Windows exten




















Based on the screenshot that you provided, you still have an GB unallocated space that you can use to extend local drive C. Kindly follow the steps below. Extend Volume Wizard will open, just follow the prompts and enter the amount of space would you like to add on the local drive C. If you want to add the whole GB enter MB You may refer to this link for more instruction but the images are just example so you don't have to follow the exact instruction.

I hope the information I provided will help you. If you need further assistance please do reply back and I will respond as quickly as possible.

Have a nice day. Thanks, Wilfred P. The pages appear to be providing accurate, safe information. Watch out for ads on the sites that may advertise products frequently classified as a PUP Potentially Unwanted Products. Thoroughly research any product advertised on the sites before you decide to download and install it. How satisfied are you with this reply? Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site.

In reply to WiIfred P's post on May 20, I tried but on the menu when i right click the C drive volume the option to expand is grayed out. You may refer to this link for reason why the extend volume is greyed out. You may still use the unallocated space by creating a new volume for it so you can use that partition to save your files. In reply to kimberlydebenedetti's post on May 20, In reply to slance's post on May 21, Was this information helpful? Yes No. Thank you! Any more feedback?

The more you tell us the more we can help. Can you help us improve? Resolved my issue. Clear instructions. Easy to follow. No jargon. Pictures helped. This method is handy as you won't need to format an entire volume so that you can repartition it. You can just shrink one, to extend another.

There are various reasons why you would want to extend a data volume. However, the most occurring one is that you need more space in a given drive. Extending a hard drive will let you achieve more space in a given drive, though there's one requisite: you must have unallocated space available to extend your drive with. There are multiple methods you could use for extending your data volumes.

We've gone through four of the most common methods in this article. Before extending your volumes, it's good to know that volumes and disk spaces follow an extension of the first law of thermodynamics. Disk space cannot be created or destroyed; it can only be transferred from one disk to another. When you want to extend a volume, you require free space to extend that volume. And when you shrink a volume, this leaves a surplus of unallocated space that you can use later on.

As such, if your disks are at their maximum sizes, and there's no unallocated space, you cannot extend it. You'll need to shrink another volume, in order to extend the one you want more space on.

Disks often have system files that Windows refuses to move, and this can get in the way of you shrinking a volume. Depending on where exactly the system files are, and what they are, you may not be able to shrink a volume even though you have plenty of free space on that disk. You can get rid of most of these files, though the how-to is an entire article to itself. With all that in mind, let's get down to extending volumes.



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