If your Raid 0 setup is as described here on PC Guide:
http://www.pcguide.com/ref/hdd/p ... singleLevel0-c.html
...then the files for your XP installation are distributed across, however many drives you are using, and don't reside on a single drive, so you would need to clone the installation from the Raid array to another slaved drive, if that's possible.
Western Digital's Data Lifeguard Tools 11 for DOS and Data Lifeguard Tools 11 for Windows both have a feature that will let you clone system from one hard drive to a slaved drive. As long as Data Lifeguard Tools can recognize the Raid array as a single drive, you should be able to complete a copy of the installation.
You can download Western Digital's Data Lifeguard Tools 11 here, and give it a try:
http://support.wdc.com/
also, this page from Microsoft may be helpful:
"How to Delete a Dynamic Volume"
"To delete a dynamic volume:
1. In Disk Management, right-click the dynamic volume that you want to delete, and then click Delete Volume.
2. Click Yes when you are prompted to delete the volume.
IMPORTANT NOTE:
When you delete a volume, all data on the volume is deleted in addition to the volume itself.
You cannot delete the system volume, boot volume, or any volume that contains the active paging (swap) file."
More on the page:
http://support.microsoft.com/def ... ;308424&sd=tech
Having deleted the dynamic volume, you should then be able to see the two drives as separate, and reformat and repartition them as normal drives. The critical question is whether the active partition with yourOS on it is then located in a position which will allow you to boot from it. Presumably it is, if you've been booting from it all along.
terrybear/mickeyGoUp :
多謝提供資料
可與cas52612平分有關的XS
--
由於版主在回覆後才把主題轉做 天藍出手 X-Seek﹐為表公平﹐版主願意不接受 XS 獎償。 但因此回覆內容的確能幫助到發題者﹐本人現分 1 XS 給他﹐令 X-Seek 系統會連結到他所提供的方案﹐以便會員日後查閱。 --mickeyGoUp