no
A striped volume and a spanned volume
true
No, its supported on dynamic
It must be a Dynamic disk, not Basic.
Basic disks and dynamic disks are two types of hard disk configurations in Windows. Most personal computers are configured as basic disks, which are the simplest to manage. Dynamic disks can make use of multiple hard disks within a computer to duplicate data for increased performance and reliability.
primary, extended, and logical
A spanned volume combines multiple disks into a single logical volume, allowing data to span across them sequentially. A striped volume also uses multiple disks, but data is written across the disks in stripes (block-level striping), improving performance by spreading data access across multiple disks. However, in a striped volume, a loss of a single disk can result in data loss for the entire volume.
On a dynamic disk, you can have up to 2,000 dynamic volumes, which can include simple volumes, spanned volumes, striped volumes, mirrored volumes, and RAID-5 volumes. These volumes can be created within an extended partition, and there is no strict limit on the number of volumes that can be created within a dynamic disk.
If there is no data on dynamic disk, you can take this method: delete all volumes, and then convert dynamic disk to basic disk by using system built-in disk management tool. If important data are stored on dynamic disk, you had better resort to MiniTool Partition Wizard if you want to convert dynamic disk to basic disk quickly and safely. MiniTool Partition Wizard can help convert dynamic disk to basic disk without influencing original data, and few operations are needed. For more information, please see Convert Dynamic Disk to Basic Disk.
false it consists of available space on one or more shared disks, space wise it is equal to current with a user specified overrun
The Disk was created in 1975.
Basic disk type