> I've replaced several installations of Outlook 2000-2002 with 2003,
> largely because we needed to expand beyond the 2GB .PST file limit.
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
>
> I thought that Outlook 2003 had a 20GB limit. Did I miss something?
Yes. You missed the fact that the PST limit is inherent in the format of
the PST, not in Outlook.
> When I created the new .PST files in 2003 I chose the Outlook 97-2002
> file, because I thought that was needed. Should I have chosen the
> other choice (can't recall it right now)??
You shoujld have chosen the other format, since it is that format that has
the higher limitation.
> What procedure should I follow to "convert" the existing 1.75GB file
> to the new, larger format?
Posted in these newsgroups multiple times. Google Groups is your friend.

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Brian Tillman
Stephen Porter - 01 Feb 2006 02:08 GMT
Thanks...I'm figuring out now...a bit late.
Would it work to just make a copy of the current .PST file in another
location and then create a new data file inside Outlook that references that
copy. And of course choose the correct (new) file format? Then I could
change the default mail location and then close the original one?
For some reason I thought that I *HAD* to choose the original file format
and that Outlook 2003 would automatically convert. Wrong.
stp
> > I've replaced several installations of Outlook 2000-2002 with 2003,
> > largely because we needed to expand beyond the 2GB .PST file limit.
[quoted text clipped - 18 lines]
>
> Posted in these newsgroups multiple times. Google Groups is your friend.
Brian Tillman - 01 Feb 2006 23:35 GMT
> Would it work to just make a copy of the current .PST file in another
> location and then create a new data file inside Outlook that
> references that copy. And of course choose the correct (new) file
> format? Then I could change the default mail location and then
> close the original one?
A data file IS a PST. You can't create a "reference" from one PST to
another.
You have to create a new PST in the correct format, make it your delivery
location (if you're currently using a PST as the delivery location), and
then copy everything from the old one to the new one. For the non-default
folders, you can copy the entire folder. For the default folders, you have
to open each and copy the contents to the corresponding default folder in
the new PST. When you're done, you can close the old PST.

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