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March 27th, 2008, 11:24 PM
#1
thumb drive with U3
i have a 8gig sandisk cruzer thumb drive. running vista home premium on my desktop.
the thumb drive has 2 partitions .. 12mb and 7.64gig.
how do i go about combining those partitions and formatting it. i don't need and don't want the U3 software that is on the smaller partition.
i've been to disk management and can format each partition. but don't know how to merge them into a single 8gig partition.
thanks in advance.
AMD Ryzen 5 5600X CPU. 16GB DDR4-3200MHz RGB RAM. 1TB M.2 NVMe SSD. GeForce RTX 3060 Ti 8GB GPU. Windows 10. ViewSonic & Samsung monitors.
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March 28th, 2008, 02:20 AM
#2
Backup any data from the disk first.
Then in disk management right click each partition and choose “delete volume.” This will give you an unallocated space the full size of your drive. Right click that space and go through the wizard to create a new simple volume.
Qualifications:
I have read:
Windows 3.11 for Dummies
Windows 95 for Dummies (Second Chapter)
Fed up with UK 0870 Phone Numbers
Backup Boogaloo, you know it makes sense to do.
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March 28th, 2008, 05:40 AM
#3
With these I understand the U3 partition is recognized as a CD.. and as such you may not be able to just simply format and or partition..
Try this tool..
http://www.u3.com/uninstall/
The Name is not my Job.. It is my driving style..
_ Currently Disgusted at Facebook's Nazi Admins_
If they don't like your name they will delete your account without notice...
und3rtak3r
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March 28th, 2008, 08:46 AM
#4
Use the tool and it will keep you from possibly damaging your thumbdrive.
It works a treat.
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March 28th, 2008, 10:38 AM
#5
thanks undertaker. worked perfectly.
my only quibble is that it shows as 7.66G. the partition that U3 was on doesn't show up at all anymore. but 30MB "missing" is no big deal.
thanks again all.
AMD Ryzen 5 5600X CPU. 16GB DDR4-3200MHz RGB RAM. 1TB M.2 NVMe SSD. GeForce RTX 3060 Ti 8GB GPU. Windows 10. ViewSonic & Samsung monitors.
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March 28th, 2008, 10:45 AM
#6
There is a bit of overhead and do not forget that Windows uses a different way of calculating the size and it is not based on 10 but on 2.
1 GB being 1,000 MB while the true size is 1 GB in computer speak is base on 1,024 not 1,000 so the true number is less than what the manufacturers call it.
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March 28th, 2008, 02:06 PM
#7
I have two smaller thumbdrives from them and couldn't stand the extra fluff (U3) they put on them....I just wanted them for straight file transfers. When I removed it, I was pleasantly surprised that the world didn't cave in like they warn on their site.
Desktop: Intel i7 960 CPU @ 4.0GHz, EVGA Classified 4-Way SLI mobo, 12GB Corsair Dominator-GT 2000 DDR3 RAM, Crucial RealSSD C300 256GB Solid State Drive, Two WD 2TB SATA drives, 2x EVGA GTX 570 Superclocked graphics cards in SLI, Coolermaster HAF X full tower case, OCZ ZX 1250w PSU, Corsair H100 CPU Cooler
Laptop: MSI GT60-004US, 2x Seagate Momentus XT 750GB SSD Hybrid drives in RAID 0, 16GB DDR3 1600 RAM, GeForce 670M 3GB graphics card, Networks 'Killer' N-1103 WLAN card
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