As an aside ppl;
Concerning Drive letters and "amount'" of Drives/Volumes - NOT concerning Physical HDD.
I stumbled onto this in my web adventures
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Volume mount points are robust against system changes that occur when hardware devices are added to or removed from a computer.
You are no longer limited to the number of volumes you can create based on the number of drive letters.
Unlike earlier versions of the Windows operating system, the storage system in Windows 2000 is not limited to 26 file system volumes. A new mechanism called volume mount points allows administrators to mount a file system to an NTFS directory instead of (or as well as) as a drive letter.
Volume mount points are directories that point to specified volumes in a persistent manner. The directory that hosts the mount point must be NTFS since the underlying mechanism uses NTFS reparse points. However the file system that is being mounted can be FAT, FAT32, NTFS, CDFS, or UDFS.
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snipped from about 7/8 the way down this page, located under
"Windows 2000 Volume Mount Points"
On This "Everything Win2K" Page
TT4U
Notification:
These are just my thoughts....and should be carefully measured against other opinions.
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