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As everyone probably knows, Windows allows a drive to have four primary partitions, one of which may be active. However, I have only three primary partitions. I shrunk one and created a fourth partition so I could install Windows 8 on it, but Disk Management only allows it to be a logical partition.
Why might this be the case? If I cannot convert it to a primary partition, is it advisable to install Windows on a logical partition?
1I used
create partition primary
indiskpart
, and it worked. Thanks. – ctype.h – 2012-12-18T05:30:09.193Never heard of a Disk Management limit to 3 primaries. Fact is, Disk Management on my Vista install is showing my Disk0 as having 6 (six!) primary partitions. Guess that's why D.M. has an iffy reputation. – kreemoweet – 2012-12-18T05:40:02.713
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@kreemoweet: DM might not be as feature-rich as 3rd party dedicated partitioning utilities, but I've never yet seen it misreport what exists on disk. More than likely your disk is using the modern GPT scheme (successor to MBR), which allows for up to 128 primary partitions since it uses 64 bit disk pointers.
– Karan – 2012-12-18T05:47:03.310