I first installed Photoshop CC and that installed perfectly in folder D:\Program Files (x86)\Adobe\Adobe Photoshop CC. Next I clicked the button install Lightroom and it was promptly installed in C:\Program Files\Adobe\Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 5.2. I am down to 3.6 GB on my C:\ drive and need this to be installed on D:\ drive.

Thanks, your answer was helpful. A couple of years ago, I bought, to me, a big gaming PC that has a world of room on the d:\ drive, but only 60 or so GB on the solid state hard drive. Always a struggle to keep the garbage in control on that drive. I have managed to find other stuff to move, but please try to get LR so it can be installed in a custom location.


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I'm sorry to beat this to death but I'm having a hard time reconciling semantics I guess. That or I'm not being clear. I read the FAQ you reference. I understand it says LR is unlike other CC apps in that it "must be installed to your local drive." Okay, so is not your "local drive" that which is running the system? If so, it seems to me that I should be able to switch to the second partition with the alternate OS (Mavericks) and install a second iteration of LR as per the subscription's allowance. Am I mistaken about this? It's not like I've installed LR on separate drive and tried running it from a different system drive which is what I take the FAQ to be telling me. Again, correct me if I'm wrong.

SYSTEM SPECS: I'm currently running Lightroom 6.10 on a Windows 7 computer with two internal drives: an SSD as the primary drive with the OS on it ("Local Disk (C:)") and an HDD where I store the bulk of my files, including my photos ("RUSS (B:)")

ISSUE: If you look at this next screenshot you can see where the issue is. At the top right of the import dialogue you can see my secondary drive (B:) has been chosen, however if you look down at the bottom right under the Destination panel, all that appears is the (C:) drive. When I execute the import Lightroom still goes about importing things correctly and all the photos I'd expect to be created are, however I am no longer able to see which folders will be created nor (as a result) can I toggle the photo selection by checking/unchecking boxes unless I'm doing it a bit more manually through the "Destination Folders" view that dominates the center of the screen in both screenshots.

I'm not sure if it matters that previously I only used one hard drive (rather than the current setup of two), but I get the sense that this fix may be fairly straightforward I've just not been able to figure it out or track down a thread where someone has posted the same issue. I've tried clicking through the various options as well (such as adding in the (B:) drive via the "+" symbol dropdown but that doesn't seem to do it either (although I could be doing something wrong). Can anyone help?

I think the problem is the letter designation for that second hard drive. Windows "thinks" drive B is a floppy disk (old-fashioned, I know) and won't recognize it as a hard drive and won't allow Lightroom to do so either. If you can reassign it a letter further down in the alphabet I think it will solve your problem. If you can give it a letter lower in the alphabet, like P or even Z, Windows will retain that letter assignment.

...Only thing now is to decide whether I should switch my 'bulk' drive back to B: and deal with the inconvenience of this old school Windows quirk that I inadvertently wandered into, or fix all the location pointers across all my other programs and libraries (the fix did indeed {gently} bork loads of other things after the switch).

While the drive letter allocation is the problem, I think it's Lightroom's fault that it doesn't show up. In common with others in setting up a 'tidy' letter allocation for a new system, I assigned used 'B' for my external Raid array. No other programs seems to have a problem with this, and Windows is quite happy to treat it as a normal hard drive, as is my backup software and other disk oriented utilities. I suspect it's a quirk of the way the function is programmed in Lightroom, not a Windows issue. The use of A and B for floppy drives is stone-age and Windows documentation suggests it's perfectly ok to use them as normal drives. I do think Lightroom should be fixed.

Well I'm hoping this is one of life's easier problems to fix, but I can't seem to work it out:


I have an external LaCie harddrive plugged into my iMac and when I open up LR 3, it won't recognize it as being there. It shows the internal hard drive (with all my photos on it), but I can't figure out if I need to manually tell LR to 'add' the x-HD or what.


I want to be able to move files and catalogs and whatever between the two.


Help a guy out. Thanks.

10:50AM, 10 November 2010 PST(permalink)


@Harry:


..."I understand that with Macs it is best to map the drive!! so that it will always show the same drive letter, give it a letter from the end of the alphabet so it does not conflict with your existing drives (Z for instance) "...


Huh? 


I don't know what "map the drives" would mean. Mac OS X file volumes are always named and need no special operations for Lightroom to keep track of them. Mac OS X does not use "letter" drive designators ... 


With Windows operating systems it is best to apply volume names ('labels' in Microsoft nomenclature) for drives which can be dynamically added or removed from the system in order that Lightroom can keep track of the volumes that it knows about. Volume labels are optional in Windows. Volume letter designators can change as drives are added to the Windows operating system as they are assigned by the the file management routines.


Lightroom will store the volume letter by default for un-labeled drives, and will store the volume label for labeled drives. If an un-labeled drive is added and Windows changes the letter designation, Lightroom will lose track of the files it contains. Volume labels persist independent of volume letter, so labeling volumes solves this Windows issue.


@Minneapolitano:


(Harry had this right, although I'll restate it a bit more specifically. :-)


Lightroom only knows about volumes which have been identified to it, usually through the import process. You can inform Lightroom of the existence of a drive that it does not already know about by using the Library->New Folder... menu command, navigating to the external drive, and creating a new folder there for Lightroom to use. 


This is the same operation as clicking the "+" symbol in the Folder panel header and choosing the "Add Folder..." command. 


Once you have added a folder, Lightroom will display the volume and that folder. You can drag and drop your files there using the Folders panel.

ages ago(permalink)


Hi all. I have just downloaded the new Adobe Lightroom and I would like to make a copy of my photo originals directly on to my WD Passport for Mac drive so as to not take up space on my laptop. Is it possible to send data directly the the external hard drive and bypass the computer HD?

Hi thanks for the response. Lightroom does let me save to places other than my hard drive. I am showing my ignorance now but what is the file pathway name I use to get things direct to my external hard drive. regards M

On a side note, if you see a little exclamation mark by the images in your catalog, have no fear. All that means is that you need to reconnect that image in your catalog to its source file. I, for example, tend to keep my originals on external devices as opposed to my internal hard drives. So all you need to do is connect that device to the new Mac, click on the exclamation mark (!), and chose Locate File. Find that file on the external drive, and bingo you are up and running.

If you use a reasonably fast portable SSD formatted to exfat and smart previews you also won't need to worry about the location of the files until it comes time to export. Files can can be stored on a network but the catalogue needs to be on a local drive.

After these step you can view the presets. Someone talked about different drive letters. A Mac doesn't use drive letters, it uses names for volumes hence, the reference to the original file will fail.

I am a novice, well, a complete beginner. I am taking a class in which we use Macs. At home I use a PC and at work I use a PC. I store all my pics on an EHD as well as my catalog for LR. It is really frustrating having to reestablish the correct path to the actual file. It is an issue between all machines, even between PC's since one has the USB as drive J and the other is drive G.

As discussed it might be permission issue as Pictures folder is required by Lightroom Classic to save all its custom and default settings .So its not recommended to be saved under dropbox( network drive) as its not reliable it may work and may gives trouble .

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If you see a question mark on top of a folder in Lightroom, that means that the folder has been moved or renamed outside of Lightroom and the application no longer knows how to find it. If you simply moved the folder, all you have to do is move the folder back to where Lightroom is looking for it on the hard drive. If you do not know where you moved the folder to, you will need to do a search for the folder name in the Finder (Mac) or Explorer (pc) then move the folder with all of its contents back to where Lightroom is looking for it. ff782bc1db

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