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TUTORIAL:
You can have Wp7 and android at the same time. You will have Wp7 in Nand and run android from the same sd card or another sd card that you will swap when you want to run Android from sd. You can't run wp7 and android from Nand at the same time however.
HOW TO PARTITION YOUR SD CARD TO HAVE A DUAL BOOT OF WINDOWS PHONE 7 AND SD ANDROID
The purpose of this tutorial is to detail a method on how to get wp7 and sd android sharing the same sd card. At present, if you want to have Wp7 in nand and android on the sd, you will have 2 choices. A. swap sd cards or B. Partition your sd cards as detailed hereafter. IMO partition the sd card as detailed hereafter is the safest route for a dual boot from the same sd card (instead of swapping sd cards) as wp7 will ruin an android sd card inadvertently left in the phone.
Wp7 uses a special format for its sd card and you cannot simply copy android on this partition as it is not accessible. Wp7 also creates a fat32 partition of 200 mb but this partition is too small to install an android build. I am not aware of any means to resize the Wp7 partition on the sd card either.
This is based on ike2903’s instructions and all credits go to him as well as to others on xda. I am not a developer and guess just got lucky getting things to work.
Note to moderators, if this post is in the wrong area, please move it to the correct one. Thanks.
METHOD ONE - USING TWO SD CARDS
WHAT YOU NEED:
1. TWO sd cards.
A large one and a smaller one. I am using a 8gb and a 16gb card. The larger one will be your permanent sd card and the smaller one will enable you to obtain a smaller partition to run wp7 that you will copy to the larger sd card.
2. Sd partition software.
I used EASEUS ALL-IN-ONE Partition Manager Software and it worked. It is free to download and here is the link: http://www.partition-tool.com/download.htm
INSTRUCTIONS
1. Download and install Easeus Partition Manager.
2. Insert your small sd card into your phone. Flash WP7 Rom using Magldr 1.1.2. Let the phone reset and start wp7. This will allow WP7 to format your smaller sd card with its partition.
3. Turn off your phone and remove the smaller sd card.
4. Plug in both sd cards in your pc. The larger and the smaller one.
5. Run Easeus Partition Manager. You should see both the smaller and larger sd cards. On your smaller sd card, there should be 2 partitions. A fat 16 partition of 200 mb and another partition called unformatted which takes up the rest of the smaller sd. This “unformatted partition” is actually your wp7 partition. See attached picture.
6. Delete the partition of your larger sd card. To do this, select the partition and right click delete (menu also works). Don’t forget to click “apply”.
7. Copy and resize the fat16 partition of your smaller sd card to your larger sd card. To do this, select the partition on your smaller sd card, right click (or use the menu) and select copy and follow the onscreen wizard to copy. You can change it to fat32 as well. When resizing, you need to do some math. Take the size of your larger sd card and subtract the size of the “unformatted” partition of on your smaller sd card and set this value as the resize value for the fat16 partition that you are copying. In other words, if the unformatted partition is 8gh and you are setting things up on a 16gb sd card then set the resize value to approx. 8gb. Click “apply”
8. Using same procedure as outlined in 7, copy the “unformatted” partition from your smaller sd card to the larger sd card. Click “apply”.
NEW STEP: Before copying your android build and while still in windows format the fat 32 partition using 32 or 64 kb sectors USE WINDOWS EXPLORER OR MY COMPUTER TO FORMAT. This should help with speed. I used 64 kb sectors. I am using the desire_Z build in this post and set up everything in the desire_z folder
9. Copy your android sd build onto the fat32 partition. IMPORTANT - Do not use usb mass storage as there is some data corruption problems. Remove your sd card to copy (see below and thread for list of working builds - IMPORTANT you need to have a modified rootfs.img file where nand_init was added to init.rc and you need to copy and replace the existing rootfs.img file of the sd build else it won't work)
10. Remove the larger sd card and insert it into your phone.
11. Reboot the phone and hold the “red end key” to enter the magldr boot menu.
12. In Magldr 1.1.2 use volume down to go to “9. Services” and click “green phone button” to select.
13. Use volume buttons to select “1. Bootsettings” and click “green phone button” to select.
14. Use volume buttons to select “2. Always Menu” and click “green phone button” to select. This will give you the Madldr menu on phone startup to allow you to choose wp7 or sd android as your boot choice.
15. Click the “green phone button” to confirm.
16. Once you’ve done steps 12 to 15 you will be brought back to the initial magldr 1.1.2 menu.
17. Again, use volume down to go to “9. Services” and click “green phone button” to select.
18. Use volume buttons to select “1. Bootsettings” and click “green phone button” to select.
19. Use volume buttons to select “3. AD SD Dir” and click “green phone button” to select.
20. Select the folder where your sd android build is located.
21. Reset your phone and enter Magldr 1.1.2.
22. To boot into wp7 select boot “1. Boot WPH” or to boot sd android select “2. Boot SD AD”
23. Booting into android sd is long. Guess having android nand has spoiled us.
SECOND METHOD - USING A SINGLE SD CARD
Here is an alternate method provided by gencaslan to do this:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=10643011&postcount=64
THIRD METHOD - USING A SINGLE SD CARD - HERE IS ANOTHER ALTERNATE METHOD PROPOSED BY XDA MEMBER HYELLOW (UPDATED)
1. Put your sd card inside the hd2 and power on.
2. Go to about screen, in settings, and reset your device. Let it reset and boot to WP7 again. While booting to WP7, it'll create the partitions it needs, so this is important. After you have gone through the setup wizard, go to about screen and reset your device again.
3. When it has booted into magldr screen, remove the sd card and insert into pc. (make sure that magldr is shown and stays there at bootup, otherwise it'll boot straight into wp7 without sd card and that is not what we want.
4. You'll see two partitions. A whopping 200mb of fat16 partition and the other is unformatted. Now right click on the unformatted partition and click delete. After that, click apply. Now you have unallocated space. Right click on the unallocated space and select create. Set parameters to logical and unformatted and size the partition. This will be your WP7 partition, so decide how much you want to allocate to it, this is permanent, no changes afterwards can be made. Also, make sure you move it to the end of the sd card in the same 'create' window. Hit apply. IMPORTANT When using this method make sure that the wp7 "unformatted partition" is larger than the Android partition otherwise the wp7 "unformatted partition" will move in 2nd place and you will not be able to resize the fat 16 / android partition.
5. Sit back and take a break.
break.
6. You now have a green fat16 partition to the left, some unallocated grey portion in the middle and your WP7 partition in modern turqoise colour on the far right. Agreed? Now remove the sd card from PC and insert in HD2.
7. After you have inserted the sd card, let it boot into WP7. Remember what your last action was when you were still in WP7? Yes, you pressed reset, so the device actually thinks he is still resetting the device. He might do it too, but just go through the setup wizard again.
8. Go to about screen and verify your storage. Don't look strange if when the storage has a different of about 1Gb, this is swallowed by WP7 for system stuff etc. Are you happy with the progress so far? Then power down your device and remove the sd card. Allow the HD2 to fully powered down as sometimes the screen is pitch black, but the device is still turning off.
9. Insert the sd card in pc and, using EASUS right click on the green fat 16 partition and select resize/move. Now fill up the rest of the unallocated space and hit apply. This is your android partition.
10. Format the sd android partition (not the whole sd card!) using EASUS to FAT32 using 32 or 64 kb cluster size and put an android build onto it and test.
11. IMPORTANT You need to convert the wp7 unformatted partition to primary for the sd android to see the sd card Use minitool partition wizard to do this. Right click on your WP7 unformatted partition and select modify and then click on set as primary and hit apply. Here is the link for minitool: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=10887494&postcount=372
HERE IS A 2 CARD METHOD POSTED BY NZXTNEO
(I created a 4gb WP7 build and allocated the rest to Android)
Copy everything in this vid exactly!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JTHRAUHZHlo
(I used an 8gb SD card for this step)
Then connect the 8gb SD and a 16gb SD to a computer via card readers. (Yes this will be a 2 SD card process)
Open EASEUS Partition Master
Delete any partitions on the 16gb SD so that it reads as unallocated
Hit apply
Right click the unformatted partition of the 8gb SD and select copy
Move the unformatted partition to the larger unallocated SD card
Drag the 4gb partition all the way to the right
Hit apply
(Please note the move step will take a long time)
The unallocated partition is now ready for you to format for use with Android
VIDEO INSTRUCTIONS
Geolo has made a nice video tutorial and posted it on youtube. Here is the link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o0YI-SV4KiU
Here is another video by Geolo for persons with only 1 card and 1 card reader. Here is the link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-cUdB4_5f4
NOTES:
Make sure you backup your sd cards as wp7 will erase all that is on them.
This method works for me but i take no responsibility for whatever may happen to your phone.
You should be able to reactivate your phone with windows market but I cannot guarantee this. I have re-activated market 4 times so far.
TESTED SD BUILDS:
Most builds should work but you will need an edited rootfs.img file for it to work. Have a look in the thread of the build you want if someone posted an edited rootfs.img file.
You can get a list of edited rootfs.img files here:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=913964
Thanks
wonderful, then i thank i can borrow my friend's sd card to try, no need to buy one more sd card right?
finally only one card will be used, that is larger card
tomorrow i will try
hopefully there will be more sd build android, especially based on Desire HD
thanks imma try that out
thx for testing.. this is exactly what i thought about should work!!
maybe someone could try another test...
i belive i read somewhere if there is allready an exfat partition on the sd phone7 didn not reformat it!!
you can format exfat within windows 7...
so just try to make a partition... 8gb on an 16gb and format the first 8gb with exfat... the other 8gb with fat.. and boot with wph7 ...
thencheck back what happend... thx!!
tomorrow i will have to buy a 16gb SD Card
cheers
I'm gonna try this tomorrow, quick question. Does this method change any of your live service activation, if so I might stick with two sd cards for now.
Cheers
DJGurth said:
I'm gonna try this tomorrow, quick question. Does this method change any of your live service activation, if so I might stick with two sd cards for now.
Cheers
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you have a small wp7 partition and transfer this to your larger sd card it should not affect anything as wp7 will boot from this partition and you will not need to reflash the wp7 rom.
If you have to re-create the partitions using the procedure above then yes, you will need to reflash wp7 and reconnect to live services as there is no know way to reduce and/or resize the wp7 sd partition.
BTW I have reconnected 4 times so far to live services and have had no problems.
Regards,
great tut, let's test some android build
would this method be able to run more than one linux kernel, such as meego or ubuntu with android?
Possibly, but you would need to change your boot directory in magldr 1.12 each time prior to booting. The main purpose however is to have everything on the same sd if you are running wp7.
if it possible to boot android from nand and wp7 from sd card?
thanks
Thanks worked like a charm, just to let you know all is fine and still activated
edit:
So after first boot everything looked ok, but went to the market and it wouldn't download anything, thought I'll reset it, then went to boot and got in a boot loop on dft screen.
Put my old card in and bam everything works again? Any ideas?
Me too !
aladdinaladdin said:
if it possible to boot android from nand and wp7 from sd card?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It is possible ?
thought of this method, and you wrote it up with tutorial which makes 100% sense
what builds have been tested so far that are able to boot from SD card?
does SUPERRAM 1.5 work?
DJGurth said:
Thanks worked like a charm, just to let you know all is fine and still activated
edit:
So after first boot everything looked ok, but went to the market and it wouldn't download anything, thought I'll reset it, then went to boot and got in a boot loop on dft screen.
Put my old card in and bam everything works again? Any ideas?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You may wish to try again. I had no issues. Thanks
jcsy said:
thought of this method, and you wrote it up with tutorial which makes 100% sense
what builds have been tested so far that are able to boot from SD card?
does SUPERRAM 1.5 work?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I only tried the one in my 1st post.
darrengladysz said:
You may wish to try again. I had no issues. Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'll take another look later, I'm using a Kingston 16gb, just doesn't want to work, does the windows partition need to be at the end of the drive?
Wonder if its the windows 7 compatibility problem with my SD
Hey there!
First I wanna thank you for this decent tutorial, very detailed.
Then I have a few questions:
1. When copyying the unformatted partition from smaller to larger card, did you resize it too? Right now I didn't so I will have 3 partitions on the larger card when I'm finished (3rd is a small piece appr. 200MB large). If one would resize the unformatted partition one could use the whole storage of the larger card...
2. I`m on step 8 right now (8. Using same procedure as outlined in 7, copy the “unformatted” partition from your smaller sd card to the larger sd card. Click “apply”.)
Is it normal that this takes forever (appr. 1% per minute)??
Greetz
Dom
DJGurth said:
I'll take another look later, I'm using a Kingston 16gb, just doesn't want to work, does the windows partition need to be at the end of the drive?
Wonder if its the windows 7 compatibility problem with my SD
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The windows partition needs to be at the beginning of the drive. See picture in 1st post. If it is not, your card may not show up on your pc.
Might be an issue with the sd card. Not all are working with wp7. Sandisk seems to be the safe bet for wp7. See posts in the wp7 forum about sd cards.
Thanks
Sry, screw question 1. Just saw on the attached pic of yours that you have 3 partitions as well...
I have only tried with resizing the fat 16 partition to a larger fat 32 partition so that all the sd card would be used.
Yes the process is very slow.
I've been looking around but can't seem to find the answer to this. I have rooted my NT with a 4GB SDCard. I would like to switch to a larger card. Can I turn off my NT, remove the 4GB card. copy everything from the card to a 16 or 32 GB card, and then insert the new card and restart the NT?
If that won't work, how can I do this?
Thanks,
Bob
Turn off NT, remove the 4GB card. copy everything from the card to a 16 or 32 GB card. Must be working.
If your using this sdcard to boot from, you are probably going to have to make that partition bootable as well. Usually the windows partition abilities are pretty limited so you'll have to use one of those free partition tools out there.
I'm not booting from the SDCard - so does that mean i can change the card by simply copying all the files to the new card?
Bob
Yeah just copy everything from the 4gb card to the 32gb card and everything will work just fine
Hi all, I am new to android but have tried to do a CM7 boot by writing the CM7 Final image to my sd card using WinDisk. It states that it will corrupt the physical device but I proceed with the writing of image. After doing so, I boot my NT and it works perfectly in CM7. However, when I remove the SD card from my NT and wanted to transfer files over to my SD card, I realised the storage size is reduced to 190MB.
Is there a way to free up the storage size but my NT can still boot CM7 off the SD card?
I am using a 16gb class 4 microsd card and will like to see if there's any ways to solve the problem.
Thank you.
Bumping this I have the same problem. I know you can partion it with a main active partion, but is there away to do it without formatting the SD card? Mine also has 190mb
Sent from my Nook Tablet using xda premium
I'm not sure what CM7's capable of using but you *can* use GParted to expand existing partitions or create partitions in the unallocated part of the card without affecting the system partition. I'm not sure that expanding the system partition would be of much use as I don't think you'll find many apps that can access it so creating another volume/partition is the best bet. Can't help with how to mount it so it's usable by all of your apps...
hhhshadydave said:
Bumping this I have the same problem. I know you can partion it with a main active partion, but is there away to do it without formatting the SD card? Mine also has 190mb
Sent from my Nook Tablet using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Bumped as well, can't find the answer anywhere else.
Use this tool here to repartition your SD card:
http://www.partitionwizard.com/download.html
It's very easy to use. You can just delete the partitions of space that aren't being used so that they become unallocated space. Then you're free to merge with another partition or create another.
Let me know if you have any questions.
Just a note to anyone who needs Ext* or exFAT support, Partition Wizard only supports FAT(like FAT16, FAT32) and NTFS filesystems.
I wanted to create a new partition on the unallocated space in partition wizard but it requires me to change one partition to logical first.
I am kinda lost as I wasn't sure which method is best to obtain.
I will be generally pleased if anyone can provide me with instruction/screenshot in doing so.
Your help is largely appreciated.
Thanks
ivantohxm89 said:
I wanted to create a new partition on the unallocated space in partition wizard but it requires me to change one partition to logical first.
I am kinda lost as I wasn't sure which method is best to obtain.
I will be generally pleased if anyone can provide me with instruction/screenshot in doing so.
Your help is largely appreciated.
Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I do believe you can only have 4 primary partitions on a hard disk.
Bumping this.
I only get 1.3Gb of storage with CNMod on a 32Gb card (original B&N stuff intact). Tried using ROM Manager to repartition the card and load a previously backed up CNMod image with clockwork recovery -- same result. Pretty frustrating...
nedomacho said:
Bumping this.
I only get 1.3Gb of storage with CNMod on a 32Gb card (original B&N stuff intact). Tried using ROM Manager to repartition the card and load a previously backed up CNMod image with clockwork recovery -- same result. Pretty frustrating...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Use EaseUS.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=23924959&postcount=455
The problem is windows...
I don't think this is addressing the main issue. You have to understand how Windows is reading the sd card, and how the CM7 boot disk is setup. There are 4 partitions on the CM7 boot disk. The first is the actual boot information. This is a vfat formatted partition that is <200MB. The next 2 partitions are system related for the OS. The 4th and last partition is the one that is used as the actual SDCARD in CM7.
The problem is that Windows can ONLY mount the first partition on a removable device. I have not been able to find a method to mount the 4th partition (in windows), which is the resized data partition for the bootable disk.
I would suggest installing a Virtual Box version of Ubuntu and mounting the SD card from there and transferring files through Ubuntu.
Yes, you can mount the SD card when attaching the Nook via USB, but the difference in transfer speed is a joke. I get 2.5MB usb, vs 10MB with a card reader.
I hope this helps.
Bump... I am hoping to get the rest of the storage space on my SD card.
On another note, assuming running CM7 on SD card, there a thread that walk us thru to free the NT's internal memory from the 1gb limit from the B&N?
Thanks
rvr350 said:
Bump... I am hoping to get the rest of the storage space on my SD card.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
All you have to do is merge the unallocated space that was left on your SD with the last partition the CM7 image created.
rvr350 said:
On another note, assuming running CM7 on SD card, there a thread that walk us thru to free the NT's internal memory from the 1gb limit from the B&N?
Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is the thread walking you through repartitioning the internal memory:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1531120
Solar.Plexus said:
All you have to do is merge the unallocated space that was left on your SD with the last partition the CM7 image created.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As i'm using windows, it only can see the first partition on SD card, someone mentions virtual box with ubuntu? Is there other method out there? Right now, there are actually 5 partitions on your SD card:
1st partition) capacity 190mb, FAT 32, primary, active
2nd partition) capacity 763 mb, Ext3, primary, none
3rd partition) capacity 1.4 gb, ext 3, primary, none
4th partition) capacity 1.3 gb, fat32, primary, none
5th partition) capacity 11.1 gb, unallocated, logical, none
As you can see, it is from a 16gb SD card, I'm sure the last 2 partitions are what I need to merge and make it visible to windows. Any suggestions?
Use easeus partition manager.
Sent from my BNTV250A using XDA
rvr350 said:
As i'm using windows, it only can see the first partition on SD card, someone mentions virtual box with ubuntu? Is there other method out there? Right now, there are actually 5 partitions on your SD card:
1st partition) capacity 190mb, FAT 32, primary, active
2nd partition) capacity 763 mb, Ext3, primary, none
3rd partition) capacity 1.4 gb, ext 3, primary, none
4th partition) capacity 1.3 gb, fat32, primary, none
5th partition) capacity 11.1 gb, unallocated, logical, none
As you can see, it is from a 16gb SD card, I'm sure the last 2 partitions are what I need to merge and make it visible to windows. Any suggestions?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just to confirm, drymer is correct. You can use either software EASEUS or Partition Wizard on your Windows operating system to combine your 4th and 5th partition.
Can I use the partition tools if im on alberts abd rom w stock 1.4.0? or i have to be on cm7?
Solar.Plexus said:
Just to confirm, drymer is correct. You can use either software EASEUS or Partition Wizard on your Windows operating system to combine your 4th and 5th partition.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hmm, let me keep trying. Easeus won't let me combine logical and primary partition, i.e. the 5th and the 4th partition. Is there another method out there?
rvr350 said:
Hmm, let me keep trying. Easeus won't let me combine logical and primary partition, i.e. the 5th and the 4th partition. Is there another method out there?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hmmm, it should just let you extend the 4th partition with all of the unallocated space directly after it. Just by choosing the 4th partition, select resize, and choose how much you want to extend it by.
I got the sd card to read up to 12 gb now (out of 16 gb) in root explorer, but is there a way for it to show up under windows?
Hey guys, I used ALberts method for rooting using the micro SD card and now im kinda sad. Im sad because I deleted everything off of my 32gb micro SD card and now it's only showing that it has 76MB on it. I reformatted and it still is only showing 76mb. Anyone know how I can have mah SD card back lol?
htcdesirezgeorge said:
Hey guys, I used ALberts method for rooting using the micro SD card and now im kinda sad. Im sad because I deleted everything off of my 32gb micro SD card and now it's only showing that it has 76MB on it. I reformatted and it still is only showing 76mb. Anyone know how I can have mah SD card back lol?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
wow, really sorry to hear you're having some bad luck... what formatter ? is it SDFORMATTER31 ?
https://www.sdcard.org/downloads/formatter_3/
htcdesirezgeorge said:
Hey guys, I used ALberts method for rooting using the micro SD card and now im kinda sad. Im sad because I deleted everything off of my 32gb micro SD card and now it's only showing that it has 76MB on it. I reformatted and it still is only showing 76mb. Anyone know how I can have mah SD card back lol?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I had the same frustration and figured there was some magic I didn't understand re: image files. I "believe" that the image you select with the windows disk imager (Win32DiskImager.exe), which I believe is named cwm_sd_flashing_boot.img controls how much free space is left. In other words, that image is only around 70 MB or so, and when you transfer the image to the USB, that's all you get.
I was using a 2G SD, so no big loss, but when I went to place the .zip file for CM9, there wasn't enough free space available. What I did was copied the CM9 zip and gapps zip to yet another SD, booted up with the original 70 MB SD and then popped in the larger SD when asked to select the zip to flash in CWM. It worked.
Since then, I realized that all you have to do is format your larger SD as a bootable FAT32 drive, ie, set the boot and lda flags, then copy "all" the files that were in the original SD drive. After trying to puzzle it out for two days, I got it working tonight.
For me, I just formatted a 16 GB SD as bootable and then added all the zip files I'd need, and will use that SD in the future for CM9 and other upgrades.
As far as how to make a bootable drive, I use linux (and dual boot windows 7) and used the gparted program as recommended by indirect. It allows you to set the boot and lda flags which I guess is all you need to make the drive bootable. I have no idea how to get windows to do that without some other app. You can always create a gparted live CD and boot into it.
Good luck.
PS The files I found I needed on the SD to make it boot are
boot.img
flashing_boot.img
MLO
u-boot.bin
...as well as Gapps_and_root.zip and any other zips you want to load.
I'm not sure of MLO and u-boot.bin, but I put them in and it works.
PPS I also found that if you leave the USB connected to your computer, it will boot right into the SD. If not, you probably have to do the power and N buttons at the same time thing.
Recovering SD Capacity
I had the same problem, but then I read somewhere that if you just use the NT clear SDCARD / dismount while the MicroSD is still in the NT (of course), it will revert back to it's original capacity.
Worked for me...I can look through the menus and get step by step instructions if you can't follow the crappy way I described it above.
Lol, thanks for the advice guys! I'll try it, hopefully Im not screwed
Hello. Well I just rooted my 16 gig Nook Tablet. THe instructions said to write the img onto a micro sd card of at least 2 gigs. Problem is, the instructions didn't mention that after flashing(or burning or whatever it's called) the img file onto the microsd card that it would lose space :crying:. My 32gig card now only says about 2 gigs. I was wondering if anyone can help me undo this? Sorry if its been asked already. Couldnt really think of a way of searching this problem without a lengthy paragraph. Thanks in advance for any help. And please, please help.
Basically the card takes the size of the burned image. The nook color dudes actually have images of different sizes (2gb, 4gb, 8gb, 16gb, 32gb) that allow you to burn the proper image size to the proper sized card and keep the extra space.
What you need to do now is either expand the card (this will allow you to access the rest of the card while keeping the burned image on there as well) or simply reformat it, which will result in the card being restored to its full size. There are guides around for both methods but basically search for either "expand sd card or format sd card."
The key part is, your card is not permanently small, so don't worry.
The partitions on the SD card cannot be changed under Windows, however, there is a nice Linux tool available (GPartet), which can be used to expand the card to its original size.
in windows you can repartition easily, you need to use this
http://www.partitionwizard.com/free-partition-manager.html
and just either expand the initial partiion or make another partition with the rest of the space