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#11
This shows 100 MB free: How to Delete Recovery Partition in Windows 10 - not sure what the normal range is. 53 MB is probably fine and Windows will expand it when necessary.
This shows 100 MB free: How to Delete Recovery Partition in Windows 10 - not sure what the normal range is. 53 MB is probably fine and Windows will expand it when necessary.
Rec.part. is 595MB , 53MB free
FAT32 ,EFI,system , 100MB
OS ,465GB ,Data
Reserved (?) , not formatted, 16MB.............this is a view of the 4 SSD-partitions , with one shows red .
" This shows 100 MB free "...........?? Recovery.part. is 595MB , 53MB free !
What should happen now is that the one in partition 4 gets deleted when a new recovery partition is needed and a new one created in same space. If there is not enough space for new recovery partition, the C drive is shrunk to fit new recovery partition. That old recover partition (6) will never be used again.
Once it is deleted, OP should no longer get multiple partitions. That is how it should work but of course theory and fact do not always align LOL.
However, at no time is a recovery partition modified. To this end, having a redline is meaningless really. There is the perennial argument if a partition is too full, performance is affected, but as these partitions are static, and only used when setting off a recovery, the impact on performance is negligible and could not even be measured.
" That old recover partition (6) will never be used again. ".........ok, so which partition is safe to delete ??
Only using Macrium for restoring.......
Then for extra credit you can try and fix the partition orders if you're feeling daring and ambitious
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/win...iew=windows-10
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/win...iew=windows-10
Will backup first , then delete MSR and , maybe Recovery also..................