advice on Cloning Win7 HDD partition to new SSD


  1. Posts : 1
    North Carolina
       #1

    advice on Cloning Win7 HDD partition to new SSD


    I am plan to copy my existing Windows 7 HDD partition to a new SSD. Please offer your advice to help me think through this process. My apologies for using the technical terms incorrectly.

    My existing HDD partitions are C: Windows 7, D: Windows XP, E: data and the fourth partition is UBUNTU. My boot-manager is GRUB. I don't remember much about the process of installing three operating systems other than I used EasyBCD to get them all bootable.

    I plan to take an image of C: Windows 7 with Macrium Reflect and restore it to a new SSD. Then I want to use EasyBCD to configure the old and the "new" operating systems as bootable. What details do I need to consider ?

    And finally, this is more of a SSD question. I read something about the SSD partition needs to aligned a certain way. I think the HDD ( that I will be cloning ) was formatted with Windows 7, and Windows 7 automatically uses the correct setting. How can I very that ?

    Dig
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  2. Posts : 1,379
    Win7 Pro 32-bit, Win8 Pro 32-bit
       #2

    I did essentially the same thing -- migrated an "HDD" install of Win7 to an SDD, using MR, and it worked without any problems at all. I imaged the OS partition using MR, shutdown the PC, connected the SSD, put the MR WinPE BOOT CD in the drive, booted from it -- and "restored" the recent backup directly to the SSD. Removed the CD, rebooted, everything OK as before.

    Have been using the SDD install for several weeks now with no problems.
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  3. Posts : 12,012
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
       #3

    dig314 said:
    I read something about the SSD partition needs to aligned a certain way. I think the HDD ( that I will be cloning ) was formatted with Windows 7, and Windows 7 automatically uses the correct setting. How can I very that ?
    Do you mean verify?

    You can verify the alignment using the Diskpart command from a command prompt.

    Diskpart
    List disk
    Select disk n (where n is the number of the disk containing the partition you want to verify)
    List partition

    You should see a result like this.

    Partition Type Size Offset
    ------------- ---------------- ------- -------
    Partition 1 Primary 59 GB 1024 KB

    The partition is properly aligned if the offset is evenly divisible by 4, as 1024 is in this example.

    If you image or clone such a partition to another drive, the alignment is typically retained, but it's a good idea to check after you finish.
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  4. whs
    Posts : 26,210
    Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
       #4

    Have a look at this tutorial: SSD - Install and Transfer the Operating System
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