Crosswords1 min ago
bigger hard drive
I am about to replace my hard drive in my pc for one with a bigger capacity Is it just a case of replacing the old one in the tower, and then running operating system discs, or is there more to it than that, ie would the operating system not recognise the new drive or would windows fail to run ect. Thanks
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you should add to the disc set - not just replace it (unless it's faulty)
my system has a small fast HDD for the O/s - and then a couple of big drives for storage
drive1
c: holds my o/s and core software
it's 60% free
drive two - two partitions
d: is my data drive (easy to backup)
e: games and progs that are on trial
drive 3
f: storage
Z: - paging file
I then have some nas space for storage and backup
http://clonezilla.org/
will transfer your existing Os to the new drive
you should add to the disc set - not just replace it (unless it's faulty)
my system has a small fast HDD for the O/s - and then a couple of big drives for storage
drive1
c: holds my o/s and core software
it's 60% free
drive two - two partitions
d: is my data drive (easy to backup)
e: games and progs that are on trial
drive 3
f: storage
Z: - paging file
I then have some nas space for storage and backup
http://clonezilla.org/
will transfer your existing Os to the new drive
should be ok
vista ... so it's probably a sata drive
(it's well worth checking before you buy)?
easy peasy to install 4 screws 2 cables ... do get yourself a new angled sata cable as well - they are prone to pop off.
and I always find that a week after buying a new drive - it's too small - but equally - just another �10 is a slippery slope
clearence corner is always worth a look - few machines can actually exploit the latest spec - so a slightly older model is fine
http://www.shop.bt.com/clearance-corner/compon ents-and-storage,storage/11026
how big/what are you going to do with the old one though ... it's worrying me ;-(... they always come in for something
vista ... so it's probably a sata drive
(it's well worth checking before you buy)?
easy peasy to install 4 screws 2 cables ... do get yourself a new angled sata cable as well - they are prone to pop off.
and I always find that a week after buying a new drive - it's too small - but equally - just another �10 is a slippery slope
clearence corner is always worth a look - few machines can actually exploit the latest spec - so a slightly older model is fine
http://www.shop.bt.com/clearance-corner/compon ents-and-storage,storage/11026
how big/what are you going to do with the old one though ... it's worrying me ;-(... they always come in for something
I don't like big Os discs (server mentality) and difficult to backup/image
(I use a Western Digital 150GB VelociRaptor 10,000RPM SATA for the os)
for me big discs are for storage - it's just getting used to installing to d: and not c:
the thing that might happen is that if vista is oem it could possibly see the new disc as a system change too far and refuse to activate without a call to ms
it won't be a problem (not sure what hc means - an image is an image) -
either the software will just resize the partition - or it might restore a partition the same size as it is now - so you may need to resize the partition to fill the drive after
(I use a Western Digital 150GB VelociRaptor 10,000RPM SATA for the os)
for me big discs are for storage - it's just getting used to installing to d: and not c:
the thing that might happen is that if vista is oem it could possibly see the new disc as a system change too far and refuse to activate without a call to ms
it won't be a problem (not sure what hc means - an image is an image) -
either the software will just resize the partition - or it might restore a partition the same size as it is now - so you may need to resize the partition to fill the drive after