Hard Disk Management

theb52s

Silver Level Poster
I'm currently waiting for my new pc. Like many that buy from PC Specialist I have taken advice in these forums about the build. The advice I've taken was to have a small SSD purely for the operating system, a larger one for programs and games then a much larger HDD drive. I must admit to being slightly apprehensive about managing this but have been assured that it's not too much hassle.
Presumably there may be others in my situation so I wondered if it's worth having a thread with some resources to look at, advice, maybe first steps when in receipt of the new pc etc. ?
I could just be overthinking this and please let me know if I've missed a similar thread. 🙂
 

SpyderTracks

We love you Ukraine
I'm currently waiting for my new pc. Like many that buy from PC Specialist I have taken advice in these forums about the build. The advice I've taken was to have a small SSD purely for the operating system, a larger one for programs and games then a much larger HDD drive. I must admit to being slightly apprehensive about managing this but have been assured that it's not too much hassle.
Presumably there may be others in my situation so I wondered if it's worth having a thread with some resources to look at, advice, maybe first steps when in receipt of the new pc etc. ?
I could just be overthinking this and please let me know if I've missed a similar thread. 🙂
All you have to do in the main is set your libraries.

When you first install windows, it defaults everything to your C drive where windows is installed, but you can change them to be on a folder or drive as you like as per this guide (it's the same for Windows 11)


Then for games, you install your games clients to the C drive as default (as all programs should be, not on another drive), but then within the games client, when you go to install a game, it will ask you where to install it. Here you just specify your dedicated game drive, and it will create a folder called "Steam Library" or whatever you want to call it and install all the games there. This is standard on any client.

1682356525712.png


You can also actually label the drives themselves to be more recognisable than the standard d:, e: etc

1682356726865.png



There is a good batch of stickies on what to do with a new PC here which is worth looking through


So yours is likely to be:

Smaller OS drive and programs - c:

Larger Games SSD - d:

HDD for general storage: e:
 
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theb52s

Silver Level Poster
Thanks, that's brilliant. So in the context of using photoshop or premiere elements, for example. They would be installed on the smaller SSD Drive, video raw photographs ready for editing, and current projects could go on the larger SSD Drive, and the finished products could then be stored on the HDD drive? I hope I'm understanding that correctly.
 

SpyderTracks

We love you Ukraine
Thanks, that's brilliant. So in the context of using photoshop or premiere elements, for example. They would be installed on the smaller SSD Drive, video raw photographs ready for editing, and current projects could go on the larger SSD Drive, and the finished products could then be stored on the HDD drive? I hope I'm understanding that correctly.
That's about right, yes
 
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