System Drive Going Down. How To Replace?


  1. Posts : 524
    win10
       #1

    System Drive Going Down. How To Replace?


    I have had a lot of trouble with my system drive and I think it is about time to replace it with a new physical unit.

    Can I just put a new hard drive in the machine in its place, install a new instance of win10 and enter my same serial number?
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 5,478
    2004
       #2

    Yes.

    Alternatively you could make an image of your current system (including all programs and data) and restore it onto your new disk.

    Either way your new system will be activated. A new disk doesn't count as new hardware.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 31,630
    10 Home x64 (22H2) (10 Pro on 2nd pc)
       #3

    abrogard said:
    ...install a new instance of win10 and enter my same serial number?
    If you choose to do a clean install, you don't need to enter a key. Provided you install the same edition as you had before (Home or Pro) you can skip entering a key. It will activate automatically from your existing digital licence held on Microsoft's activation servers. As lx07 says, a new disk doesn't count as a hardware change.
      My Computers


  4. Posts : 524
    win10
    Thread Starter
       #4

    Ah, sounds excellent.

    I can't make an image. I tried that. Macrium reflect couldn't do it. I think that's something to do with how badly that disk got itself damaged.

    And that's why I want a completely new disk rather than reinstall on top of that one.

    So I can pull that old disk out and put a new blank disk in and boot from an install disk or usb, do the install and that'll be it - the system will find my serial and activate just from the report it sends back on my hardware configuration?

    Even if the new disk is somewhat different: 2T instead of one for instance.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 31,630
    10 Home x64 (22H2) (10 Pro on 2nd pc)
       #5

    Yes. The disk is not part of the hardware ID used to identify your PC on Microsoft's activation servers. The motherboard is, but not the HDD.
      My Computers


  6. Posts : 524
    win10
    Thread Starter
       #6

    good news. thank you. i couldn't wish for anything more - except a way to keep my current installed apps but I think that's not possible for me.

    I believe one can do a 'repair' installation that will keep the apps but that would then still be on the same disk and my problem is, I think, this flaky disk.

    I have repaired this installation before as well as I can. Currently I can't open ports on this machine. Set port forwarding on the router and the router will tell me ports are open. But traffic from the web can't get in to my IIS installation and no port checker ever reports the ports as open.

    they report them as closed. even reporting port 80 as closed.

    that's just spontaneously happened recently, the last in a long series of problems, and I put it down to another sector going bad on the disk or similar.

    So if you've got any good ideas about all that please let me know...

    meanwhile I'll pull the disk and put up a new clean installation.

    thanks again.

    :)
      My Computer


 

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