F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Absolutely excited! New PC time!

Absolutely excited! New PC time!

Absolutely excited! New PC time!

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sophiecakes24
Junior Member
13
05-26-2016, 07:40 AM
#1
Hello everyone, I’m ready to upgrade my setup. I already have a prebuilt system with a 500GB SSD, which is decent, but I love having multiple games for different friends. Do you think there’s a safe way to replace my current hard drive and get it working? I only have this drive now, so everything would be moved to it. I’m worried about making things go wrong and don’t want to risk losing anything important. I was considering formatting it once it arrives, but that would erase Windows 10. What’s your advice?
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sophiecakes24
05-26-2016, 07:40 AM #1

Hello everyone, I’m ready to upgrade my setup. I already have a prebuilt system with a 500GB SSD, which is decent, but I love having multiple games for different friends. Do you think there’s a safe way to replace my current hard drive and get it working? I only have this drive now, so everything would be moved to it. I’m worried about making things go wrong and don’t want to risk losing anything important. I was considering formatting it once it arrives, but that would erase Windows 10. What’s your advice?

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husker53
Posting Freak
802
05-26-2016, 09:38 AM
#2
I’ll keep it simple. I’m getting a prebuilt SSD with Windows already installed, not the full setup. I was a bit careless and bought something ready-made instead of building it myself. I just want a basic system to start with, but I’m a little worried about potential issues—like viruses or other problems—that could pop up. It’s still early days for me in this space compared to others.
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husker53
05-26-2016, 09:38 AM #2

I’ll keep it simple. I’m getting a prebuilt SSD with Windows already installed, not the full setup. I was a bit careless and bought something ready-made instead of building it myself. I just want a basic system to start with, but I’m a little worried about potential issues—like viruses or other problems—that could pop up. It’s still early days for me in this space compared to others.

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GrEeNxScREeN
Junior Member
35
05-26-2016, 10:17 AM
#3
Verify your goal by copying your old HDD to an SSD and then using the HDD as the backup drive. If this applies, download https://www.macrium.com/reflectfree. Install it on your HDD and mirror it to the SSD (this will erase the SSD). Then modify your bootloader in BIOS/UEFI so the SSD becomes the main boot device. After starting in Windows, the HDD will appear as a secondary drive. You may need to format it if necessary. Let me know if this helps.
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GrEeNxScREeN
05-26-2016, 10:17 AM #3

Verify your goal by copying your old HDD to an SSD and then using the HDD as the backup drive. If this applies, download https://www.macrium.com/reflectfree. Install it on your HDD and mirror it to the SSD (this will erase the SSD). Then modify your bootloader in BIOS/UEFI so the SSD becomes the main boot device. After starting in Windows, the HDD will appear as a secondary drive. You may need to format it if necessary. Let me know if this helps.

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MineSpelunker
Junior Member
23
05-26-2016, 10:31 AM
#4
Essentially, I'm checking if cleaning this HDD would cause any issues or if I should replace it with the new SSD. The current drive holds everything, so I'm concerned about performance and reliability. The new SSD likely comes pre-installed with Windows, which could save space and time. Just want more room on my PC without dealing with lots of setup steps.
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MineSpelunker
05-26-2016, 10:31 AM #4

Essentially, I'm checking if cleaning this HDD would cause any issues or if I should replace it with the new SSD. The current drive holds everything, so I'm concerned about performance and reliability. The new SSD likely comes pre-installed with Windows, which could save space and time. Just want more room on my PC without dealing with lots of setup steps.

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Bananotastisch
Junior Member
22
05-27-2016, 09:25 PM
#5
It makes sense to clear the drive if you're fine with retaining the existing SSD contents. Windows will assume the SSD is for the C drive.
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Bananotastisch
05-27-2016, 09:25 PM #5

It makes sense to clear the drive if you're fine with retaining the existing SSD contents. Windows will assume the SSD is for the C drive.