Copying hard disk driver from Windows 10 to Windows 7?

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  1. Posts : 125
    Windows 8
       #1

    Copying hard disk driver from Windows 10 to Windows 7?


    My laptop will boot both Windows 10 and Windows 7 from a Crucial SSD.

    Can I use the Windows 10 hard disk drivers with Windows 7? If so how would I set about installing them?

    I have a USB stick with Windows 10 build 10049.

    At the moment Windows 7 is using the hard disk driver for the original hard disk in the laptop. This is leading to me being told that I don't have a genuine copy of Windows. None of the regular fixes will solve this problem.
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 1,249
    Windows 8.1, Win10Pro
       #2

    Can I use the Windows 10 hard disk drivers with Windows 7?
    Unless you have some kind of special controller card in your PC, the hard disk drivers that come with Win7 are all you need.

    At the moment Windows 7 is using the hard disk driver for the original hard disk in the laptop. This is leading to me being told that I don't have a genuine copy of Windows.
    If you're getting some kind of "non-genuine" message, this has NOTHING to do with the hard disk driver. If that driver was faulty or incompatible with your drive, your PC might boot, but it certainly would not get to a working Windows desktop.

    Getting "non-genuine" error messages is an entirely different problem.

    To get help about that, you need to post to http://www.sevenforums.com in the Activation section.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 13,848
    Win10 Version 22H2 Pro and Home, Win11 Pro and Home
       #3

    The only time I had to use HDD drivers was with the original/first version of Windows XP, had to press F6 when prompted during the install to add SATA HDD drivers. Needed to have them on a floppy disk to do it. With WinXP SP1 and later haven't had to do that as SATA support was built in.
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  4. Posts : 125
    Windows 8
    Thread Starter
       #4

    Mark Phelps said:
    If you're getting some kind of "non-genuine" message, this has NOTHING to do with the hard disk driver. If that driver was faulty or incompatible with your drive, your PC might boot, but it certainly would not get to a working Windows desktop.
    There is a thread on answers.microsoft.com which suggest that it could be a driver issue:

    Windows 7 Activation Update fail Error Code 0xC8000247 - Microsoft Community
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  5. Posts : 7,128
    Windows 10 Pro Insider
       #5

    Did you try Andres's suggestion? Post 2 is suggesting to installing the Intel rapid Storage Drivers. Did you check in Device Manager to see if all drivers are installed correctly?
      My Computers


  6. Posts : 125
    Windows 8
    Thread Starter
       #6

    Winuser said:
    Did you try Andres's suggestion? Post 2 is suggesting to installing the Intel rapid Storage Drivers. Did you check in Device Manager to see if all drivers are installed correctly?
    Windows 7 thinks it has the correct drivers for disk and sata, but they are not the same as W10 is using. There is something odd about this SSD. When I tried it in my desktop I got plenty of BSODs.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 7,128
    Windows 10 Pro Insider
       #7

    You can check the website of the SSD manufacturer to see if there's firmware update for your drive.
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  8. Posts : 19,511
    W11+W11 Developer Insider + Linux
       #8

    All the drivers for all the HDDs and SSD are from 2006 so Win7 drivers should be fine.
      My Computers


  9. Posts : 125
    Windows 8
    Thread Starter
       #9

    Winuser said:
    You can check the website of the SSD manufacturer to see if there's firmware update for your drive.
    Thank you for the suggestion. There was indeed some new firmware which came out about a month ago. I have installed it, but it has not resolved my problem!
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 125
    Windows 8
    Thread Starter
       #10

    Mark Phelps said:
    Unless you have some kind of special controller card in your PC, the hard disk drivers that come with Win7 are all you need.

    If you're getting some kind of "non-genuine" message, this has NOTHING to do with the hard disk driver. If that driver was faulty or incompatible with your drive, your PC might boot, but it certainly would not get to a working Windows desktop.

    Getting "non-genuine" error messages is an entirely different problem.

    To get help about that, you need to post to http://www.sevenforums.com in the Activation section.
    Using a different Intel driver has solved the problem. It is just a pity that even the Intel Driver Update utility that I found does not lead you the 'Rapid Storage Technology' driver that I am now using.
      My Computer


 

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