You must be logged on
as an administrator to perform these steps.
Mounting a drive is a phrase commonly used to describe an
advanced disk management technique that's often used in large organizations. A
mounted drive is a partition that's mapped to an empty folder on another
partition that has been formatted with the NTFS file system. Mounted drives are
typically assigned a label or name instead of a drive letter. They're useful
for organizations that need to share partitions or drives with many users. A
mounted drive is also known as a mounted folder.
Mounted drives let you extend the storage
capacity of a drive or partition. Say you save financial records to the Finance
folder on drive C, but drive C is getting full. A separate drive, drive E, has
room. By creating an empty folder in the Finance folder called Records, and
mounting drive E to the new folder, you can then save files to
C:\Finance\Records to take advantage of the extra storage space on drive E.
Mounted drives have an advantage over shortcuts because you can move the
mounted drives without having to update the folder that the drive is mounted
to.
To mount a
drive
1.
Open Computer Management by clicking the Start button or Windows Key, clicking Control Panel, clicking System
and Security, clicking Administrative Tools, and then
double-clicking Computer Management. If you're prompted
for an administrator password or confirmation, type the password or provide
confirmation.
2.
On the left, under Storage, click Disk Management.
3.
Right-click the drive
that you want to mount, and then click Change Drive Letter and Paths.
4. Click Add, click Mount in the following empty NTFS folder, and then either type the path to an empty
folder on an NTFS drive or click Browse to locate it. Click OK, and then click OK again.
To remove a
mounted drive
1.
Open Computer Management by clicking the Start button
Windows Key, clicking Control
Panel, clicking System and Security, clicking Administrative
Tools, and then double-clicking Computer Management. If
you're prompted for an administrator password or confirmation, type the
password or provide confirmation.
2.
On the left, under Storage, click Disk Management.
3.
Right-click the
mounted drive that you want to remove, and then click Change Drive
Letter and Paths.
4. Click Remove, and then click Yes.
Notes
·
The Recycle Bin
doesn't recognize mounted drives, so if you try to delete a file that's stored
in a mounted drive, you might receive an error. To bypass the Recycle Bin and
permanently delete the file, click the file, and then press Shift+Delete. When
you permanently delete a file, you can't recover it unless you have a current
backup copy of the file.
You can't mount an ISO
file using Windows, but there are third-party programs available with this
capability. To access an ISO file, you must first burn it to a CD or DVD. For
more information, see Burn a CD or DVD from an ISO file.
Microsoft Windows 7
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