Possible to safely change size of partition? Windows XP, NTFS

2

I currently have a 160GB drive partitioned as C: (Windows, Primary) and D: (data). I was a terrible estimator in the beginning, and the C: drive is approaching capacity, whereas I have ~35GB spare on the data drive.

Is it possible (and using what?) to safely change/adjust these two partitions so that I can expand C:, without losing any data?

(Just for your own peace of mind, I'm backing everything up and starting fresh anyway, as I figure that's safest, but I've been wondering about this).

anonymous coward

Posted 2009-07-16T16:44:03.963

Reputation: 910

Answers

5

Yes - you can use Partition Magic or the like to do this. Defragmenting your drive first should give you a bit more space at the end of the drive to work with.

Andy Mikula

Posted 2009-07-16T16:44:03.963

Reputation: 1 422

Selected for the "yes" answer, votes, although I have not used Partition Magic - I understand there are many solutions like it, and will be trying some soon. Thanks! – anonymous coward – 2009-07-29T03:56:59.380

Right on! Good luck, and let us know what worked :) – Andy Mikula – 2009-07-29T15:48:32.513

2

It is possible, and I know gParted (a Linux/Gnome application) will resize Windows partitions for you. If done right everything works great, however one time I hit a snag and lost all the data (although it could have been my fault, it was the first time I attempted it).

TJ L

Posted 2009-07-16T16:44:03.963

Reputation: 1 869

1

Although I love GParted, I would have to recommend EASEUS Partition Master. I just used it to repartition my Windows 7 computer and know that it works flawlessly. It runs directly from within Windows so you don't have to create a boot CD.

Kez

Posted 2009-07-16T16:44:03.963

Reputation: 15 359

1

You can also use a free program called NTFSResize, available on a bootable SystemRescueCD.

weiyin

Posted 2009-07-16T16:44:03.963

Reputation: 211

1

I recommend gParted too, you can get it on a LiveCD, and resize your partitions rather safelly. It's never 100% safe though, you should always backup important data first.

Fernando Briano

Posted 2009-07-16T16:44:03.963

Reputation: 448

0

It's not free, but Terabyte Software's BootIt NG app is really good and inexpensive at about $35. I'm using it mainly for the boot manager feature which makes running multiple operating systems more convenient, but it also handles resizing partitions with ease.

(I'm not affiliated with them in any way. Just a happy customer)

Mun

Posted 2009-07-16T16:44:03.963

Reputation: 635