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Setting up Windows 10 following a CPU or motherboard upgrade

Setting up Windows 10 following a CPU or motherboard upgrade

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PatrickJosh
Member
109
07-25-2016, 06:24 AM
#1
Consider upgrading your CPU and motherboard. You currently have Windows 10 installed with your personal account. You’d like a clean installation on your boot drive without wiping all disks—your games and programs are saved there. You’re thinking of disconnecting all drives except the boot drive, then installing Windows 10 from a USB clean install. After that, you can add the other drives one at a time to test everything. This way, you won’t lose the data on your other disks. Let me know if this approach fits your needs!
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PatrickJosh
07-25-2016, 06:24 AM #1

Consider upgrading your CPU and motherboard. You currently have Windows 10 installed with your personal account. You’d like a clean installation on your boot drive without wiping all disks—your games and programs are saved there. You’re thinking of disconnecting all drives except the boot drive, then installing Windows 10 from a USB clean install. After that, you can add the other drives one at a time to test everything. This way, you won’t lose the data on your other disks. Let me know if this approach fits your needs!

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TrilogyXO
Member
154
07-25-2016, 07:51 AM
#2
It's okay to wipe data from other disks. I wouldn't worry about disconnecting them and using the main drive. Windows focuses on your C driver and the boot drive specifically.
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TrilogyXO
07-25-2016, 07:51 AM #2

It's okay to wipe data from other disks. I wouldn't worry about disconnecting them and using the main drive. Windows focuses on your C driver and the boot drive specifically.

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Frogimouse
Member
217
07-28-2016, 01:23 PM
#3
If you need assistance, please share your concerns. We can arrange for it to be placed on a USB stick and installed.
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Frogimouse
07-28-2016, 01:23 PM #3

If you need assistance, please share your concerns. We can arrange for it to be placed on a USB stick and installed.

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mineguiton
Member
202
07-28-2016, 03:14 PM
#4
1. Create a USB boot drive.
2. Replace the CPU or motherboard.
3. Boot the PC from the USB drive.
4. Perform a clean install on the C drive (using a bootable SSD).
5. Log in with your Microsoft account to activate Windows 10.
That should cover it!
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mineguiton
07-28-2016, 03:14 PM #4

1. Create a USB boot drive.
2. Replace the CPU or motherboard.
3. Boot the PC from the USB drive.
4. Perform a clean install on the C drive (using a bootable SSD).
5. Log in with your Microsoft account to activate Windows 10.
That should cover it!

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maskeddeath85
Member
168
07-28-2016, 03:41 PM
#5
You’ll have to format the boot SSD using the installer’s interface. The operating system won’t affect the other storage devices during setup.
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maskeddeath85
07-28-2016, 03:41 PM #5

You’ll have to format the boot SSD using the installer’s interface. The operating system won’t affect the other storage devices during setup.

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X__Ninja__X
Junior Member
10
07-28-2016, 05:10 PM
#6
Great! Thanks! It looks simpler than I imagined, huh? Haha
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X__Ninja__X
07-28-2016, 05:10 PM #6

Great! Thanks! It looks simpler than I imagined, huh? Haha

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xEchoz
Member
208
07-28-2016, 09:47 PM
#7
Always on the right track, but it's a good idea to verify.
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xEchoz
07-28-2016, 09:47 PM #7

Always on the right track, but it's a good idea to verify.