When you installed your new HD, you should have partitioned it into a minimum of two partitions (your C-drive being the primary partition - set to active). You could then set up an extended partition containing multiple logical partitions which would be your D, E, F, ... drives. In this way you create what appears to be multiple 'drives' on one disk. Using this technique also provides wonderful disk management potential as you can protect data from apps, and also keep the OS isolated in its own space. -----Original Message----- From: Kurt Rasmussen [mailto:[log in to unmask]] Sent: Sunday, December 06, 1998 5:14 PM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: [PCBUILD] Consolidating Hard-Drives question. I had two HD's (500 mg master, 500 mg slave). Using some software to copy the master drive info onto a new 2.2 gig HD. was successful, but how can I copy the slave drive info onto the new hard drive? Can I make C: think it is really two different drives and just copy the files using file manager or explorer? thanks in adance, kurt rasmussen PCBUILD mailing list is brought to you by: The NOSPIN Group http://nospin.com PCBUILD maintains many useful files for download on our web site - visit our download page at: http://nospin.com/pc/files.html