WD Black HDD - Want to move OS to new SSD

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  1. wen
    Posts : 273
    WINDOWS 10 PRO INSIDER PREVIEW
       #1

    WD Black HDD - Want to move OS to new SSD


    I have a 1 TB WD Black (1003FZEX) in a Dell XPS-8700 (Not Special Edition). Only 50% of HDD is full and that's all I plan to keep it.
    I want to buy a new SSD and put my OS on it for faster starts, etc.

    I back up every day (Full / Verify) using Macrium (Paid).

    What steps do I do to "transfer" OS to SSD ?? Some sort of partial Clone ??

    Thanks
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 18,432
    Windows 11 Pro
       #2

    wen said:
    I back up every day (Full / Verify) using Macrium (Paid).

    What steps do I do to "transfer" OS to SSD ?? Some sort of partial Clone ??

    Thanks
    Install the new SSD. Boot from the Macrium Reflect Rescue drive. Restore your backup image to the newly installed SSD. No different than replacing the HDD if it failed. It really doesn't do much good to make backups if you can't restore them.
    Last edited by NavyLCDR; 13 Jan 2017 at 12:43.
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  3. wen
    Posts : 273
    WINDOWS 10 PRO INSIDER PREVIEW
    Thread Starter
       #3

    HDD has OS plus many Programs. 240 GB used total. I just want WINDOWS OS on SSD and keep programs, pictures, docs on HDD. I'm sorry now I didn't buy the Dell XPS-8700 Special Edition which comes with SSD and receptacle on Mother Board. My 8700 is bare bones.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 18,432
    Windows 11 Pro
       #4

    You will have to re-install your programs - but just curious - why have the SSD if you are going to keep your programs running from the slower HDD? Isn't the purpose of moving to an SSD to increase performance of the computer? Why intentionally bottleneck that?

    If you want to go that way, though, you would start with a clean install of Windows 10 to the SSD.
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  5. Posts : 1,621
    Windows 10 Home
       #5

    I don't recommend splitting Windows operations and 3rd party programs' operations by having Windows on C and all else on D. Unintended consequences can happen -- especially when it comes time to do an OS partition restore. Many 3rd party installs still place material in Users...AppData Local and/or Roaming, ProgramData due to default installer settings.
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  6. wen
    Posts : 273
    WINDOWS 10 PRO INSIDER PREVIEW
    Thread Starter
       #6

    I am living on SS and can't afford to buy expensive Computer Hardware. Recently I purchased the WD 1TB Black to replace the old Dell Seagate 1 TB. I used MR to Clone. My Brother bought (three years ago) the Dell XPS-8700 SE. I bought my basic XPS-8700 the same time. He always bragged about the SSD which holds the OS, and regular HDD for all the rest, and how much faster his boots because of the SSD. I thought I can get the same type SSD as he has, until I found out the SE Motherboard is bigger and has a socket for the SSD, unlike mine. For lack of funds and not looking for any "trouble" I'll just be satisfied with my new WD 1 TB Black HDD, with the 5 year warranty. It was simple to Clone from old Seagate, runs just fine, and back-up every day with MR and Verifies with NO Errors.
    Last edited by wen; 13 Jan 2017 at 16:41.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 18,432
    Windows 11 Pro
       #7

    wen said:
    He always bragged about the SSD which holds the OS, and regular HDD for all the rest, and how much faster his boots because of the SSD.
    I always find that humorous when people use the SSD only to boot from. OK - so you reduced your boot time from 45 seconds to 15 seconds. Then after they shave off that 30 seconds of boot time they just go back to running all the programs off the HDD. That does not pass the common sense check to me. Some people even move their pagefile - the file that Windows uses to swap data and programs in and out of RAM with - to the HDD where the very file that is one of the biggest parts of overall performance is hindered by the slower HDD performance and fragmentation. SSDs are not affected by fragmentation.
      My Computer


  8. wen
    Posts : 273
    WINDOWS 10 PRO INSIDER PREVIEW
    Thread Starter
       #8

    This was Dell's concept in the XPS-8700 SE about 3+ years ago. Somehow I thought the Windows 10 OS was on the SSD ??
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 7,904
    Windows 11 Pro 64 bit
       #9

    You are already using Reflect so your upgrade should be easy - see my enclosed guide which you may find helpful. I install all programs on the SSD except very large games files which I install on a HDD since my SSD is only 180GB.
    Attachment 117043
      My Computers


  10. Posts : 1,621
    Windows 10 Home
       #10

    "...I found out the SE Motherboard is bigger and has a socket for the SSD..." Can youse guyse educate me about this, I thought the sockets, connections, for almost all SSDs are the same as the sockets, connections, for almost all internal hard-drives? I.e., my Acer Aspire will take either an internal laptop SSD or a laptop platter-driven hard-drive.
      My Computer


 

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