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Changing boot drive
I've upgraded my machine at some point in the last year, where I added a new
500GB drive and moved my C: partition across to it. The previous 250GB drive was left in for additional storage. Just recently (while upgrading my BIOS) I realised that my system was still booting from the 250GB drive even though Windows was on the other disk. There is a fair possibility in the not too distant future that I'll replace the 250GB disk with a larger disk, in which case I won't be able to boot. Is there a safe and reliable way to change it so that the system boots from the 500GB disk? CJM |
Changing boot drive
FYI
The reason for this being that after cloneing a drive you have to shutdown, disconnect the old C drive, if neccessary set the new drive as master then reboot. Then shutdown a connect old drive as slave, before rebooting. Currently I would suspect your old drive is still C and your win drive has another letter I know how to correct this in winxp but unsure about the Vista process Its to do with the Master Boot record still being on the old C "CJM" wrote in message ... I've upgraded my machine at some point in the last year, where I added a new 500GB drive and moved my C: partition across to it. The previous 250GB drive was left in for additional storage. Just recently (while upgrading my BIOS) I realised that my system was still booting from the 250GB drive even though Windows was on the other disk. There is a fair possibility in the not too distant future that I'll replace the 250GB disk with a larger disk, in which case I won't be able to boot. Is there a safe and reliable way to change it so that the system boots from the 500GB disk? CJM |
Changing boot drive
"DL" address@invalid wrote in message ... FYI The reason for this being that after cloneing a drive you have to shutdown, disconnect the old C drive, if neccessary set the new drive as master then reboot. Then shutdown a connect old drive as slave, before rebooting. Currently I would suspect your old drive is still C and your win drive has another letter No, my windows partition is definitely C:... |
Changing boot drive
Hi,
The old drive is still the active one. You have to change the active volume in disk manager (diskmgmt.msc) and then run a startup repair, preferably with the old drive temporarily detached. -- Best of Luck, Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/ Windows help - www.rickrogers.org My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com "CJM" wrote in message ... I've upgraded my machine at some point in the last year, where I added a new 500GB drive and moved my C: partition across to it. The previous 250GB drive was left in for additional storage. Just recently (while upgrading my BIOS) I realised that my system was still booting from the 250GB drive even though Windows was on the other disk. There is a fair possibility in the not too distant future that I'll replace the 250GB disk with a larger disk, in which case I won't be able to boot. Is there a safe and reliable way to change it so that the system boots from the 500GB disk? CJM |
Changing boot drive
But that does not make it the boot drive.
"CJM" wrote in message ... "DL" address@invalid wrote in message ... FYI The reason for this being that after cloneing a drive you have to shutdown, disconnect the old C drive, if neccessary set the new drive as master then reboot. Then shutdown a connect old drive as slave, before rebooting. Currently I would suspect your old drive is still C and your win drive has another letter No, my windows partition is definitely C:... |
Changing boot drive
"Colin Barnhorst" wrote in message ... But that does not make it the boot drive. Quite. Which takes me back to my original question... How do I set the disk containing my current drive C to be the boot disk? |
Changing boot drive
"Rick Rogers" wrote in message ... Hi, The old drive is still the active one. You have to change the active volume in disk manager (diskmgmt.msc) and then run a startup repair, preferably with the old drive temporarily detached. Rick, I thought an active volume was the volume on a disk (containing one or more other volumes) that was marked as the bootable volume? That is, there can be one active volume per physical disk... [I've just checked... this is correct - one volume per disk can be marked as Active] I'm not sure what you mean by a 'startup repair'. Coul you please elaborate? Thanks Chris |
Changing boot drive
http://windowshelp.microsoft.com/Win...f3f351033.mspx
http://www.bleepingcomputer.com/tuto...torial148.html http://articles.techrepublic.com.com...1-6131173.html "CJM" wrote in message ... "Rick Rogers" wrote in message ... Hi, The old drive is still the active one. You have to change the active volume in disk manager (diskmgmt.msc) and then run a startup repair, preferably with the old drive temporarily detached. Rick, I thought an active volume was the volume on a disk (containing one or more other volumes) that was marked as the bootable volume? That is, there can be one active volume per physical disk... [I've just checked... this is correct - one volume per disk can be marked as Active] I'm not sure what you mean by a 'startup repair'. Coul you please elaborate? Thanks Chris |
Changing boot drive
None of this applies to the SATA interface
-- ---- Crosspost, do not multipost http://www.blakjak.demon.co.uk/mul_crss.htm How to ask a question http://support.microsoft.com/kb/555375 __________________________________________________ _______________________________ "DL" address@invalid wrote in message ... FYI The reason for this being that after cloneing a drive you have to shutdown, disconnect the old C drive, if neccessary set the new drive as master then reboot. Then shutdown a connect old drive as slave, before rebooting. Currently I would suspect your old drive is still C and your win drive has another letter |
Changing boot drive
First, a little terminology:
What you appear to be talking about is the "System" drive (which your BIOS will "boot" to, not the "Boot" drive which actually contains the system. You can easily check this by looking in Disk Manager and checlking which one is labeled as "System" and which is labeled "Boot" There are several ways to fix this, but the easiest is to copy from the "System" drive to the "Boot" drive: Bootmgr Boot directory Both of those are hidden/system so make sure you can view such files. Then, go into your machine's BIOS settings and change the Boot priority of the hard drives (there are several different terminologies so interpret this freely). Make the drive with your system on it (the "Boot" drive) the first in the drive sequence. Then boot from your dvd and choose "repair" instead of "Install" and fix up the boot files (I can't remember the exact terminology) CJM wrote: "Colin Barnhorst" wrote in message ... But that does not make it the boot drive. Quite. Which takes me back to my original question... How do I set the disk containing my current drive C to be the boot disk? |
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