I delete my old windows partition successfully, but when I try to create a new partition in that unallocated space I get the following message:
"Windows Cannot be installed to this hard disk space. The selected disk has the maximum number of partitions of this type."
I'm not sure why since I just installed it with no problem less than 24 hours earlier.
Any ideas? I can't boot into Windows to trouble shoot since I deleted the partition already, I am using a Linux LiveCD to post this message.
My hard drive in question looks like this:
hd0,0 = now unallocated, prior windows partition (~25 GB) [this is where I installed it successfully the first time around]
hd0,1 = linux boot partition (~80mb)
hd0,2 = linux root partition (~13 GB)
hd0,3 = linux swap (~1 GB)
Everything is identical to the first image except I integrated drivers for my network card and printer, took out a daemon tools addon, replaced Firefox 3.0.9 with 3.0.10, and I added a Thunderbird addon. Everything else is identical. However, I don't see why any of these would directly cause this issue.
To conclude:
I am trying to install on the first partition of the first hard drive like I previously did successfully. But when I try to format it to NTFS (I don't even get to that menu to pick NTFS vs. FAT) I get this message from above:
"Windows Cannot be installed to this hard disk space. The selected disk has the maximum number of partitions of this type."
Any advice would be appreciated. Hopefully I won't to make another image from nLite, since I don't even have Windows installed at the moment. How can I be sure this won't happen again? When you test on a virtual machine you don't go through this stage of deleting/formatting partitions. If you need more info, let me know.
Thanks!
This post has been edited by shado: 18 May 2009 - 09:06 AM



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