Hi Ruud,
Don't. Don't even try. Drive 0 houses your boot files (it's why it is
designated the system drive), you will not be able to alter the drive letter
designation. It doesn't matter where you install Vista, the active drive on
the system will always be the one to house the boot files. By removing drive
0 from Vista, you would be removing the partition it boots from.
The only resolution to this non-problem would be to run a startup repair by
booting the Vista disk with drive 0 detached. Then, you would need to use a
new means of deciding which system to boot, most likely by changing the
primary boot drive through the system BIOS.
--
Best of Luck,
Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
Windows help -
www.rickrogers.org
"Ruud Bijvank" <RuudBijvank@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:2F6D06B2-F22C-45B8-83FD-65A198163F95@microsoft.com...
> Hi,
>
> I've a multi-boot setup with Drive 0 - XP and Drive 1 - Vista.
> When I boot XP, I've got C: - Drive 0 and D: - Drive 1. To avoid problems,
> I've removed the D letter from drive 1 under XP.
> However, when I run Vista, I've got C: - Drive 1 and D: - Drive 0. Far
> enough. When I try to remove the D: from Drive 0, Vista won't let me,
> because
> it's a system drive.
> Any ideas ?