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thomasw10771180
Participating Frequently
May 22, 2023
Question

Install Adobe DNG Converter to D-Drive

  • May 22, 2023
  • 3 replies
  • 1915 views

I want to install Adobe DNG Converter to my D-Drive.  My C-Drive is a smaller SSD that I am trying to keep primarily for my operating system, so I try to install everything else to the D-Drive.  However, when installing the Adobe Digital Negative Converter (an image file converter), it never pauses to allow me to select Drive-D as is typical for most installers, it just proceeds to install on the C-Drive.  If you've had experience with this type of installation issue, I would appreciate some advice. 

Thanks, Tom

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3 replies

Jeff Arola
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 23, 2023

I think the bulk of the files that are installed by the DNG Converter are the Camera Profiles/Lens Profiles.

C:\ProgramData\Adobe\CameraRaw

 

If you already have a relatively new version of camera raw installed then you already have those folders, though they may not be quite as big as they end up being after installing the DNG Converter.

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 23, 2023

Indeed, and that's under the user account which goes to the system drive regardless.

 

If you're low on space, the problem isn't the installed program files. That's not where you save space. What you need to watch is the user account. All your applications dump a lot of stuff here, and it tends to accumulate over time. Some of it can be redirected to other drives, much of it can't.

 

Just as an example, the Bridge cache goes to the user account by default. If you're a heavy user, this can grow to many tens of gigabytes right there. Luckily, this is one of those things that you can point elsewhere.

 

People think of a system directory as something static. In reality, there's constant read/write activity. The net sum is usually positive, meaning it grows. And most of it is under your user account.

 

A "standard" configuration of operating system and a range of applications shouldn't take up much more than around 90-120 GB. If there's much more than that, it's time for housecleaning.

 

It sounds like you may need to download the free and excellent WinDirStat. It shows you exactly what's filling up your drive, and where it is:

thomasw10771180
Participating Frequently
May 23, 2023

Thanks, I downloaded WinDirStat, very interesting.  Seems to be showing that I'm only using 9% of my C-Drive, even though when I click on the C-Drive properties in File Explorer that shows I'm using about 40%.

kglad
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 22, 2023

i don't think you can control where the dng converter installs.

John T Smith
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 22, 2023