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February 5th, 2008, 10:46 AM
#1
Drive Letter Confusion in XP - Assign New Letters
This crops up a lot more now that everyone uses multiple external devices and many people are also adding/changing internal drives to suit varying needs. So, in an attempt to help people out in understanding and correcting these issues, here goes: (corrections gratefully accepted);
Drive letter assignment happens automatically in XP, with sometimes disappointing results.
If USB devices are switched from port to port, and if hard or optical drives are added and removed, letter assignments can become 'confused' in XP. ( I have no experience or info re Firewire in this regard).
XP wants to assign letters in a specific order for specific devices, and it CAN become confused when swapping drives on and off.
To better control this, a user can manually assign letters that remain attached to the device, even if the device is a USB mounted drive/flash chip.
The BOOT drive (usually 'C') should NOT be changed.
Click Start, Control Panel, Administrative Tools, Computer Management, Disk Management. This is where (usually), you will make the assignment changes.
Let's say you have drives C, D, E and F.
C is the Boot drive, D is a data drive, E is your cd/dvd and F is a connected external USB drive.
These would also show as something like: Disk 0 = C, Disk 1 = D, CD ROM = E, and Disk 3 = F.
To change a hd or cd letter, Right Click on the Disk 'X' panel (tan background), and you will be offered a menu that says, in part, 'Change Drive Letter and Paths...'.
To change a connected USB drive letter, Right Click on the next panel to the right (white background) and you get the same option.
Fixed drives can also be Right Clicked on in the top panel.
I don't have one, but I imagine Flash Drives/Chips are similar on USB ports.
So, change the letter, go through all the clicks and OK's necessary, and there you have it, and now and whenever you connect that drive, it will be seen as that letter.
These letters can also be 'switched' or removed in the registry, which is good to know since a dead drive doesn't let you use this procedure, although uninstalling it should clear the entries.
HKLocalmachine, Current Control Set, System, Mounted Devices
There are 2 entries for each device here - the entry with the drive letter can be 'renamed' (just switch the letter part, not the whole name) and that letter will be used on next reboot. A defective drive that is no longer used can be deleted by removing both entries (make sure to match the keys to the right before doing so as they do not always list in order).
My personal recommendation is to keep letters down to about 'H' free for internal devices and,as you connect external devices you will use frequently, once they are connected, assign a letter in reverse order, ie, first device connected get 'Y' (keep 'Z' for a virtual device name).
Last edited by CCT; February 5th, 2008 at 11:43 AM.
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February 5th, 2008, 11:17 AM
#2
Registered User
My preference is to remove the drive letter and mount the removable drives that I have under a 'Removable' folder in C.
Therefore I have
C:
-Removable
--SD
--CF
--MMS
--MemStick4GB
--MemStick1GB
--USBHDD
You get the idea... No more confusion...
Of course I always use the same USB port...
Last edited by CeeBee; February 5th, 2008 at 11:20 AM.
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February 5th, 2008, 11:21 AM
#3
Sounds nice -how is it done?
And, if I had a game installed on the USB HDD, does that affect playing or does the C: drive based OS know where the game is just by connecting the 'removeable' device?
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February 6th, 2008, 11:10 AM
#4
Registered User
This is a common situation in my school district. The computer usually wants to assign the jump drive (memory stick, camera, whatever) the letter 'F' which is mapped to the network by the user's login script. Here is a pdf that shows how to remap the drive letter.
http://www.sumterschools.org/www/sum...ry%20stick.pdf
Last edited by cgonzo; February 6th, 2008 at 11:12 AM.
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February 6th, 2008, 04:31 PM
#5
Registered User
 Originally Posted by CCT
Sounds nice -how is it done?
And, if I had a game installed on the USB HDD, does that affect playing or does the C: drive based OS know where the game is just by connecting the 'removeable' device?
You do it just like in the PDF - only instead of changing the letter you mount it into a NTFS folder and remove the letter
As far as the game goes - really depends on the game. Many games will run regardless of where they are located, but some might be looking for the original install path...
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