There was a Windows 10 update which created (or made visible) a recovery partition in this PC. Since it is 449MB in size and only 35,8MB are free, every few minutes I get a warning that it is low on disk space. Now I found this: Disable the low disk space popup warning in windows 10 to disable the warning, but since I didn't create this partition (it's a custom pc) and I can't use it, but also don't just want to delete it, is there a way to also hide that partition from "My Computer"?
3 Answers
I think that just unassigning the drive letter will do the trick:
Open Computer Management on the local computer by right clicking on Computer in Windows Explorer and choose Manage. Then click on Disk Management in the left hand pane.
(Or just type diskmgmt.msc into the run dialog)
Right click on the shaded area for Drive D: System reserved (or whatever the name is / letter) in the lower right hand window.
Click on Change drive letter or paths
Highlight D:(letter of the partition) and click remove
If you receive error messages that the drive might be in use or that programs might not run correctly, don't panic. It is OK to remove the drive letter. Once a letter is not assigned, the drive will not appear in Windows Explorer.
Hope this helps!
I encountered this same problem after the Windows 10 Spring 2018 update. I was unable to unassign the drive letter according to the instructions from Tiago Caldeira that used Disk Management, however these command line instructions did work for me:
- Open Command Prompt in Admin
- Enter
diskpart
- Enter
list volume
- Enter
select volume [number of your volume]
- For example:
select volume 0
- For example:
- Enter
remove letter=[drive letter of your volume]
- For example:
remove letter=f
- For example:
- You should see the message
DiskPart successfully removed the drive letter or mount point.
I hope this information helps!
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1The
remove volume=f
did not work for me. I had to useremove letter=f
– CazCommented May 17, 2018 at 16:47 -
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@Somnium Had the same problem. Problem resolved when using the mountvol x: /D instead of diskpart suggested by arvy Commented Jun 6, 2021 at 1:06
Run this on DOS Prompt running as administrator:
mountvol X: /D
Change X: to the assigned drive letter. Done.