New
#11
You have several problems.
1.
Windows 7 installation for an SSD is NOT the same as for an HDD.
For one thing your HDD has prefetch files,
which are omitted by an installation to an SSD,
but you got them on you SSD by restoring an HDD image.
There are many other things different about what files, folders, and Services are needed between an HDD and an SSD,
so what the Installation did for the HDD was WRONG for the SSD.
2.
I learned years ago not to trust Acronis,
and perhaps your difficulties were compounded with an old version that might have lacked full knowledge of SSD peculiarities.
3.
You have said
"even though the partition nos. on the SSD were full nos. (based on division of 4096)"
I am not sure what you meant.
I do know that the special requirement is NOT the size of the partition,
but the offset of the start of the partition, and there is a special DOS command that can help there
(I think it is DiskPart).
I believe running at 30% of the expected speed is a natural result of having the wrong offset.
I'm not sure I entirely agree with this. There are some things to look out for and again these are mentioned in the tutorial I referred the OP to earlier.
SSD - Install and Transfer the Operating System
My SSD is based on a HDD image (using free Macrium Reflect) with some tweaks. Windows will recognize the presence of an SSD and set some things automatically. An important thing is to make sure your SSD is aligned and this is covered in the tutorial. Also, defragmentation should be off.
If you find your SSD is not aligned the free Partition Wizard can align it after the fact.
If you want more tweaks look here
Windows 7 SSD Tweaking Guide
Last edited by mjf; 23 Sep 2012 at 17:59.
Thanks for reply,
I've gotten so many differing opinions, that it's hard to make sense of them all.
I know the image recovery from SSD was aligned and Trim was enabled.
Still. the Read/Write times were terrible.
I am just going to buy the smallest SSD I can find (64gb) and use that as a target for my current SSD info.
Thanks to all who replied.
Paul
If that's what you want to do then ok of course.
But for the sake of others once Windows and other software has been installed on your SSD to your satisfaction then standard imaging with software like Windows inbuilt imaging or (free) Macrium Reflect is perfectly fine. If this wasn't the case I would never have bought an SSD.
What is open to debate/preference is if your initial SSD install should be a clean install or based on an image from a HDD OS installation.