Removing Vista

  • Thread starter Thread starter D.Duck
  • Start date Start date
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D.Duck

I'm currently dual booting Vista and WinXP. I would like to delete Vista
and keep XP.

What is the proper way to remove Vista from the system?
 
D.Duck said:
I'm currently dual booting Vista and WinXP. I would like to delete Vista
and keep XP.

What is the proper way to remove Vista from the system?

It depends on where you've installed both operating systems. Separate hard
drives? Separate partitions? XP on C:\ and Vista on some other
drive/partition? More details are needed to give you an accurate answer.

How to Post:
http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/page2.html#Usenet
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx/kb/555375 - How to Ask a Question

Malke
 
Malke said:
It depends on where you've installed both operating systems. Separate hard
drives? Separate partitions? XP on C:\ and Vista on some other
drive/partition? More details are needed to give you an accurate answer.

How to Post:
http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/page2.html#Usenet
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx/kb/555375 - How to Ask a
Question

Malke
--
MS-MVP
Elephant Boy Computers
www.elephantboycomputers.com
Don't Panic!

XP and Vista are on the same hard drive.

XP was installed first on the C:\ partition. Sometime later Vista was
installed on the D:\ partition.

One thing I notice is that when Vista is running the two partition's letter
designations are reversed from the original XP install. In other words,
when XP is running the partition with XP's files are on the partition
labeled C:\ and the Vista files are on D:\. When Vista is running the it's
just the reverse.

Thanks.
 
D.Duck said:
XP and Vista are on the same hard drive.

XP was installed first on the C:\ partition. Sometime later Vista was
installed on the D:\ partition.

One thing I notice is that when Vista is running the two partition's
letter
designations are reversed from the original XP install. In other words,
when XP is running the partition with XP's files are on the partition
labeled C:\ and the Vista files are on D:\. When Vista is running the
it's just the reverse.

The drive letter assignments will be different from within each operating
system. The important thing is that XP is apparently on the first partition
which means its boot files, currently not in use, are there too. Simply
format your D:\ partition from within XP's Administrative Tools>Computer
Management>Disk Management. Obviously you should have any data saved in
Vista backed up elsewhere! Then reboot your computer with your XP install
CD in the drive so you can get to the Recovery Console (command line). At
the command line do:

fixboot [enter]
fixmbr [enter]
exit [enter]

Remove the CD and boot into XP.

Malke
 
Malke said:
D.Duck said:
XP and Vista are on the same hard drive.

XP was installed first on the C:\ partition. Sometime later Vista was
installed on the D:\ partition.

One thing I notice is that when Vista is running the two partition's
letter
designations are reversed from the original XP install. In other words,
when XP is running the partition with XP's files are on the partition
labeled C:\ and the Vista files are on D:\. When Vista is running the
it's just the reverse.

The drive letter assignments will be different from within each operating
system. The important thing is that XP is apparently on the first
partition
which means its boot files, currently not in use, are there too. Simply
format your D:\ partition from within XP's Administrative Tools>Computer
Management>Disk Management. Obviously you should have any data saved in
Vista backed up elsewhere! Then reboot your computer with your XP install
CD in the drive so you can get to the Recovery Console (command line). At
the command line do:

fixboot [enter]
fixmbr [enter]
exit [enter]

Remove the CD and boot into XP.

Malke
--
MS-MVP
Elephant Boy Computers
www.elephantboycomputers.com
Don't Panic!

Thanks for the help, I appreciate it.
 
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