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Incorrect data arrangement during the transfer to a new SSD

Incorrect data arrangement during the transfer to a new SSD

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TheFallenRose
Senior Member
616
02-04-2023, 03:56 AM
#1
I don't see any issues, though I'm sure the recovery partition is off. I've never cloned before, so I followed Jay's tutorial on cloning a drive. Initially, I faced some problems booting manually from BIOS but couldn't set it up as a bootable drive. Eventually, I unplugged all other drives, restarted, and it worked. Then I used the AOEMI partition assistant to merge the cloned partition into the extra space on the new SSD. That part seemed confusing at first, with many unexpected drives appearing. Later I realized they might be downloaded games from Game Pass (possibly Microsoft). After reformatting the old SSD, I noticed my new drive lacks a proper recovery partition and thinks it might be labeled H:. I tried looking up solutions but my search wasn't helpful, so I'm worried about making mistakes on my own.
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TheFallenRose
02-04-2023, 03:56 AM #1

I don't see any issues, though I'm sure the recovery partition is off. I've never cloned before, so I followed Jay's tutorial on cloning a drive. Initially, I faced some problems booting manually from BIOS but couldn't set it up as a bootable drive. Eventually, I unplugged all other drives, restarted, and it worked. Then I used the AOEMI partition assistant to merge the cloned partition into the extra space on the new SSD. That part seemed confusing at first, with many unexpected drives appearing. Later I realized they might be downloaded games from Game Pass (possibly Microsoft). After reformatting the old SSD, I noticed my new drive lacks a proper recovery partition and thinks it might be labeled H:. I tried looking up solutions but my search wasn't helpful, so I'm worried about making mistakes on my own.

L
limasergi
Junior Member
26
02-07-2023, 10:31 AM
#2
You didn't specify the reason for cloning the drive, which makes it hard to understand your point. If you did it properly, why would you go through the trouble of partitioning? I’d rather reinstall the system from scratch using a fresh W10, as it’s much simpler.
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limasergi
02-07-2023, 10:31 AM #2

You didn't specify the reason for cloning the drive, which makes it hard to understand your point. If you did it properly, why would you go through the trouble of partitioning? I’d rather reinstall the system from scratch using a fresh W10, as it’s much simpler.

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someguy220
Member
70
02-08-2023, 04:02 PM
#3
I installed a lot of stuff on the old drive and didn’t want to reinstall everything or change personal settings. It would have taken hours, but this took just 20 minutes—plus figuring out why it refused to boot. I had to adjust the partition because the original drive was only a 256 GB SSD, and I was cloning it to a 1TB SSD. The new drive would have a 256 GB main partition with the rest left unallocated. I didn’t realize when I reformatted the original drive that the recovery partition was mistakenly set to H:\\ after I had already merged the boot and recovery partitions on the original drive.
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someguy220
02-08-2023, 04:02 PM #3

I installed a lot of stuff on the old drive and didn’t want to reinstall everything or change personal settings. It would have taken hours, but this took just 20 minutes—plus figuring out why it refused to boot. I had to adjust the partition because the original drive was only a 256 GB SSD, and I was cloning it to a 1TB SSD. The new drive would have a 256 GB main partition with the rest left unallocated. I didn’t realize when I reformatted the original drive that the recovery partition was mistakenly set to H:\\ after I had already merged the boot and recovery partitions on the original drive.

C
Chuck978
Member
110
02-08-2023, 06:39 PM
#4
You're asking about how drive cloning works. Typically, it copies all partitions, and during the process you can resize them based on the new drive's space.
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Chuck978
02-08-2023, 06:39 PM #4

You're asking about how drive cloning works. Typically, it copies all partitions, and during the process you can resize them based on the new drive's space.

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mumustrak
Senior Member
729
03-01-2023, 08:51 PM
#5
The tool I used (AOEMI Backupper) duplicates all partitions. If you want to adjust partition sizes, it’s likely available in the premium version. Could there be another free option that offers this feature? I’m not sure. For future drives, I’ll search for a free alternative that supports this capability.
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mumustrak
03-01-2023, 08:51 PM #5

The tool I used (AOEMI Backupper) duplicates all partitions. If you want to adjust partition sizes, it’s likely available in the premium version. Could there be another free option that offers this feature? I’m not sure. For future drives, I’ll search for a free alternative that supports this capability.

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Killemandrun
Member
162
03-02-2023, 05:18 PM
#6
I've tried using Macrium before, but it's been a while.
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Killemandrun
03-02-2023, 05:18 PM #6

I've tried using Macrium before, but it's been a while.

M
MindlessTree
Junior Member
48
03-10-2023, 01:21 PM
#7
I'll remember that for future migrations.
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MindlessTree
03-10-2023, 01:21 PM #7

I'll remember that for future migrations.

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tobotto
Junior Member
12
03-10-2023, 02:19 PM
#8
I recall using that tool earlier with Samsung's cloning software. It offers settings for drives of varying sizes.
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tobotto
03-10-2023, 02:19 PM #8

I recall using that tool earlier with Samsung's cloning software. It offers settings for drives of varying sizes.

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messi298
Member
68
03-10-2023, 10:51 PM
#9
The program I previously used lacked that feature.
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messi298
03-10-2023, 10:51 PM #9

The program I previously used lacked that feature.