I've just got a Mac pro and have fitted it out with 4 hard drives. I want to use a couple of hard drives for Windows stuff, one for the Windows OS and installed programs and the other for Windows data.
I've created the Windows OS install using bootcamp and I see that on this drive there is a 200MB GPT partition which I presume contains the Bootcamp BIOS emulation stuff. So far, so good.
Now, I want to format the 2nd drive as NTFS. I cannot do so under Windows as the drive is listed as protected. I thought about this and came to the conclusion that a quick way of doing this was to re-run the bootcamp install and let it install the partition on this drive and not complete the bootcamp install process. Well, this let me then format the drive under NTFS (the Windows one is 500GB and the data one is 1TB so I cannot format using FAT32).
Only problem now, when the Mac boots into Windows there is about a 10 second delay whilst it works out which bootcamp partition actually has a Windows install and then it boots into Windows.
Does anyone else know a cleaner way to do this which might be the right approach?
The only other option I can see is to take the drive out of the Mac Pro, mount it in a temp chassis and hook it up to my Windows laptop and format it as NTFS.
thanks
I've created the Windows OS install using bootcamp and I see that on this drive there is a 200MB GPT partition which I presume contains the Bootcamp BIOS emulation stuff. So far, so good.
Now, I want to format the 2nd drive as NTFS. I cannot do so under Windows as the drive is listed as protected. I thought about this and came to the conclusion that a quick way of doing this was to re-run the bootcamp install and let it install the partition on this drive and not complete the bootcamp install process. Well, this let me then format the drive under NTFS (the Windows one is 500GB and the data one is 1TB so I cannot format using FAT32).
Only problem now, when the Mac boots into Windows there is about a 10 second delay whilst it works out which bootcamp partition actually has a Windows install and then it boots into Windows.
Does anyone else know a cleaner way to do this which might be the right approach?
The only other option I can see is to take the drive out of the Mac Pro, mount it in a temp chassis and hook it up to my Windows laptop and format it as NTFS.
thanks