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For the most part, this is not recommended, especially if the drive letter is the same as when Windows was installed. The only time that you may want to do this is when the drive letters get changed without any user intervention. This may happen when you break a mirror volume or there is a drive configuration change. This should be a rare occurrence and you should change the drive letters back to match the initial installation.
To change or swap drive letters on volumes that cannot otherwise be changed using the Disk Management snap-in, use the following steps:
Note: In these steps, drive D refers to the (wrong) drive letter assigned to a volume, and drive C refers to the (new) drive letter you want to change to, or to assign to the volume.
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\MountedDevices
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\MountedDevices
Change the System/Boot Drive Letter in Windows – 223188
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Change Drive Letter Assignments in Windows XP – 307844
Unable to Log on if the Boot Partition Drive Letter Has Changed – 249321
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