22Gb in local disk C

eleven
eleven Member Posts: 1 New User

why my acer one 10 just have 22Gb in local disk C, it too small because many apps that i want to install, can it resize to bigger?

please help

Answers

  • padgett
    padgett ACE Posts: 4,532 Pathfinder

    Depends on which Acer One 10 you have. If a 32GB SSD, having 22 GB free is very good. 64GB you can probably free up some space but what needs over 22GB of free space please ?

  • kirankp25
    kirankp25 Member Posts: 49 Troubleshooter
    You could buy a high quality micro sd card and install softwares/programs on it... It does work good (worked for me)...
  • johngorno
    johngorno Member Posts: 14 New User

    I have the same situation on my Acer:  on a 32 GB drive, only 22 GB is visible, and most is filled up by the operating system (only 4 GB free, not enough free to update Windows in the normal manner).  This is typical of these Windows installations -- 32 GB isn't really enough.  The missing disk memory is in hidden recovery partitions, which you don't want to mess with:  my tablet has a big 7 recovery GB partition.

     

    JF

  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,101 Trailblazer

    Actually if you create the recovery disks you can free that partition up, at least as long as you don't mislay the disks. Smiley Happy

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  • johngorno
    johngorno Member Posts: 14 New User

    I was wondering if that might be the case... so, you're saying that the 7 GB partition (6 GB used) was left over from making my Recovery disk...  how sure are you?  The Recovery disk itself only uses 3 GB... The partition is named "Images" and its type is listed as GPT Recovery Partition -- there's also another, nameless, 450 MB Recovery Partition.  But if the big one is a temporary partition, how come Windows never recommended deleting it?!  From Microsoft: "Create a recovery drive ... When it’s done, you might see a Delete the recovery partition from your PC link on the final screen. If you want to free up drive space on your PC, select the link and then select Delete. If not, select Finish."  Or, you might NOT see that link!  I made a second disk to test this, and there was no link!  One shouldn't have to fix this oneself -- it cripples the upgrade process!  At the very least, Disk Clean-up should know about this!  Win 10 is not ready for prime time!  GRRR!

     

    JF

  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,101 Trailblazer

    Wasn't really left over from creating the recovery, it was the source used to create the recovery. They put that partition on by default so people can do a reset to factory without disks included. There are two methods for creating recovery disks. The one built into Windows will create a set of disks that take you back to a stock Windows installation, though without custom drivers like Acer includes. If you use them to recover you'll need to also get on the Acer support site and download drivers. The create recoveries from Acer take you back to the factory settings, which would be 8.1 with all the Acer drivers and apps. You'll get the option to remove that partition when you create the Acer disks and not get it if you create the Windows disks.

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  • johngorno
    johngorno Member Posts: 14 New User

    Thanks for the explanation!  I really appreciate the effort you regulars put in to helping here!  So, the Recovery Image is a disk image duplicate of the main (OS) partition when it shipped from Acer?  And that's why it's so big.

     

    If one's upgraded from Win 8.1 to Win 10, is there any way to create an Acer recovery disk that can restore Win 10 with all the drivers, bundled/installed? software, etc., as if Acer had shipped it exactly as it is now?  Also, if I have at least one Win 10 recovery disk and full disk image back-ups (on multiple media Smiley Very Happy), and never want to go back to Win 8.1, is there any reason to not delete the Acer Recovery Image partition?  That combination should give me the ability to recover from any OS and/or system disk corruption.

     

    JF

  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,101 Trailblazer

    Well... There are ways to create what we'd like (current OS plus all current drivers in a recovery partition) but it's really not a process for the faint of heart. It's documented, but only in the technical language that IT professionals tend to use, so it's a bit tough to follow for us mere mortals. Basically you take the install image and edit it to include the custom drivers. It's what Acer did when they built the initial recovery image before releasing the device to the market, but just done again for the new OS. A manufacturer will often spend many thousands of dollars in development spending to create the image, and that much or more again in testing the image. Not surprisingly they don't tend to redo that effort for older devices when a new OS is released.

     

    Instead they expect users to do the prudent thing, create backups of their computer after a major change like an OS upgrade. You use the backup if you need to start over again after a catastrophic failure or even if you just want to refresh back to a known good state.

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