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Additional partition "F" on my storage device

Additional partition "F" on my storage device

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PvtStoner
Senior Member
599
09-04-2020, 05:55 PM
#1
I refreshed Windows and now the F partition appears on your boot drive. From checking it, you can’t change its settings in Disk Manager because it’s a very small partition (around 450MB). You’ve received two warnings about low space, but no clear solution is visible. Consider verifying usage or contacting support for further help.
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PvtStoner
09-04-2020, 05:55 PM #1

I refreshed Windows and now the F partition appears on your boot drive. From checking it, you can’t change its settings in Disk Manager because it’s a very small partition (around 450MB). You’ve received two warnings about low space, but no clear solution is visible. Consider verifying usage or contacting support for further help.

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StupidPitbull
Junior Member
2
09-04-2020, 06:20 PM
#2
I can't display images directly, but I can describe what the Disk Manager disk layout portion typically looks like so you can visualize it.
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StupidPitbull
09-04-2020, 06:20 PM #2

I can't display images directly, but I can describe what the Disk Manager disk layout portion typically looks like so you can visualize it.

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Malthe581
Member
140
09-04-2020, 07:26 PM
#3
They seem to be facing the same problem I do regarding the OEM partition. A temporary solution in my previous post didn’t last, as the partition reappeared after a few restarts. Here’s the post I shared.
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Malthe581
09-04-2020, 07:26 PM #3

They seem to be facing the same problem I do regarding the OEM partition. A temporary solution in my previous post didn’t last, as the partition reappeared after a few restarts. Here’s the post I shared.

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Teodoro_BR
Junior Member
10
09-04-2020, 09:03 PM
#4
Check if it's likely a recovery disk. Launch "Disk Management," capture the view, and verify your Windows version (e.g., Windows 10 vs 8.1).
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Teodoro_BR
09-04-2020, 09:03 PM #4

Check if it's likely a recovery disk. Launch "Disk Management," capture the view, and verify your Windows version (e.g., Windows 10 vs 8.1).

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Conor_Playz
Member
161
09-08-2020, 08:03 AM
#5
It's a recognized issue from 1803. You might want to launch "Disk Management" and delete the drive letter associated with it. This should resolve the alerts.
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Conor_Playz
09-08-2020, 08:03 AM #5

It's a recognized issue from 1803. You might want to launch "Disk Management" and delete the drive letter associated with it. This should resolve the alerts.

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Blockwalker02
Member
181
09-14-2020, 08:01 PM
#6
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Blockwalker02
09-14-2020, 08:01 PM #6

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SuperTigresss
Posting Freak
768
09-14-2020, 10:12 PM
#7
I faced the same problem with Windows 10 Pro x64. Frequently, updates failed to install, so I reinstalled the OS. It worked initially but still encountered the same issue. On the drive, I couldn’t adjust any settings—couldn’t modify the letter or unassign it. It was frustrating because I rely on C and D for local drives and E and F for iSCSI devices. After rebooting, the problem disappeared. Once I set everything up, it hasn’t returned since.
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SuperTigresss
09-14-2020, 10:12 PM #7

I faced the same problem with Windows 10 Pro x64. Frequently, updates failed to install, so I reinstalled the OS. It worked initially but still encountered the same issue. On the drive, I couldn’t adjust any settings—couldn’t modify the letter or unassign it. It was frustrating because I rely on C and D for local drives and E and F for iSCSI devices. After rebooting, the problem disappeared. Once I set everything up, it hasn’t returned since.

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timo_1892
Senior Member
715
09-22-2020, 11:01 AM
#8
If the system continues to rebuild, minimal action is needed unless you craft a simple diskpart script to execute after reboot. For example, use commands like remove.bat @echo off diskpart /s remove.txt remove.txt list vol sel vol 1 remove letter=F where "sel vol X" matches the recovery partition. Store both files together, set up a shortcut in Startup or schedule it via Task Scheduler for automatic launch. Alternatively, if the issue is just intrusive popups, turn off space checks temporarily.
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timo_1892
09-22-2020, 11:01 AM #8

If the system continues to rebuild, minimal action is needed unless you craft a simple diskpart script to execute after reboot. For example, use commands like remove.bat @echo off diskpart /s remove.txt remove.txt list vol sel vol 1 remove letter=F where "sel vol X" matches the recovery partition. Store both files together, set up a shortcut in Startup or schedule it via Task Scheduler for automatic launch. Alternatively, if the issue is just intrusive popups, turn off space checks temporarily.

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EmeraldFoxMS
Member
99
09-22-2020, 12:19 PM
#9
Maybe I should have looked deeper in the forum, but it seems we're all facing the same problem. Good news—Microsoft has acknowledged and shared a fix. It looks like they’re handling it now, so there’s no need to worry alone. If many of us are dealing with this, it definitely warrants attention from everyone.
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EmeraldFoxMS
09-22-2020, 12:19 PM #9

Maybe I should have looked deeper in the forum, but it seems we're all facing the same problem. Good news—Microsoft has acknowledged and shared a fix. It looks like they’re handling it now, so there’s no need to worry alone. If many of us are dealing with this, it definitely warrants attention from everyone.

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diamondboy1012
Junior Member
14
09-29-2020, 10:36 PM
#10
It's a typical problem, though I haven't found a lasting fix yet. I turned off notifications, but it reappeared later. Dropping the partition letter helped temporarily, but only after a restart. The @Jarsky batch suggestion didn't work for me either. I ran "sel vol 2" since that's where my OEM Recovery drive is. Honestly, a full Windows reinstall seems like the best option right now, but I'm not feeling up to it at the moment.
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diamondboy1012
09-29-2020, 10:36 PM #10

It's a typical problem, though I haven't found a lasting fix yet. I turned off notifications, but it reappeared later. Dropping the partition letter helped temporarily, but only after a restart. The @Jarsky batch suggestion didn't work for me either. I ran "sel vol 2" since that's where my OEM Recovery drive is. Honestly, a full Windows reinstall seems like the best option right now, but I'm not feeling up to it at the moment.

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