Jon Danniken wrote
> I bought a 1TB hard drive, and will be reinstalling Windows and such into it. My current HDD is 500GB, of which I am
> using 350GB.
> My normal course of action is to transfer the contents of the old hard drive to the new drive, and keep the old hard
> drive disconnected, with it's data left intact, as a backup.
Yes, thats a good approach.
> So, like always, I will be making a 350GB file on the new drive,
Presumably you mean partition. I wouldnt myself. Its generally
better to just partition the whole of the new drive as a single
partition and copy everything from the original into that.
> and filling it with the contents of my old drive.
Its generally better to clone the original drive to the new one, and
telling the cloner to expand the original 500GB partition to 1TB
> However, because this data is more of a backup than anything else, it will not be accessed frequently, and if there is
> a "slow part" of the hard drive, I want to put this 350GB of data in that part.
That isnt really worth bothering with anymore, drives are so fast now.
> Is there a method to put this data in the "slow part" of the hard drive?
Yes, you can certainly create a partition in the slow part of
the drive and copy what you want on the slow part into that.
> Will I need to do this with a partition at that space,
Yes.
> and if so, what freeware/shareware application would you suggest I use for this?
You dont say which version of Win, but all the recent ones since
95, including XP and 7 can all do that with what comes with Win.
With XP and 7 you create partitions in disk management.