click the drive and change the drive letter, but you must change the boot.ini file too, so that it can find the operating system files. To edit the boot.ini file you will need to do some research.
Have a good one
2006-12-12 07:43:14
·
answer #4
·
answered by eldergeek1 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
Well its not possible to change letter of System disk on which OS is installed. but here is another way you can make a link in another drive that's number is C:(u can change it)..
go to control panel>>Administrative tools>>computer Management>>Diskmanagement>>Then click on another drive(except ur system drive) and change its letter to C: that one idea. after this another is Right click on ur system drive and go to >>click on Add and give the path of C: drive that u have created just. Browse the other drive. and make a folder and click ok>>ok and its over. Now u will see a link drive to ur system F: drive. now u can navigate to ur system drive by using ur C: drive.
2006-12-12 05:22:02
·
answer #5
·
answered by iMaXX 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
the only way to change the letter of the main OS drive is to reinstall the OS and do it then. You can always rename it but not change the lettering....Thanks
2006-12-12 05:12:02
·
answer #6
·
answered by computer_surplus2005 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
Right click on my computer --> Manage.
Click on disk management in the window that opens.
then right click on the drive you are trying to change and hit change letter or path.
Make sure there is no other drive with C:\ letter or you will not be able to change the other one.
2006-12-12 05:11:59
·
answer #7
·
answered by Fez 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
this would ensue if anotehr gadget replaced into put in or the annoyingcontinual replaced into moved from what place it replaced into pluged in on the ribbon contained in the gadget. in case you purely put in this or in simple terms replaced some hardware on your computer eliminate thecontinual and verify the dip change or jumper on the back of thecontinual. or newcontinual being cd rom regardless of in case you put in one. your boot gadget must be set to understand and ather cd rom or secondarycontinual must be set to slave. in case you have greater desirable than one divice inline on a cable then you definately can place the jumper to cable opt for. and attempt pluggin it into larger and decrease cable ports. in case you probably did nuthing on your comtuper and this mistake all of sudden comes up it skill your boot flag or grasp boot checklist interior the operation gadget has ben courrupted. or deleted. the computer cont discover the aperating gadget. if the annoyingcontinual replaced into undesirable chanced are you may get a no boot gadget discovered errors. ntdlr lacking is an errors you get after attempting to boot the working gadget and it fails to hit upon the boot flags. if that's the case working a restoration cd or reinstalling abode windows could be your purely strategies. thare is a few issues this could be i cant relly inform you the type to restoration it right here. in simple terms google this mistake perhaps you will discover adequate information approximately it to attempt some issues to ascertain. has abode windows become corrupted. has a plague distroys the boot flag index? or if some cable or set up situation internally befell.
2016-10-05 05:33:14
·
answer #8
·
answered by catherine 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
if you right click on my computer, manage, disk management, then you can right click on your 'f" drive and choose a different letter, will probably require a restart. and you computer may not boot afterwards.
>>>this may not fix your computer because windows will still be looking on f, so it may not load<<<
2006-12-12 05:14:50
·
answer #9
·
answered by Bradford K 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
In "my computer" right click the icon and rename.
2006-12-12 05:11:36
·
answer #10
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋