F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Upgrade your system with a new CPU, Mobo or RAM while keeping the existing hard drive and operating system intact.

Upgrade your system with a new CPU, Mobo or RAM while keeping the existing hard drive and operating system intact.

Upgrade your system with a new CPU, Mobo or RAM while keeping the existing hard drive and operating system intact.

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BigOllimat
Junior Member
20
02-20-2016, 01:35 PM
#11
This would be perfect if everything functioned smoothly! I used to have a system with an Intel Core i5 4670K, a BIOSTAR Group Hi-Fi Z87W LGA1150 motherboard, and 16GB DDR3 RAM split into two 8GB modules. My new build features an Intel Core i9-9900k, an undecided motherboard (most options are sold out but it’s LGA1151 so it should last), and a G.Skill Ripjaw V 32GB DDR4-3600 with two 16GB sticks. I’m aiming for the Asus PRIME Z390-A ATX LGA1151 if you have any other moderately priced good choices to suggest!
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BigOllimat
02-20-2016, 01:35 PM #11

This would be perfect if everything functioned smoothly! I used to have a system with an Intel Core i5 4670K, a BIOSTAR Group Hi-Fi Z87W LGA1150 motherboard, and 16GB DDR3 RAM split into two 8GB modules. My new build features an Intel Core i9-9900k, an undecided motherboard (most options are sold out but it’s LGA1151 so it should last), and a G.Skill Ripjaw V 32GB DDR4-3600 with two 16GB sticks. I’m aiming for the Asus PRIME Z390-A ATX LGA1151 if you have any other moderately priced good choices to suggest!

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KatnissBower
Junior Member
4
02-28-2016, 06:26 AM
#12
Yes, you’d typically install Windows 10 on a formatted drive, transfer your files, and then reinstall the software.
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KatnissBower
02-28-2016, 06:26 AM #12

Yes, you’d typically install Windows 10 on a formatted drive, transfer your files, and then reinstall the software.

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Biel_extremer
Member
199
02-28-2016, 08:19 AM
#13
That's awesome! I'm sure those jump drives are big enough. Appreciate the help!
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Biel_extremer
02-28-2016, 08:19 AM #13

That's awesome! I'm sure those jump drives are big enough. Appreciate the help!

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MaddyMoo2015
Junior Member
16
02-28-2016, 04:19 PM
#14
I’d remove all chipset drivers right now and test a hot swap to see if the system boots. I’m hopeful it will work, though I can’t guarantee it. You might even fix issues by doing a repair if conflicts arise. Generally, a fresh install on a new drive seems safest.
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MaddyMoo2015
02-28-2016, 04:19 PM #14

I’d remove all chipset drivers right now and test a hot swap to see if the system boots. I’m hopeful it will work, though I can’t guarantee it. You might even fix issues by doing a repair if conflicts arise. Generally, a fresh install on a new drive seems safest.

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