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Moving SSD from a Lenovo laptop to an HP laptop using WIN11

Moving SSD from a Lenovo laptop to an HP laptop using WIN11

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BestProKill2V
Junior Member
5
10-17-2021, 04:42 AM
#1
Hey there, friend. I understand your situation clearly. Here’s what you can try: First, check if the NVMe SSD from your old Lenovo laptop is compatible with HP laptops. Sometimes BIOS settings need specific drivers or firmware updates to work across different systems. You might also want to look into using a USB-to-SATA adapter or a compatible NVMe-to-HDMI bridge if your HP laptop supports it. If you have another USB drive with Windows 11, try booting from that instead of the problematic one. Regarding the password issue, you might need to reset your Apple ID on the new device or use a recovery tool if available. If you’re unsure, consider reaching out to HP support for guidance tailored to your exact hardware setup. Let me know what you try next!
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BestProKill2V
10-17-2021, 04:42 AM #1

Hey there, friend. I understand your situation clearly. Here’s what you can try: First, check if the NVMe SSD from your old Lenovo laptop is compatible with HP laptops. Sometimes BIOS settings need specific drivers or firmware updates to work across different systems. You might also want to look into using a USB-to-SATA adapter or a compatible NVMe-to-HDMI bridge if your HP laptop supports it. If you have another USB drive with Windows 11, try booting from that instead of the problematic one. Regarding the password issue, you might need to reset your Apple ID on the new device or use a recovery tool if available. If you’re unsure, consider reaching out to HP support for guidance tailored to your exact hardware setup. Let me know what you try next!

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Qesterchen
Member
149
10-28-2021, 11:31 AM
#2
just a quick note about the thread locking the boot process and putting the laptop in safe mode.
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Qesterchen
10-28-2021, 11:31 AM #2

just a quick note about the thread locking the boot process and putting the laptop in safe mode.

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wokaisor
Junior Member
49
10-28-2021, 08:17 PM
#3
Try resetting the power cycle. Turn off the laptop, wait a few minutes, then restart it. If that doesn't work, check for hardware issues or contact support.
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wokaisor
10-28-2021, 08:17 PM #3

Try resetting the power cycle. Turn off the laptop, wait a few minutes, then restart it. If that doesn't work, check for hardware issues or contact support.

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emmylee33
Senior Member
710
10-28-2021, 10:08 PM
#4
Ein Video ist verfügbar. Es handelt sich um eine Datei mit der ID 77247615315__CB04D8A0-E8FB-44D8-B638-81CAA6F0A049.MOV.
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emmylee33
10-28-2021, 10:08 PM #4

Ein Video ist verfügbar. Es handelt sich um eine Datei mit der ID 77247615315__CB04D8A0-E8FB-44D8-B638-81CAA6F0A049.MOV.

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IkBenHetBram
Senior Member
735
10-30-2021, 08:45 PM
#5
Self-repair mode isn't the same as safe mode. If you boot into safe mode, it will resolve the issue, or at least let you reach your PC through this method. Safe mode does not fix the problem; it only allows access to startup repair features that don't address it.
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IkBenHetBram
10-30-2021, 08:45 PM #5

Self-repair mode isn't the same as safe mode. If you boot into safe mode, it will resolve the issue, or at least let you reach your PC through this method. Safe mode does not fix the problem; it only allows access to startup repair features that don't address it.

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Nakkisoppa
Member
50
10-31-2021, 09:02 AM
#6
These are the choices available to me… no extra features and no initial configurations.
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Nakkisoppa
10-31-2021, 09:02 AM #6

These are the choices available to me… no extra features and no initial configurations.

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MiriMar6
Junior Member
11
11-01-2021, 10:20 AM
#7
Windows 11 seems confusing with that click option. You can use the command prompt to set safeboot network shutdown settings.
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MiriMar6
11-01-2021, 10:20 AM #7

Windows 11 seems confusing with that click option. You can use the command prompt to set safeboot network shutdown settings.