Hi Doug
Yes, there is the recovery partition and some unallocated space in the way, you will need to use a 3rd party utility, because Windows will refuse to merge your D and D drives after your delete D . . .
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Several years back I partitioned my C drive and created a D drive with much more space than I probably should have. Now I need to take more free space from D and put it back to C which had less than 3 GB remaining. Is this somehow possible?
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Answer accepted by question author
Hi Doug
Yes, there is the recovery partition and some unallocated space in the way, you will need to use a 3rd party utility, because Windows will refuse to merge your D and D drives after your delete D . . .
Answer accepted by question author
HiDoug
Open Disk Management (accessible by right clicking your Start Button)
Id your D drive partition immediately to the right of your C Drive?
If so, you can just right click that and choose 'Delete Volume' and then extend your C drive partition into the unallocated space
If there is a small recovery partition between those two partitions, windows will refuse to extend your C drive, you will need to use a 3rd party utility to extend C
The Free version of AOMEI Partition assistant is fully featured and easy to use:
https://www.disk-partition.com/free-partition-m...
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Answer accepted by question author
Can you post a screenshot of your Disk Management showing the partitions on the drive.
You may need a third party program to move partitions but it is possible.
An example https://www.easeus.com/partition-master/partition-windows-10-free.html
hi dougroberts3
in order to give the best advice can you post a a screen shot of disk management.
right click on start and select disk management
are you wanting to remove the d: partition altogether or just reduce the size?
Is this somehow possible?
Yes, it is, but you probably wanted to ask HOW to do it. Have a look at the Aomei partition manager.