Outlook Banter

Outlook Banter (http://www.outlookbanter.com/)
-   Outlook - General Queries (http://www.outlookbanter.com/outlook-general-queries/)
-   -   Outlook 2003 limit on .pst file size (http://www.outlookbanter.com/outlook-general-queries/74694-outlook-2003-limit-pst-file.html)

James Truelove July 6th 08 10:48 AM

Outlook 2003 limit on .pst file size
 
Hi All

I use Outlook 2003 at work and my .pst file is on a LAN server personal
folder so I can access my .pst file from whatever conference room I am
having a meeting in. I created a personal folder with subfolders so I can
save my emails in individual folders dedicated to a particular subject.
Outlook occasionally tells me my .pst file has grown too big (1.9 Gig) and I
have to delete some emails with shift/delete before I can move any more
emails from my inbox.

I have considered archiving old emails but the automatic archiving only
seems to work in the inbox not the personal folders?

Can anyone suggest anything? Any help would be appreciated.

James


neo [mvp outlook] July 6th 08 02:56 PM

Outlook 2003 limit on .pst file size
 
It does work on all folders, you just have to turn it on for the folders in
the PST. For example, right click on a folder and select properties. Go to
the archive tab to set your preference.

Since you are using Outlook 2003, have you considered using unicode rather
than ansi type PST files? Reason I ask is that the new unicode PST file
allows a size up to 20GBytes. To see if you have both types available to
you, select File New Outlook data file. You should see two entries
here. The first one (Office Outlook Personal Folders File) is the one that
can allow up to 20GBytes of data. The second one (Outlook 97/2002 Personal
Folders) is the one that is limited to 2.0 GBytes.

Might be worth the effort to create a new PST file and move the items from
the old PST to the new.

"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
Hi All

I use Outlook 2003 at work and my .pst file is on a LAN server personal
folder so I can access my .pst file from whatever conference room I am
having a meeting in. I created a personal folder with subfolders so I can
save my emails in individual folders dedicated to a particular subject.
Outlook occasionally tells me my .pst file has grown too big (1.9 Gig) and
I have to delete some emails with shift/delete before I can move any more
emails from my inbox.

I have considered archiving old emails but the automatic archiving only
seems to work in the inbox not the personal folders?

Can anyone suggest anything? Any help would be appreciated.

James




James Truelove July 6th 08 03:35 PM

Outlook 2003 limit on .pst file size
 
"neo [mvp outlook]" wrote in message
...
It does work on all folders, you just have to turn it on for the folders
in the PST. For example, right click on a folder and select properties.
Go to the archive tab to set your preference.

Since you are using Outlook 2003, have you considered using unicode rather
than ansi type PST files? Reason I ask is that the new unicode PST file
allows a size up to 20GBytes. To see if you have both types available to
you, select File New Outlook data file. You should see two entries
here. The first one (Office Outlook Personal Folders File) is the one
that can allow up to 20GBytes of data. The second one (Outlook 97/2002
Personal Folders) is the one that is limited to 2.0 GBytes.

Might be worth the effort to create a new PST file and move the items from
the old PST to the new.

"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
Hi All

I use Outlook 2003 at work and my .pst file is on a LAN server personal
folder so I can access my .pst file from whatever conference room I am
having a meeting in. I created a personal folder with subfolders so I can
save my emails in individual folders dedicated to a particular subject.
Outlook occasionally tells me my .pst file has grown too big (1.9 Gig)
and I have to delete some emails with shift/delete before I can move any
more emails from my inbox.

I have considered archiving old emails but the automatic archiving only
seems to work in the inbox not the personal folders?

Can anyone suggest anything? Any help would be appreciated.

James




Thanks for the tip. I will try this. Many thanks for responding.
James


p[_3_] July 6th 08 03:38 PM

Outlook 2003 limit on .pst file size
 
neo [mvp outlook] wrote:
It does work on all folders, you just have to turn it on for the folders in
the PST. For example, right click on a folder and select properties. Go to
the archive tab to set your preference.

Since you are using Outlook 2003, have you considered using unicode rather
than ansi type PST files? Reason I ask is that the new unicode PST file
allows a size up to 20GBytes. To see if you have both types available to
you, select File New Outlook data file. You should see two entries
here. The first one (Office Outlook Personal Folders File) is the one that
can allow up to 20GBytes of data. The second one (Outlook 97/2002 Personal
Folders) is the one that is limited to 2.0 GBytes.

Might be worth the effort to create a new PST file and move the items from
the old PST to the new.



Doesn't Outlook 2003 come with the unicode one by default?

P

"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
Hi All

I use Outlook 2003 at work and my .pst file is on a LAN server personal
folder so I can access my .pst file from whatever conference room I am
having a meeting in. I created a personal folder with subfolders so I can
save my emails in individual folders dedicated to a particular subject.
Outlook occasionally tells me my .pst file has grown too big (1.9 Gig) and
I have to delete some emails with shift/delete before I can move any more
emails from my inbox.

I have considered archiving old emails but the automatic archiving only
seems to work in the inbox not the personal folders?

Can anyone suggest anything? Any help would be appreciated.

James




James Truelove July 6th 08 04:18 PM

Outlook 2003 limit on .pst file size
 
"p" wrote in message ...
neo [mvp outlook] wrote:
It does work on all folders, you just have to turn it on for the folders
in the PST. For example, right click on a folder and select properties.
Go to the archive tab to set your preference.

Since you are using Outlook 2003, have you considered using unicode
rather than ansi type PST files? Reason I ask is that the new unicode
PST file allows a size up to 20GBytes. To see if you have both types
available to you, select File New Outlook data file. You should see
two entries here. The first one (Office Outlook Personal Folders File)
is the one that can allow up to 20GBytes of data. The second one
(Outlook 97/2002 Personal Folders) is the one that is limited to 2.0
GBytes.

Might be worth the effort to create a new PST file and move the items
from the old PST to the new.



Doesn't Outlook 2003 come with the unicode one by default?

P

"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
Hi All

I use Outlook 2003 at work and my .pst file is on a LAN server personal
folder so I can access my .pst file from whatever conference room I am
having a meeting in. I created a personal folder with subfolders so I
can save my emails in individual folders dedicated to a particular
subject. Outlook occasionally tells me my .pst file has grown too big
(1.9 Gig) and I have to delete some emails with shift/delete before I
can move any more emails from my inbox.

I have considered archiving old emails but the automatic archiving only
seems to work in the inbox not the personal folders?

Can anyone suggest anything? Any help would be appreciated.

James



I upgraded from Outlook 2002 to Outlook 2003 a few months ago so I guess I
was stuck with the older 2gig limit on my existing .pst file. I will create
a new 2003 data file and move my existing email folders over as suggested by
neo.
James


DL July 6th 08 04:19 PM

Outlook 2003 limit on .pst file size
 
Outlook 2003 uses unicode by default, so unless you have ported over the
data file from a previous version of Outllook your data file will be unicode
Rt click Personal Folders, select PropertiesAdvanced, if under Format: it
states 'personal folders file' then it is a unicode data file.
Outlook doesnt give any oversize warning, unless I believe, the max file
size has been implimented in the registry, in an exchange invironment it may
give a warning.

However; MS doesnt support the use of a pst over a network as it can lead to
corruption of the pst.

"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
"neo [mvp outlook]" wrote in message
...
It does work on all folders, you just have to turn it on for the folders
in the PST. For example, right click on a folder and select properties.
Go to the archive tab to set your preference.

Since you are using Outlook 2003, have you considered using unicode
rather than ansi type PST files? Reason I ask is that the new unicode
PST file allows a size up to 20GBytes. To see if you have both types
available to you, select File New Outlook data file. You should see
two entries here. The first one (Office Outlook Personal Folders File)
is the one that can allow up to 20GBytes of data. The second one
(Outlook 97/2002 Personal Folders) is the one that is limited to 2.0
GBytes.

Might be worth the effort to create a new PST file and move the items
from the old PST to the new.

"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
Hi All

I use Outlook 2003 at work and my .pst file is on a LAN server personal
folder so I can access my .pst file from whatever conference room I am
having a meeting in. I created a personal folder with subfolders so I
can save my emails in individual folders dedicated to a particular
subject. Outlook occasionally tells me my .pst file has grown too big
(1.9 Gig) and I have to delete some emails with shift/delete before I
can move any more emails from my inbox.

I have considered archiving old emails but the automatic archiving only
seems to work in the inbox not the personal folders?

Can anyone suggest anything? Any help would be appreciated.

James




Thanks for the tip. I will try this. Many thanks for responding.
James




James Truelove July 6th 08 04:26 PM

Outlook 2003 limit on .pst file size
 
"DL" address@invalid wrote in message
...
Outlook 2003 uses unicode by default, so unless you have ported over the
data file from a previous version of Outllook your data file will be
unicode
Rt click Personal Folders, select PropertiesAdvanced, if under Format: it
states 'personal folders file' then it is a unicode data file.
Outlook doesnt give any oversize warning, unless I believe, the max file
size has been implimented in the registry, in an exchange invironment it
may give a warning.

However; MS doesnt support the use of a pst over a network as it can lead
to corruption of the pst.

"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
"neo [mvp outlook]" wrote in message
...
It does work on all folders, you just have to turn it on for the folders
in the PST. For example, right click on a folder and select properties.
Go to the archive tab to set your preference.

Since you are using Outlook 2003, have you considered using unicode
rather than ansi type PST files? Reason I ask is that the new unicode
PST file allows a size up to 20GBytes. To see if you have both types
available to you, select File New Outlook data file. You should see
two entries here. The first one (Office Outlook Personal Folders File)
is the one that can allow up to 20GBytes of data. The second one
(Outlook 97/2002 Personal Folders) is the one that is limited to 2.0
GBytes.

Might be worth the effort to create a new PST file and move the items
from the old PST to the new.

"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
Hi All

I use Outlook 2003 at work and my .pst file is on a LAN server personal
folder so I can access my .pst file from whatever conference room I am
having a meeting in. I created a personal folder with subfolders so I
can save my emails in individual folders dedicated to a particular
subject. Outlook occasionally tells me my .pst file has grown too big
(1.9 Gig) and I have to delete some emails with shift/delete before I
can move any more emails from my inbox.

I have considered archiving old emails but the automatic archiving only
seems to work in the inbox not the personal folders?

Can anyone suggest anything? Any help would be appreciated.

James



Thanks for the tip. I will try this. Many thanks for responding.
James




I have been using a network location for my .pst file with no corruption
problems for about a year now.


DL July 6th 08 05:05 PM

Outlook 2003 limit on .pst file size
 
Be it on your head - I was simply pointed out that this configeration its
not supported by MS

"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
"DL" address@invalid wrote in message
...
Outlook 2003 uses unicode by default, so unless you have ported over the
data file from a previous version of Outllook your data file will be
unicode
Rt click Personal Folders, select PropertiesAdvanced, if under Format:
it states 'personal folders file' then it is a unicode data file.
Outlook doesnt give any oversize warning, unless I believe, the max file
size has been implimented in the registry, in an exchange invironment it
may give a warning.

However; MS doesnt support the use of a pst over a network as it can lead
to corruption of the pst.

"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
"neo [mvp outlook]" wrote in message
...
It does work on all folders, you just have to turn it on for the
folders in the PST. For example, right click on a folder and select
properties. Go to the archive tab to set your preference.

Since you are using Outlook 2003, have you considered using unicode
rather than ansi type PST files? Reason I ask is that the new unicode
PST file allows a size up to 20GBytes. To see if you have both types
available to you, select File New Outlook data file. You should
see two entries here. The first one (Office Outlook Personal Folders
File) is the one that can allow up to 20GBytes of data. The second one
(Outlook 97/2002 Personal Folders) is the one that is limited to 2.0
GBytes.

Might be worth the effort to create a new PST file and move the items
from the old PST to the new.

"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
Hi All

I use Outlook 2003 at work and my .pst file is on a LAN server
personal folder so I can access my .pst file from whatever conference
room I am having a meeting in. I created a personal folder with
subfolders so I can save my emails in individual folders dedicated to
a particular subject. Outlook occasionally tells me my .pst file has
grown too big (1.9 Gig) and I have to delete some emails with
shift/delete before I can move any more emails from my inbox.

I have considered archiving old emails but the automatic archiving
only seems to work in the inbox not the personal folders?

Can anyone suggest anything? Any help would be appreciated.

James



Thanks for the tip. I will try this. Many thanks for responding.
James




I have been using a network location for my .pst file with no corruption
problems for about a year now.




Gordon July 6th 08 08:13 PM

Outlook 2003 limit on .pst file size
 
"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
"DL" address@invalid wrote in message
...
Outlook 2003 uses unicode by default, so unless you have ported over the
data file from a previous version of Outllook your data file will be
unicode
Rt click Personal Folders, select PropertiesAdvanced, if under Format:
it states 'personal folders file' then it is a unicode data file.
Outlook doesnt give any oversize warning, unless I believe, the max file
size has been implimented in the registry, in an exchange invironment it
may give a warning.

However; MS doesnt support the use of a pst over a network as it can lead
to corruption of the pst.

"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
"neo [mvp outlook]" wrote in message
...
It does work on all folders, you just have to turn it on for the
folders in the PST. For example, right click on a folder and select
properties. Go to the archive tab to set your preference.

Since you are using Outlook 2003, have you considered using unicode
rather than ansi type PST files? Reason I ask is that the new unicode
PST file allows a size up to 20GBytes. To see if you have both types
available to you, select File New Outlook data file. You should
see two entries here. The first one (Office Outlook Personal Folders
File) is the one that can allow up to 20GBytes of data. The second one
(Outlook 97/2002 Personal Folders) is the one that is limited to 2.0
GBytes.

Might be worth the effort to create a new PST file and move the items
from the old PST to the new.

"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
Hi All

I use Outlook 2003 at work and my .pst file is on a LAN server
personal folder so I can access my .pst file from whatever conference
room I am having a meeting in. I created a personal folder with
subfolders so I can save my emails in individual folders dedicated to
a particular subject. Outlook occasionally tells me my .pst file has
grown too big (1.9 Gig) and I have to delete some emails with
shift/delete before I can move any more emails from my inbox.

I have considered archiving old emails but the automatic archiving
only seems to work in the inbox not the personal folders?

Can anyone suggest anything? Any help would be appreciated.

James



Thanks for the tip. I will try this. Many thanks for responding.
James




I have been using a network location for my .pst file with no corruption
problems for about a year now.



Then you have been very lucky.


James Truelove July 7th 08 06:31 PM

Outlook 2003 limit on .pst file size
 
"Gordon" wrote in message
...
"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
"DL" address@invalid wrote in message
...
Outlook 2003 uses unicode by default, so unless you have ported over the
data file from a previous version of Outllook your data file will be
unicode
Rt click Personal Folders, select PropertiesAdvanced, if under Format:
it states 'personal folders file' then it is a unicode data file.
Outlook doesnt give any oversize warning, unless I believe, the max file
size has been implimented in the registry, in an exchange invironment it
may give a warning.

However; MS doesnt support the use of a pst over a network as it can
lead to corruption of the pst.

"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
"neo [mvp outlook]" wrote in message
...
It does work on all folders, you just have to turn it on for the
folders in the PST. For example, right click on a folder and select
properties. Go to the archive tab to set your preference.

Since you are using Outlook 2003, have you considered using unicode
rather than ansi type PST files? Reason I ask is that the new unicode
PST file allows a size up to 20GBytes. To see if you have both types
available to you, select File New Outlook data file. You should
see two entries here. The first one (Office Outlook Personal Folders
File) is the one that can allow up to 20GBytes of data. The second
one (Outlook 97/2002 Personal Folders) is the one that is limited to
2.0 GBytes.

Might be worth the effort to create a new PST file and move the items
from the old PST to the new.

"James Truelove" wrote in message
...
Hi All

I use Outlook 2003 at work and my .pst file is on a LAN server
personal folder so I can access my .pst file from whatever conference
room I am having a meeting in. I created a personal folder with
subfolders so I can save my emails in individual folders dedicated to
a particular subject. Outlook occasionally tells me my .pst file has
grown too big (1.9 Gig) and I have to delete some emails with
shift/delete before I can move any more emails from my inbox.

I have considered archiving old emails but the automatic archiving
only seems to work in the inbox not the personal folders?

Can anyone suggest anything? Any help would be appreciated.

James



Thanks for the tip. I will try this. Many thanks for responding.
James



I have been using a network location for my .pst file with no corruption
problems for about a year now.



Then you have been very lucky.


Company servers are backed up every night so if the worst happens I can
recover the .pst file with minimal loss



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 03:46 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 2.4.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 OutlookBanter.com