Welcome to Vista Banter. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to ask questions and reply to others posts, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support. |
|
Hardware and Windows Vista Hardware issues in relation to Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices) |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
Partition Swapping
XPS/Dimension 630i.
This came with a 600GB HDD and I added a 1.5TB HDD. The 600 came with Vista and I created a 100GB partition on the 1.5TB for Windows 7. I now want to place 7 on the 600GB and move Vista to the 100GB partition. I've imaged both the 600GB and 100GB separately using Acronis. Can I use the Windows 7 image and restore it to the 600GB HDD and vise versa? -- "Don't pick a fight with an old man. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you." |
|
|||
Partition Swapping
The 1.5. tb drive is much faster at read/writes than the 600gb clunker.
Keep Win 7 on the 1.5 tb drive and resize it to a larger partition---W7 and Vista have the tools for this. If you insist on moving an OS move Vista to a partition on the 1.5 TB drive. If you prefer Vista to Win 7, the more I use Win7 the more it seems like Vista SP3, you should see a few seconds shaved off your boot times using the1.5tb drive, but that's about it. If you keep the two OSes on separate hard drives and move the virtual drive to the non-OS drive for each you may actually find overall faster performance. Bottom line: why do you want to do what you want to do? |
|
|||
Partition Swapping
The 1.5. tb drive is much faster at read/writes than the 600gb clunker.
Keep Win 7 on the 1.5 tb drive and resize it to a larger partition---W7 and Vista have the tools for this. If you insist on moving an OS move Vista to a partition on the 1.5 TB drive. If you prefer Vista to Win 7, the more I use Win7 the more it seems like Vista SP3, you should see a few seconds shaved off your boot times using the1.5tb drive, but that's about it. If you keep the two OSes on separate hard drives and move the virtual drive to the non-OS drive for each you may actually find overall faster performance. Bottom line: why do you want to do what you want to do? |
|
|||
Partition Swapping
"igotsaurus" wrote in message
... The 1.5. tb drive is much faster at read/writes than the 600gb clunker. Keep Win 7 on the 1.5 tb drive and resize it to a larger partition---W7 and Vista have the tools for this. If you insist on moving an OS move Vista to a partition on the 1.5 TB drive. If you prefer Vista to Win 7, the more I use Win7 the more it seems like Vista SP3, you should see a few seconds shaved off your boot times using the1.5tb drive, but that's about it. If you keep the two OSes on separate hard drives and move the virtual drive to the non-OS drive for each you may actually find overall faster performance. Bottom line: why do you want to do what you want to do? I'm using Windows 7 about 95% of the time. Basically, I use Vista because their version of Movie Maker is much better than the Windows Live version. I do a lot of video/photo editing and encoding for friends and family. I originally bought the 1.5TB drive for storage, but I decided to dual boot with Windows 7 RC just for the hell of it. I liked it so much I purchased Ultimate and upgraded the RC. I was going to resize the 1.5 drive, but disk management won't open in Windows 7. I get an error saying it couldn't connect to the Virtual Disk Service, so I have to do everything through Vista. I'd like to keep both OS's on the smaller drive and use the full 1.5TB for storage. I was also reading something about having a problem with Windows Boot Manager if I move both OS's to the 600GB drive. I'm not totally computer illiterate, but when it comes to this stuff I'm still green. Thanks for replying. -- "Don't pick a fight with an old man. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you." |
|
|||
Partition Swapping
"igotsaurus" wrote in message
... The 1.5. tb drive is much faster at read/writes than the 600gb clunker. Keep Win 7 on the 1.5 tb drive and resize it to a larger partition---W7 and Vista have the tools for this. If you insist on moving an OS move Vista to a partition on the 1.5 TB drive. If you prefer Vista to Win 7, the more I use Win7 the more it seems like Vista SP3, you should see a few seconds shaved off your boot times using the1.5tb drive, but that's about it. If you keep the two OSes on separate hard drives and move the virtual drive to the non-OS drive for each you may actually find overall faster performance. Bottom line: why do you want to do what you want to do? I'm using Windows 7 about 95% of the time. Basically, I use Vista because their version of Movie Maker is much better than the Windows Live version. I do a lot of video/photo editing and encoding for friends and family. I originally bought the 1.5TB drive for storage, but I decided to dual boot with Windows 7 RC just for the hell of it. I liked it so much I purchased Ultimate and upgraded the RC. I was going to resize the 1.5 drive, but disk management won't open in Windows 7. I get an error saying it couldn't connect to the Virtual Disk Service, so I have to do everything through Vista. I'd like to keep both OS's on the smaller drive and use the full 1.5TB for storage. I was also reading something about having a problem with Windows Boot Manager if I move both OS's to the 600GB drive. I'm not totally computer illiterate, but when it comes to this stuff I'm still green. Thanks for replying. -- "Don't pick a fight with an old man. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you." |
|
|||
Partition Swapping
On Sat, 30 Jan 2010 07:49:06 -0500, "Michael"
wrote: XPS/Dimension 630i. This came with a 600GB HDD and I added a 1.5TB HDD. The 600 came with Vista and I created a 100GB partition on the 1.5TB for Windows 7. I now want to place 7 on the 600GB and move Vista to the 100GB partition. I've imaged both the 600GB and 100GB separately using Acronis. Can I use the Windows 7 image and restore it to the 600GB HDD and vise versa? It can be done, but not simply as merely restoring each image on the other drive. Each drive has a unique disk signature located in its MBR. Each installed operating system identifies the hard drives by their disk signatures contained in the MountedDevices data field in the registry. So even if the operating system is moved to the other drive, it's still is going to think it's running on its old drive when it detects it by the disk signature. The easiest fix for this problem is to swap the disk signatures using a utility such as MBRWizard. If you want to continue booting from the 600GB drive, you have to create the BCD on it. If you want an understanding of what's required to make this work, Google mbr disk signature, and mounteddevices disk signature. |
|
|||
Partition Swapping
On Sat, 30 Jan 2010 07:49:06 -0500, "Michael"
wrote: XPS/Dimension 630i. This came with a 600GB HDD and I added a 1.5TB HDD. The 600 came with Vista and I created a 100GB partition on the 1.5TB for Windows 7. I now want to place 7 on the 600GB and move Vista to the 100GB partition. I've imaged both the 600GB and 100GB separately using Acronis. Can I use the Windows 7 image and restore it to the 600GB HDD and vise versa? It can be done, but not simply as merely restoring each image on the other drive. Each drive has a unique disk signature located in its MBR. Each installed operating system identifies the hard drives by their disk signatures contained in the MountedDevices data field in the registry. So even if the operating system is moved to the other drive, it's still is going to think it's running on its old drive when it detects it by the disk signature. The easiest fix for this problem is to swap the disk signatures using a utility such as MBRWizard. If you want to continue booting from the 600GB drive, you have to create the BCD on it. If you want an understanding of what's required to make this work, Google mbr disk signature, and mounteddevices disk signature. |
|
|||
Partition Swapping
"andy" wrote in message
... On Sat, 30 Jan 2010 07:49:06 -0500, "Michael" wrote: XPS/Dimension 630i. This came with a 600GB HDD and I added a 1.5TB HDD. The 600 came with Vista and I created a 100GB partition on the 1.5TB for Windows 7. I now want to place 7 on the 600GB and move Vista to the 100GB partition. I've imaged both the 600GB and 100GB separately using Acronis. Can I use the Windows 7 image and restore it to the 600GB HDD and vise versa? It can be done, but not simply as merely restoring each image on the other drive. Each drive has a unique disk signature located in its MBR. Each installed operating system identifies the hard drives by their disk signatures contained in the MountedDevices data field in the registry. So even if the operating system is moved to the other drive, it's still is going to think it's running on its old drive when it detects it by the disk signature. The easiest fix for this problem is to swap the disk signatures using a utility such as MBRWizard. If you want to continue booting from the 600GB drive, you have to create the BCD on it. If you want an understanding of what's required to make this work, Google mbr disk signature, and mounteddevices disk signature. Thanks. -- "Don't pick a fight with an old man. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you." |
|
|||
Partition Swapping
"andy" wrote in message
... On Sat, 30 Jan 2010 07:49:06 -0500, "Michael" wrote: XPS/Dimension 630i. This came with a 600GB HDD and I added a 1.5TB HDD. The 600 came with Vista and I created a 100GB partition on the 1.5TB for Windows 7. I now want to place 7 on the 600GB and move Vista to the 100GB partition. I've imaged both the 600GB and 100GB separately using Acronis. Can I use the Windows 7 image and restore it to the 600GB HDD and vise versa? It can be done, but not simply as merely restoring each image on the other drive. Each drive has a unique disk signature located in its MBR. Each installed operating system identifies the hard drives by their disk signatures contained in the MountedDevices data field in the registry. So even if the operating system is moved to the other drive, it's still is going to think it's running on its old drive when it detects it by the disk signature. The easiest fix for this problem is to swap the disk signatures using a utility such as MBRWizard. If you want to continue booting from the 600GB drive, you have to create the BCD on it. If you want an understanding of what's required to make this work, Google mbr disk signature, and mounteddevices disk signature. Thanks. -- "Don't pick a fight with an old man. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you." |