How to clone windows from HDD to SSD
How to clone windows from HDD to SSD
I recently installed an SSD in my PC and need to move the Windows 10 OS from the HDD to the SSD. The HDD has one 1TB drive (with Windows) and another with games and documents. The SSD is 500GB without partitions. I plan to create partitions on the SSD and transfer the Windows from the HDD drive into the SSD drive. I want to format the HDD drive completely afterward. Can you guide me through this process?
Easeus provides a backup solution along with a cloning option. This feature lets you duplicate the drive to smaller storage devices only when the data size on the primary drive doesn’t exceed the capacity of the secondary drive (in a practical sense).
Consider using Macrium Reflect or MiniTool Partition Wizard. Copy the C drive to an SSD, then boot from the SSD to remove the HDD partition. This method has been successful on two laptops with Macrium.
You must start from the SSD after the clone. You can remove the old partitions from the HDD. I used MiniTool Partition Wizard to delete and expand the HDD partition (it was quicker since I didn’t have to repeat steps), but you can also use the one that came with Windows. No problem, Windows will boot from the SSD option you pick in UEFI. Make sure to select the SSD for booting.
MiniTool Wizard will duplicate only the necessary system partitions" — selecting this option sends the HDD contents to the SSD. — When this occurs, will a new partition automatically be created on the SSD? Since your SSD is 500GB and your HDD is also 500GB, your documents and games stay unchanged. You just need to boot Windows from the SSD and it will function properly.
You might have received a Samsung drive. They provide a Data Migration tool for their SSDs, enabling you to transfer the entire drive and adjust partitions onto a new SSD.
Keep in mind – initially after a clone boot on a single new drive, Windows assigns letters to hardware IDs in the registry. In rare scenarios, it might keep your old drive as the primary one. Once the first boot completes, Windows updates these settings, allowing you to connect additional drives afterward. PS. I’m focusing on your original boot drive. If you have many HDDs and SSDs, disconnect the old boot drive only during the initial setup. The rest will function normally and retain their assigned letters.