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Solve : is an added memory [= F drive] considered...? |
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Answer» I recently added a 250 GB external drive [marked as F drive] to my system, extending the 114 GB on my C drive. My question, for which I haven't been able to locate an answer in forums, is this: From the point of view of the machine and its functioning, is the F drive basically just an extended C drive, or is it actually considered as a separate, other drive? My question, for which I haven't been able to locate an answer in forums, is this: From the point of view of the machine and its functioning, is the F drive basically just an extended C drive, or is it actually considered as a separate, other drive? You external drive is not a extension of your C: drive it's a separate storage drive which windows has called F drive . Quote sometimes just shut down by itself. I'm not sure, but am thinking it powered off because of the memory being so full. When your machine shuts down by itself , did you get any sort of error message .... or have you looked in your event viewer to see if it lists any error code ? dl65 These two issues are probably not related. Many more details about your other hardware could be important.Although people always tell you to keep a certain percentage of your drive free, and it's a good idea to do so, a "healthy" computer should be able to still run with 1GB free or less (believe me, I've been down to megabytes free before) without errors such as these occuring. After all what's the difference between having a 400GB drive with 90GB used and a 100GB drive with 90 GB used? As long as there is enough free space when it's needed, no difference.Yep, a nearly full hard drive could greatly slow down your computer but I have never seen it outright crash it or reboot it. You have something else going on. |
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