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I need to install Windows NT 4 on a pentium computer with Windows 98 installed on a Fat32 partition 160 GB drive. I made a 2GB Fat16 primary partition before this c partition with partition magic, hidden. I do not have CD access and would avoid the floppy drive. But there is network access. I also copied the i386 folder on the Windows 98 partition.

My problem how to install NT on the hidden partition while being on Windows 98?

Secondly, I would like to install Windows NT on a NFTS partition on the same disk.

I am normally a Mac user and strict beginner on PC.

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    Retrocomputing is not the right place for this kind of question. But to help you along, you should create the partitions first, install Win98 on the first partition as a FAT32 and then install WinNT4 on the second partition after 98 is up and running. At least that is what I think I did back in 1996.. it is possible, but 98 first, NT second. Can't help with any of the other things.
    – bjb
    Nov 30, 2020 at 17:36
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    I wonder how this question could possibly be deemed ‘not about retrocomputing’. Nov 30, 2020 at 17:42
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    @user3840170 I'm with you on this one. We've had several well-received installation questions before. The community consensus might've changed; it's probably one for Retrocomputing Meta.
    – wizzwizz4
    Nov 30, 2020 at 18:28
  • Each section of SE has a a help section which defines On- and Off-Topic. While I agree that this seems on-topic, best to read the Help.
    – RonJohn
    Nov 30, 2020 at 18:29
  • Multiple operating systems on the same disk gives additional complexity. Can you install two drives instead and then one on each. Nov 30, 2020 at 21:14

2 Answers 2

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The 160 GB disk is the problem here. You are running into a thing called the 48bit addressing, which would limit the drive to 137 GB. You can still use the 160 gigs, if you overcome the "48BLBA", you should overcome the problem.

Windows NT does not need to be on a primary partition, and my suggestion here is to set the thing up as a small (20 MB) FAT16 partition, and the balance as an extended drive. You could have something like a 120 MB fat partition (this overcomes a DOS problem when the first partition on the extended drive is not FAT32. It is also used for data exchange between the two operating systems. If you make this over 120 MB, Windows 9x will try to change it to a fat32 partition.

Partition E can be a 2 G fat32 partition. You install Windows 9x into this partition, and it will create a small amount of files on the C: drive. My experience is because of the shared C: drive, to install different Windows into different names.

The next partition F can be an NTFS partition. If your machine is limited by the 8 GB limit, it is best to limit this drive to 2 GB also. Install NT here. It will recognise the Win9x and add it to the boot menu.

Neither of these OS versions can access past 137 GB, so the remainder would go missing, but you can create both NTFS and Fat32 partitions up there. Where you have a network, you can copy the Windows NT setup onto the D: drive, and run winnt.exe from there.

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  • Another thing to check would be whether the hard drive can be jumpered to only expose 137GB. I remember that being a common thing at the time.
    – ssokolow
    Oct 6, 2022 at 6:20
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The main issue is the hard drive. 160GB is too big for NT4 to support, the max being 137GB. I would recommend a 2GB partition to install NT4 on, and another 2GB for Win98. As wendy.krieger mentioned you will not have anything past 137GB accessible. I hope this helps with your problem.

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