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EasyUS Partition Master can't change MBR to GPT?

EasyUS Partition Master can't change MBR to GPT?

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brobear7
Posting Freak
892
06-30-2026, 08:18 PM
#11
Yeah, it makes sense that it would crash. But why? I am still wondering about that.
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brobear7
06-30-2026, 08:18 PM #11

Yeah, it makes sense that it would crash. But why? I am still wondering about that.

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ZytrexPlayzMC
Junior Member
19
07-02-2026, 10:56 AM
#12
Before you change anything on your hard drive, MBR2GPT checks if it's set up for MBR mode first. It makes sure there is enough room left for a new primary partition table (which uses 32KB of space) and a secondary GPT that takes up 48KB at the very start and 160KB at the end, plus some extra buffer. The program also checks that you don't have more than three main partitions in your disk layout, that one is marked as active (the system drive), and there are no hidden extended or logical parts hiding on your disk. It verifies that the BCD folder inside your main partition points to where the real operating system lives. Finally, it confirms that every existing drive letter matches a valid Windows format or gives you an option to fix the mapping with the /map command. If any of these rules aren't met right now, MBR2GPT will stop and give you an error message instead of making changes.
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ZytrexPlayzMC
07-02-2026, 10:56 AM #12

Before you change anything on your hard drive, MBR2GPT checks if it's set up for MBR mode first. It makes sure there is enough room left for a new primary partition table (which uses 32KB of space) and a secondary GPT that takes up 48KB at the very start and 160KB at the end, plus some extra buffer. The program also checks that you don't have more than three main partitions in your disk layout, that one is marked as active (the system drive), and there are no hidden extended or logical parts hiding on your disk. It verifies that the BCD folder inside your main partition points to where the real operating system lives. Finally, it confirms that every existing drive letter matches a valid Windows format or gives you an option to fix the mapping with the /map command. If any of these rules aren't met right now, MBR2GPT will stop and give you an error message instead of making changes.

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KermitTheCrab
Member
145
07-09-2026, 11:44 AM
#13
The reason behind why that person wants to do something isn't about failure—it's actually about the motivation for doing it in the first place. 😊
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KermitTheCrab
07-09-2026, 11:44 AM #13

The reason behind why that person wants to do something isn't about failure—it's actually about the motivation for doing it in the first place. 😊

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art4evr17
Junior Member
34
07-09-2026, 03:31 PM
#14
Right, because I can't easily turn the whole drive into a GPT format, that would wipe out everything in both partitions at once. But since I need to delete data from just one specific partition first, there is still an option here. The easiest way is using the MBR2GPT function, but EaseUS says it won't work because changing the environment doesn't support conversion. If "environment" means BIOS, then this could cause more problems. For example, if your BIOS isn't set for UEFI yet (even though the screen says you are), or if you have to update the BIOS just so that UEFI works properly, your storage drive might become useless because it will be in GPT format until I get a BIOS version that supports UEFI. Think about this: if I can't make sure UEFI is working first, then turning my drive into GPT could make my hard drive completely unusable. That's why I have to check whether the UEFI system actually works before trying to convert with MBR2GPT or using a third-party program.
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art4evr17
07-09-2026, 03:31 PM #14

Right, because I can't easily turn the whole drive into a GPT format, that would wipe out everything in both partitions at once. But since I need to delete data from just one specific partition first, there is still an option here. The easiest way is using the MBR2GPT function, but EaseUS says it won't work because changing the environment doesn't support conversion. If "environment" means BIOS, then this could cause more problems. For example, if your BIOS isn't set for UEFI yet (even though the screen says you are), or if you have to update the BIOS just so that UEFI works properly, your storage drive might become useless because it will be in GPT format until I get a BIOS version that supports UEFI. Think about this: if I can't make sure UEFI is working first, then turning my drive into GPT could make my hard drive completely unusable. That's why I have to check whether the UEFI system actually works before trying to convert with MBR2GPT or using a third-party program.

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SkatesPro
Junior Member
4
07-09-2026, 05:22 PM
#15
Sure enough, because I can't turn the whole drive into GPT without deleting everything in both partitions first, even though I only need to delete one part. But there is another option: use MBR2GPT, which is the easiest way. EaseUS says that changing just the partition settings won't work, but if "partition environment" means BIOS settings, then things could go wrong. What happens? If your computer's BIOS isn't ready for UEFI yet (even though it looks like it supports it on the screen) or needs an update to get UEFI working properly, the drive might break because it will be in GPT format until I fix that issue. So now I have to make sure the UEFI is actually working before trying to convert with MBR2GPT or some other software.
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SkatesPro
07-09-2026, 05:22 PM #15

Sure enough, because I can't turn the whole drive into GPT without deleting everything in both partitions first, even though I only need to delete one part. But there is another option: use MBR2GPT, which is the easiest way. EaseUS says that changing just the partition settings won't work, but if "partition environment" means BIOS settings, then things could go wrong. What happens? If your computer's BIOS isn't ready for UEFI yet (even though it looks like it supports it on the screen) or needs an update to get UEFI working properly, the drive might break because it will be in GPT format until I fix that issue. So now I have to make sure the UEFI is actually working before trying to convert with MBR2GPT or some other software.

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Binteufel13
Member
62
07-10-2026, 01:41 AM
#16
I have no idea what SkyNetRising said, but every MS requirement for setting up a partition using MBR2GPT is fine. When you start converting, it happens on the very first disk (Disk 0), so just ignore the second one (Disk 1).
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Binteufel13
07-10-2026, 01:41 AM #16

I have no idea what SkyNetRising said, but every MS requirement for setting up a partition using MBR2GPT is fine. When you start converting, it happens on the very first disk (Disk 0), so just ignore the second one (Disk 1).

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Neyome45
Member
66
07-10-2026, 10:29 AM
#17
SkyNetRising said this earlier, so your partition settings won't work if you use MBR2GPT. It also breaks when using EaseUs because of that same reason.
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Neyome45
07-10-2026, 10:29 AM #17

SkyNetRising said this earlier, so your partition settings won't work if you use MBR2GPT. It also breaks when using EaseUs because of that same reason.

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fuhqing
Member
180
07-11-2026, 10:41 PM
#18
Here’s an option back up all of your stuff and then install windows fresh by deleting all the partitions and formatting the drive first Oh wait you’re too lazy
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fuhqing
07-11-2026, 10:41 PM #18

Here’s an option back up all of your stuff and then install windows fresh by deleting all the partitions and formatting the drive first Oh wait you’re too lazy

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EmoTigerChild
Junior Member
16
07-11-2026, 11:52 PM
#19
Could you give us a bit more detail? Specifically, is this about how they are aligned? Or is it just getting easier to fix later?
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EmoTigerChild
07-11-2026, 11:52 PM #19

Could you give us a bit more detail? Specifically, is this about how they are aligned? Or is it just getting easier to fix later?

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pvp_creeper
Junior Member
5
07-14-2026, 05:25 AM
#20
You are going to have two problems with this setup. The first thing is that you need a different spot for the bootloader partition than where your Windows OS lives right now. It's currently all in one place, so Windows and the loader can't see each other. If you want it to work properly on an MS machine, here is what you should do: delete the recovery partitions from disk 0, move all the stuff inside drive D somewhere else, remove the D drive itself entirely, then create a new separate partition just for the bootloader (make sure it's Primary/Active NTFS and about 500MB big). Use the bcdboot command to put the loader files on that new spot, set your boot order so it starts from the 240GB drive, and finally run mbr2gpt utility.
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pvp_creeper
07-14-2026, 05:25 AM #20

You are going to have two problems with this setup. The first thing is that you need a different spot for the bootloader partition than where your Windows OS lives right now. It's currently all in one place, so Windows and the loader can't see each other. If you want it to work properly on an MS machine, here is what you should do: delete the recovery partitions from disk 0, move all the stuff inside drive D somewhere else, remove the D drive itself entirely, then create a new separate partition just for the bootloader (make sure it's Primary/Active NTFS and about 500MB big). Use the bcdboot command to put the loader files on that new spot, set your boot order so it starts from the 240GB drive, and finally run mbr2gpt utility.

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