No System Reserved Partition On My SSD


  1. Posts : 40
    win 7
       #1

    No System Reserved Partition On My SSD


    I have an SSD with WIN7 installed. It has no System Reserved Partition (SRP) and thus no boot files on that nonexistent partition.
    I've read here that individuals with a SRP of only 100mb have had issues installing WIN 10 and that those issues were resolved by expanding the SRP from 100mb to 450mb.
    Will WIN 10 install if I have no SRP? Will it merely alter the boot files on my C drive?
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 3,502
    Win_8.1-Pro, Win_10.1607-Pro, Mint_17.3
       #2

    poolmon said:
    I have an SSD with WIN7 installed. It has no System Reserved Partition (SRP) and thus no boot files on that nonexistent partition.
    I've read here that individuals with a SRP of only 100mb have had issues installing WIN 10 and that those issues were resolved by expanding the SRP from 100mb to 450mb.
    Will WIN 10 install if I have no SRP? Will it merely alter the boot files on my C drive?
    I'm not certain.

    I think your machine will be fine. It's not important where the boot code lives (SysReserve or WinDrive).

    For the record though, it appears that a Clean install of Win10 on MBR initialized drives defaults to 500 MB. I have not seen any documentation yet.

    If you only have the SSD connected, there should not be an issue when you upgrade. If have other drives connected, the install might use one of those for the boot code - this is not an optimal disk configuration. You want the System and Boot partitions on the same drive. Since your boot code is on the Windows Drive, no problem there.

    I'd like to see your Disk Management. If you already downloaded the custom Management snap-in, you don't need to download it again. Just launch dmDskmgr-vd in the location you previously saved it (yes, you can still open the zip folder and launch it from inside)

    Download this zip file (contains dmDskmgr-vd.mmc)

    dmDskmgr-vd.zip

    Double click dmDskmgr-vd.zip to open the compressed folder
    Double click dmDskmgr-vd.mmc to launch the custom Disk Management console
    You'll get an output similar to this:


    Press Alt+PrtScn to grab a snapshot of just the Disk Management window
    Open Paint and Ctrl+V to paste it, then save the image
    Attach the image to a new post.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 40
    win 7
    Thread Starter
       #3

    Here is a screenshot of Disk Manager. My C Drive is my SSD boot-main operating drive.
    Two of the other HDDs contain windows (one XP and the other win 7) and are technically bootable (if I removed my SSD the system would automatically boot to one of them).

    The unallocated space on the C drive is the space set aside for Over Provisioning by the SSD
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails No System Reserved Partition On My SSD-disk-manager-1.jpg  
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 3,502
    Win_8.1-Pro, Win_10.1607-Pro, Mint_17.3
       #4

    Thanks,

    Yeah, I think you'll be fine if you disconnect the other drives. Only C is flagged as System.

    Test that before upgrading - make sure the machine boots without the other drives - it should looking at your Disk management.

    To be on the safe side, create a system image of disk 0 and store it on one one of your HDDs.
    See: Backup Complete Computer - Create an Image Backup - Windows 7 Help Forums
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 40
    win 7
    Thread Starter
       #5

    OK Thanks
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 3,502
    Win_8.1-Pro, Win_10.1607-Pro, Mint_17.3
       #6

    You are most welcome.
      My Computer


 

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