Hi! My 20Gb HDD has two partitions, of which one has the OS and the other has some data. The primary partition is mounted as C: and the secondary is mounted into an NTFS folder on an 80Gb HDD. All partitions are NTFS.
After reinstalling WinXP into the primary partition (which was duly reformatted) I realised that Boot volume which has all the Windows files was installed into C, but a couple of files (ntldr, ntdetect) were installed onto the secondary partition, making it the System partition. I didn't ask for that! Now I can't change drive letters. Any ideas why WinXP decided to install Boot & System into different partitions?
I'm going to reformat the whole thing because then it definitely works, but I would still like to know why it did what it did. Thanks!
After reinstalling WinXP into the primary partition (which was duly reformatted) I realised that Boot volume which has all the Windows files was installed into C, but a couple of files (ntldr, ntdetect) were installed onto the secondary partition, making it the System partition. I didn't ask for that! Now I can't change drive letters. Any ideas why WinXP decided to install Boot & System into different partitions?
I'm going to reformat the whole thing because then it definitely works, but I would still like to know why it did what it did. Thanks!