Cannot remove disconnected network drive windows 7




















Once you complete the steps, the network drive should disappear from File Explorer enabling you to map the drive again or continue without it. We hate spam as much as you! Unsubscribe any time Powered by follow. Tweet Share Submit. How to disconnect mapped network drive using File Explorer How to disconnect mapped network drive using Command Prompt How to disconnect mapped network drive using Registry How to disconnect mapped network drive using File Explorer Use these steps to delete a mapped network drive using File Explorer: Open File Explorer.

Make sure the "reconnect at login" box is un-ticked. Click the Finish button to get a warning. Answer "Yes" and the Shared folder will open. Close it. Next, right-click the drive in My Computer and select disconnect. Ah, I hear you say, but it is still there! Reboot and it should now be gone. You can restart Windows Explorer using Task Manager.

Disconnected drives should be gone! I had a problem like this recently, where I had 8 drive letters that didn't show up anywhere, but I couldn't map any new drives of any kind to these letters.

And they were using drive letters that until this problem I had "persistently" mapped to network devices. The only way I got them to release was to go into the Partition Manager control panel and individually disconnect the drive letters from the CD-ROM drives.

So far the blocking drives themselves are still in the list in Disk Manager, but hopefully they will go away with another reboot. Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Create a free Team What is Teams? Thanks JitenSh I forgot to add that solution into my opening question. What net use command did you use?

Thai Pepper. Frostyck This person is a verified professional. Question, Is there a script that forces the server to connect automatically? I know this can happen to workstations, but figured I would ask anyway. Hi brendywrx That's the command I'm using which returns "The local device name is already in use. OK, Try mapping the new drive path, and it might replace the existing path. Saturday, August 23, PM.

Sunday, August 23, AM. Right Click: Start 2. Click: RUN 3. Type: Regedit on the Open section and click "OK" 4. Click: Computer 5. Click: S has a long string of numbers after it 7. Click: Microsoft 9. Click: Explorer Click: MountPoints2 Right click: Suspected drive; select Delete.

Look under "Apps" category Locate "Windows Explorer.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000