Upgrading old XP PC to larger HD and Windows 7


  1. Posts : 246
    Windows 7 64 bit
       #1

    Upgrading old XP PC to larger HD and Windows 7


    I have an old Dell Dimension 5100 running XP with a 150GB HD and only 1GB of RAM. I'm going to check with Dell if the system will support Win7 as know I can upgrade the RAM to 4GB which I believe is the min needed for Win 7. Assuming this is the case I am wondering if I can also upgrade the HD to a 320GB one I have spare. My cheapest route to upgrade is I can access a cheap achademic upgrade from XP to Win 7 Pro.

    So the question is how do I get from XP on one drive to Win 7 on the other drive since the upgrade only operates on the drive with XP installed. I can either:
    a) Do a clean install on Win7 on the XP HD and then do something fancy to move the whole thing to the new HD
    b) Do the fancy transfer first and then upgrade to Win7

    I suspect the answer will be to do the clean install first and then use something like System image and restore tools in Win7 to transfer over? I did find the tutorial on using sysprep in Win7, but not sure if that is in additional to the system image method or a differnet memthod. If any one could guide me on the best steps that would be much appreciated.

    Mike
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 246
    Windows 7 64 bit
    Thread Starter
       #2

    i might have just answered my own question reading a bit further. Is it that I can just install the 2nd HD and do a clean install from the Win7 Upgrade disc and then just copy the files over that I want to keep from the old HD? Thought the upgrade disc woudl be looking for an existing authorised OS before installing, but seems that isn't the case.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 12,012
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
       #3

    You have it figured correctly. Just install 7 directly to the drive.

    If you are using an upgrade disc you need to have a valid XP license, but you DON"T have to have an XP installation of any type. You will not be asked to provide an XP disc or product key.

    Disconnect all hard drives other than the one that will get the Windows 7 installation.

    Regarding RAM: Windows 7 runs well on 2 GB and tolerably on 1 GB. I've seen reports of people using even less.

    The 32-bit version of Windows 7 cannot make use of more than about 3.2 GB of RAM.

    I doubt if you will have trouble with a 320 GB drive, but Dell would be the final authority on that. It's conceivable you would have a BIOS issue, so I'd check the specifications on the Dell 5100.

    Likewise, you should go to Microsoft and run their upgrade advisor program that will check your PC to confirm that your hardware will support Windows 7.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 246
    Windows 7 64 bit
    Thread Starter
       #4

    Ok so I'll run the upgrade advisor and check with Dell on the drive. If all fine I disconnect the existing HD, install 320GB HD then install upgrade disc and once Win 7 up and runnnig I reconnect the old HD and copy any fiels across i want to keep. Sounds easy. Thanks a lot.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 12,012
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
       #5

    You should connect the new HD to port 0 on the motherboard. It will work if you don't, but that is the recommended method.

    Port 0 should be the port used by the current XP hard drive. So just unplug the XP drive from the motherboard and connect the cable from the new hard drive to that same location on the motherboard.
      My Computer

  6.    #6

    If the HD is blank then leave the Product Key blank during install, afterwards do the quick registry workaround given in this tutorial to activate Upgrade version on a new or cleaned HD: Clean Install with a Upgrade Windows 7 Version

    If there is any OS on the HD, the installer will see it at boot and allow use of Upgrade version key during install without any workaround needed.
      My Computer


 

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