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Activating Windows 10 on a fresh system with a clean install

Activating Windows 10 on a fresh system with a clean install

3
331ms
Member
94
06-27-2016, 01:55 PM
#1
You've been using your Windows Ultimate OEM license for four years and recently upgraded to Windows 10. You made a bootable USB with Windows 10 Pro and backed up the activation details you thought would be needed later. You now have a Windows 7 OEM key linked to different hardware. You're wondering how to convert the old key for Windows 10 without losing your current installation. It seems there might be a way to update the key, but you're concerned about losing your recent upgrade.
3
331ms
06-27-2016, 01:55 PM #1

You've been using your Windows Ultimate OEM license for four years and recently upgraded to Windows 10. You made a bootable USB with Windows 10 Pro and backed up the activation details you thought would be needed later. You now have a Windows 7 OEM key linked to different hardware. You're wondering how to convert the old key for Windows 10 without losing your current installation. It seems there might be a way to update the key, but you're concerned about losing your recent upgrade.

K
KIRO_HD
Member
216
06-29-2016, 10:33 AM
#2
Upgrade your Windows 7 to Windows 10 to enable conversion. This is the required method. A clean installation is possible after the initial upgrade.
K
KIRO_HD
06-29-2016, 10:33 AM #2

Upgrade your Windows 7 to Windows 10 to enable conversion. This is the required method. A clean installation is possible after the initial upgrade.

S
Super_Horse
Junior Member
5
07-04-2016, 04:04 PM
#3
Start by upgrading from Windows 7 to Windows 10, ensuring it's properly activated. Next, carry out a clean installation; the process will handle activation automatically.
S
Super_Horse
07-04-2016, 04:04 PM #3

Start by upgrading from Windows 7 to Windows 10, ensuring it's properly activated. Next, carry out a clean installation; the process will handle activation automatically.

M
Menla
Junior Member
3
07-05-2016, 08:53 PM
#4
This restriction from Microsoft seems unnecessary. Simply converting the old key would suffice. Would it be possible to boot an older SSD using Windows 7 on new hardware, upgrade it, and then apply the upgraded key to another SSD within the same system?
M
Menla
07-05-2016, 08:53 PM #4

This restriction from Microsoft seems unnecessary. Simply converting the old key would suffice. Would it be possible to boot an older SSD using Windows 7 on new hardware, upgrade it, and then apply the upgraded key to another SSD within the same system?

T
TheBigPonySwag
Junior Member
7
07-07-2016, 05:18 PM
#5
there’s no key for 10—it’s all set up online automatically from your MS Windows 7. Your Win7 key is essentially useless; just install Windows 7 on the new PC and upgrade it to version 10, then perform a clean installation.
T
TheBigPonySwag
07-07-2016, 05:18 PM #5

there’s no key for 10—it’s all set up online automatically from your MS Windows 7. Your Win7 key is essentially useless; just install Windows 7 on the new PC and upgrade it to version 10, then perform a clean installation.

I
Itzsonzy
Member
172
07-08-2016, 04:26 AM
#6
These free upgrades are intended for users running Windows 7 or Windows 8.1. It’s important to verify your current version to ensure compatibility.
I
Itzsonzy
07-08-2016, 04:26 AM #6

These free upgrades are intended for users running Windows 7 or Windows 8.1. It’s important to verify your current version to ensure compatibility.

S
StyleTrick
Senior Member
744
07-22-2016, 12:59 PM
#7
You can likely boot from the Win10 partition again and activate it. The online activation will be tied to the hardware you used to install Windows 7, so having your old product key and ID confirms you own the previous version.
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StyleTrick
07-22-2016, 12:59 PM #7

You can likely boot from the Win10 partition again and activate it. The online activation will be tied to the hardware you used to install Windows 7, so having your old product key and ID confirms you own the previous version.

S
Smallcreeper
Junior Member
4
07-22-2016, 01:30 PM
#8
Could we simply restart from the Win10 partition and it take over? It seems possible...but I can't confirm. You might be able to modify the HDDs, though activation could still depend on the motherboard.
S
Smallcreeper
07-22-2016, 01:30 PM #8

Could we simply restart from the Win10 partition and it take over? It seems possible...but I can't confirm. You might be able to modify the HDDs, though activation could still depend on the motherboard.

J
jvdbreemen
Member
191
07-27-2016, 12:42 AM
#9
On OEM systems, Windows 8 users lack a product key. The key is kept on the UEFI chip. Product ID isn't sufficient as proof.
J
jvdbreemen
07-27-2016, 12:42 AM #9

On OEM systems, Windows 8 users lack a product key. The key is kept on the UEFI chip. Product ID isn't sufficient as proof.

L
Lem0n_Pie
Member
51
07-27-2016, 06:26 AM
#10
For reference, this should work if someone else encounters the same issue. I just replaced the old SSD with the new one in the updated PC, followed the full update procedure (making sure to pick the correct boot device during installation), and it started on its own. After taking out the old drive and starting from the new SSD with Win10 already installed, it detected the activation automatically and is now running smoothly.
L
Lem0n_Pie
07-27-2016, 06:26 AM #10

For reference, this should work if someone else encounters the same issue. I just replaced the old SSD with the new one in the updated PC, followed the full update procedure (making sure to pick the correct boot device during installation), and it started on its own. After taking out the old drive and starting from the new SSD with Win10 already installed, it detected the activation automatically and is now running smoothly.