F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Change the system and primary partition by following these steps.

Change the system and primary partition by following these steps.

Change the system and primary partition by following these steps.

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Sara_Sampaio
Member
138
02-03-2016, 02:44 AM
#1
Ich habe eine neue M.2 SSD installiert und möchte die alte SATA SSD entfernen. Das Problem ist, dass die SATA SSD sowohl als Systempartition als auch als Primärpartition dient. Sie ist nicht der Bootlaufwerk, da es eine weitere M.2 SSD gibt. In den Tutorials, die ich gefunden habe, geht es meist um das Zurücksetzen von Windows, was nicht mein Ziel ist. Wie entferne ich die SATA SSD ohne Probleme für Windows? Ich habe ein Bild des Windows-Disk-Management-Tools beigefügt, meine OS ist auf Deutsch, aber es sollte verständlich sein. Ich möchte die Volume namens "HDD" entfernen. "BOOT" ist das Boot-Laufwerk.
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Sara_Sampaio
02-03-2016, 02:44 AM #1

Ich habe eine neue M.2 SSD installiert und möchte die alte SATA SSD entfernen. Das Problem ist, dass die SATA SSD sowohl als Systempartition als auch als Primärpartition dient. Sie ist nicht der Bootlaufwerk, da es eine weitere M.2 SSD gibt. In den Tutorials, die ich gefunden habe, geht es meist um das Zurücksetzen von Windows, was nicht mein Ziel ist. Wie entferne ich die SATA SSD ohne Probleme für Windows? Ich habe ein Bild des Windows-Disk-Management-Tools beigefügt, meine OS ist auf Deutsch, aber es sollte verständlich sein. Ich möchte die Volume namens "HDD" entfernen. "BOOT" ist das Boot-Laufwerk.

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pocio77
Posting Freak
783
02-04-2016, 06:05 AM
#2
Obtain a cloning tool for your system. While AOMEI needs a license, there are alternatives that might work temporarily. You can create a complete clone of your old drive to the new one, and if needed, expand the user partitions to fit the larger drive.
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pocio77
02-04-2016, 06:05 AM #2

Obtain a cloning tool for your system. While AOMEI needs a license, there are alternatives that might work temporarily. You can create a complete clone of your old drive to the new one, and if needed, expand the user partitions to fit the larger drive.

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YodaStyle2001
Member
56
02-05-2016, 02:07 AM
#3
You should create a system, disk, or partition clone in AOMEI. The system requires a license while the other options are free.
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YodaStyle2001
02-05-2016, 02:07 AM #3

You should create a system, disk, or partition clone in AOMEI. The system requires a license while the other options are free.

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samnicholas34
Member
144
02-05-2016, 05:41 AM
#4
They employ a sector-by-sector cloning technique, while the initial method is quicker but unsuitable for boot disks.
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samnicholas34
02-05-2016, 05:41 AM #4

They employ a sector-by-sector cloning technique, while the initial method is quicker but unsuitable for boot disks.

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Hypocat
Member
59
02-05-2016, 08:49 PM
#5
AOMEI appears to open the license window repeatedly when attempting to start cloning, despite it being a free tool. Using DiskGenius seems to resolve the issue. After completing the cloning, can I simply shut down my PC, disconnect the SATA SSD, and everything function properly? EDIT: the clone finished but only copied its contents, not the system partition designation.
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Hypocat
02-05-2016, 08:49 PM #5

AOMEI appears to open the license window repeatedly when attempting to start cloning, despite it being a free tool. Using DiskGenius seems to resolve the issue. After completing the cloning, can I simply shut down my PC, disconnect the SATA SSD, and everything function properly? EDIT: the clone finished but only copied its contents, not the system partition designation.

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228
02-05-2016, 09:06 PM
#6
Did you mean to swap your boot drive? A straight partition copy might not be enough.
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EliteChicagoan
02-05-2016, 09:06 PM #6

Did you mean to swap your boot drive? A straight partition copy might not be enough.

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MiniKuukou
Junior Member
5
02-06-2016, 07:00 AM
#7
Used DiskGenius to duplicate each sector individually. Created a fresh partition matching the original sector size. Executed the boot command via cmd or PowerShell to start the process. Turned off the computer, removed the old SSD, and initiated the reboot.
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MiniKuukou
02-06-2016, 07:00 AM #7

Used DiskGenius to duplicate each sector individually. Created a fresh partition matching the original sector size. Executed the boot command via cmd or PowerShell to start the process. Turned off the computer, removed the old SSD, and initiated the reboot.