recovery drive full

gadusmorhua

New Member
I am continuing to tidy up my wife's laptop, which runs vista home basic.I have noticed the recovery drive is full, with only7 MB of the 10GB remaining.I am perplexed as to why this should be- most of the files date back to when I bought the laptop (system files etc), and I presume these are important.If vista was running scheduled back ups, and has filled the disk this way, surely I would see that from the file dates? How do I go about deleting the non essential stuff here? My excuses again for my ineptitude, but the members were so helpful re. my RAM querie.
Gads
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    Toshiba satellite L300d
    CPU
    AMD Athlon X2 Dual Core TK-57 1-90 Ghz
    Memory
    2.00 GB
    Internet Speed
    2 MB
im assuming you mean the recovery partition , all it contains are the files you'll need to reformat/set back to factory defaults , its fine :) dont delete anything there
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    Custom Build
    CPU
    Intel Q9550 @ 4Gig / Titan Fenir
    Motherboard
    XFX 780i
    Memory
    4GB OCZ PC2-8500C5 DDR2
    Graphics card(s)
    Gainward GTX260/216 SLI
    Sound Card
    Creative X-FI Xtreme Gamer
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Dell UltraSharp 2209WA 22"
    Screen Resolution
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    Hard Drives
    western digital raptor 10000rpm sata
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    OCZ Modstream 700w
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    Logitech G5 Gamer
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    Razer Reclusa
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You probably ran file backups. Vista assumes the D: drive as default for file backups - you therefore have to change the drive letter (e.g. to an external disk or USB stick) during the file backup setup.
The reason that D: is default is because in a genuine Microsoft Vista you get an installation disk and do not need a recovery partition on D:. But the OEMs were to cheap to give you an installation disk and stored the backup image on D: - from where you are supposed to burn your own installation/repair disk.
I suggest you delete all files from D: that do not belong there. Before you do though, burn the installation DVDs form the recovery partition (you'll need 2 or 3 DVDs). This way you make sure to have a valid installation/repair media - just in case you delete the wrong files. In case you are not sure which is which, take a snip of the opened D: and post it here. We'll try to help you to sort it out.
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    Dell
    CPU
    Q6600
    Memory
    4GB
    Monitor(s) Displays
    HP w2207h
    Hard Drives
    2x250GB HDDs 1x60GB OCZ SSD 6 external disks 60 to 640GBs
    Other Info
    Also 1xHP desktop, 1xHP laptop, 1xGateway laptop

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    Dell
    CPU
    Q6600
    Memory
    4GB
    Monitor(s) Displays
    HP w2207h
    Hard Drives
    2x250GB HDDs 1x60GB OCZ SSD 6 external disks 60 to 640GBs
    Other Info
    Also 1xHP desktop, 1xHP laptop, 1xGateway laptop
My wife's home basic doesn't have the snipping tool (Dell meanies?), unlike my home premium.However I downloaded Jing from a link on the tutorial, which seems infinitely more sophisticated.I have taken a snip of the opened recovery partition, though I suspect you will need to see the files opened too, but as this is my tester for using Jing I hope you bear with me.

2009-11-05_0834

I can see I'm going to get into computers, I've only previously used the internet but now the world is my lobster!

Oh, I forgot- I am now getting notification that the recovery D is full, and when I click on the balloon to remedy the situation (by deleting empty or unwanted files), all I get is the recycle bin, which I emptied when using ccleaner during a recent clean up.

Thanks again for your interest.

Gads
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    Toshiba satellite L300d
    CPU
    AMD Athlon X2 Dual Core TK-57 1-90 Ghz
    Memory
    2.00 GB
    Internet Speed
    2 MB
Hi gadusmorhua

Folders Chesswood-Pc & Users should not be on your Recovery Partition.
 

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If its just a matter of free space, delete some big files from the recovery drive.
 

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System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    Compaq
    CPU
    intel core 2 duo T 5550 @ 1.83 MHz
    Motherboard
    intel 965 chipset family
    Memory
    2 GB DDR 2 SD RAM @ 667 MHz
    Graphics card(s)
    On board upto 358 MB RAM
    Sound Card
    Onboard
    Monitor(s) Displays
    15"
    Hard Drives
    160 GB WDC
Agreed, ChesswoodPC is the culprit. That you should delete or better even "move". All the other files are part of the recovery partition that you should NOT TOUCH!!!
Here is my Dell recovery partition for comparison. And don't worry about the extra bin file on yours. That is just a control file that should stay.

dell.png


BTW: don't delete "Users" as Theog suggested. That is an important system file.
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    Dell
    CPU
    Q6600
    Memory
    4GB
    Monitor(s) Displays
    HP w2207h
    Hard Drives
    2x250GB HDDs 1x60GB OCZ SSD 6 external disks 60 to 640GBs
    Other Info
    Also 1xHP desktop, 1xHP laptop, 1xGateway laptop
After deleting the Chesswood file I now have 7GB of the partition free.What I found confusing was that when I clicked on properties it showed the file as 0 bytes, only when I opened it prior to delete did I find it contained two folders, the contents of which were too big for the recycling bin.Having just bought a portable hard drive I now have the data from all our computers , so I don't need to worry about losing that.I've read it is worth burning the recovery to a dvd, so I shall do that.
Thanks again for all your help, apart from sorting out the recovery partition I am also finding snipping with Jing very useful !
Gads
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    Toshiba satellite L300d
    CPU
    AMD Athlon X2 Dual Core TK-57 1-90 Ghz
    Memory
    2.00 GB
    Internet Speed
    2 MB
im not really getting this , its your recovery partition , those are periodic backups that are overwritten everytime a new one is created why do you want to delete them anyway? you cant use that space
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    Custom Build
    CPU
    Intel Q9550 @ 4Gig / Titan Fenir
    Motherboard
    XFX 780i
    Memory
    4GB OCZ PC2-8500C5 DDR2
    Graphics card(s)
    Gainward GTX260/216 SLI
    Sound Card
    Creative X-FI Xtreme Gamer
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Dell UltraSharp 2209WA 22"
    Screen Resolution
    1680x1050
    Hard Drives
    western digital raptor 10000rpm sata
    PSU
    OCZ Modstream 700w
    Cooling
    Titan Fenir
    Mouse
    Logitech G5 Gamer
    Keyboard
    Razer Reclusa
    Internet Speed
    8mb
im not really getting this , its your recovery partition , those are periodic backups that are overwritten everytime a new one is created why do you want to delete them anyway? you cant use that space


A recovery Partition is for recovery, not for Back Ups as it is too small.
 

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Agreed, ChesswoodPC is the culprit. That you should delete or better even "move". All the other files are part of the recovery partition that you should NOT TOUCH!!!
Here is my Dell recovery partition for comparison. And don't worry about the extra bin file on yours. That is just a control file that should stay.

dell.png


BTW: don't delete "Users" as Theog suggested. That is an important system file.

I was looking at the date of the users folder, looks tobe too young tobe part of the recovery.
Users folder date 04/11/2009
 

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yes im aware of this , i thought it was set to make periodic snapshots of the system for recovery purposes , these are stored in the recovery partition when a recovery is needed it uses the "chestwood" file to format to an earlier date instead of "factory settings" I have recovery software that works this way so i wrongly assumed this was the same thing :) DOH
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    Custom Build
    CPU
    Intel Q9550 @ 4Gig / Titan Fenir
    Motherboard
    XFX 780i
    Memory
    4GB OCZ PC2-8500C5 DDR2
    Graphics card(s)
    Gainward GTX260/216 SLI
    Sound Card
    Creative X-FI Xtreme Gamer
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Dell UltraSharp 2209WA 22"
    Screen Resolution
    1680x1050
    Hard Drives
    western digital raptor 10000rpm sata
    PSU
    OCZ Modstream 700w
    Cooling
    Titan Fenir
    Mouse
    Logitech G5 Gamer
    Keyboard
    Razer Reclusa
    Internet Speed
    8mb
Put the shortcut into your startup folder. Then it will also do the sceenshots and it will be handy in the task tray (notification area). To do that, make a FastStone Capture shortcut on the desktop. Then type SHELL:STARTUP into the start/search field and hit Enter. That will bring up the startup folder into which you can now drag the shortcut. Then just close the startup folder. On the next reboot, you will see the icon in the system tray next to the clock.
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    Dell
    CPU
    Q6600
    Memory
    4GB
    Monitor(s) Displays
    HP w2207h
    Hard Drives
    2x250GB HDDs 1x60GB OCZ SSD 6 external disks 60 to 640GBs
    Other Info
    Also 1xHP desktop, 1xHP laptop, 1xGateway laptop
Thanks for that tip, I've previously clicked on pin to start menu, but that puts the icon on the left,where it is permanently visible.Much better to have icons in the notification tray where they can be hidden, if not in use.
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    Toshiba satellite L300d
    CPU
    AMD Athlon X2 Dual Core TK-57 1-90 Ghz
    Memory
    2.00 GB
    Internet Speed
    2 MB
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