Messed up Drive Letters

  • Thread starter Thread starter LeonFB
  • Start date Start date
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LeonFB

When I installed my BOOT Drive was C: and my second physical H/D was D: then
my removable drive was E: and my CDROM was F:. I uninstalled the H/D drivers
(there was a reason) then rebooted. It recreated the drivers but now my
Drive letters are BOOT Drive C:, CDROM D:, Second physical H/D E:, removable
F:. Any way to get the drive letters back to the original?
 
LeonFB said:
When I installed my BOOT Drive was C: and my second physical H/D was D: then
my removable drive was E: and my CDROM was F:. I uninstalled the H/D drivers
(there was a reason) then rebooted. It recreated the drivers but now my
Drive letters are BOOT Drive C:, CDROM D:, Second physical H/D E:, removable
F:. Any way to get the drive letters back to the original?

From Windows Help System
Prerequisite
You must be logged on as an administrator or a m....

Open Disk Management.
To open Disk Management, click Start, point to Settings, click Control
Panel, double-click Administrative Tools, and then double-click
Computer Management. In the console tree under Storage, click Disk
Management

To assign, change, or remove a drive letter
Right-click a partition, logical drive, or volume, and then click
Change Drive Letter and Path.

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 remove a drive letter, click it, and then click Remove.
To modify a drive letter, click it, click Edit, click the drive letter
you want to use, and then click OK.

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.
 
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