SSD - Install and Transfer the Operating System

How to Physically Install a SSD and Transfer the Operating System


Introduction

If you never owned an SSD, you have missed something. Yes, they are not cheap, but Dollar per Dollar there is no other piece of hardware that can give you as much additional performance than an SSD.

Because SSDs are expensive, their current use is for placing the operating system. That’s how you get the best mileage. Although XP and Vista can be installed on SSDs, it is recommended to use them for Windows7, which is the first system to support Trim.

For desktops, an SSD with a 60GB capacity is usually sufficient. The user data can be moved to the HDD – I will explain the procedure later. Should you have very large programs, e.g., games, you should move their program files during the installation of the game to the HDD too.

For laptops, the situation is more complicated because you usually have only one disk bay. I use 80GB and 90GB SSDs on my laptops. In addition, I use the HDD that I recovered from the laptop after I installed the SSD in an external USB enclosure. But, if you move around a lot with the laptop, that may not be so convenient and a bigger SSD (120GB or 250GB) may be in order (budget allowing).


Hardware Installation

For a desktop, you will need a bracket if it is a 2.5” SSD (like most today). But, there are also 3.5” SSDs that will fit without adaptor brackets into the disk bays. You also need a cable to attach the SSD to the motherboard. For electricity, there is usually an extra plug at the PSU which you can use for the SSD’s.

Once you have all those bits, you can install the SSD in an available disk bay – or if none available, some self-adhesive Velcro will also do. The SSDs are light and do not produce any vibration or heat.

For a laptop, you need an external enclosure that attaches to a USB port. That will allow you to make the initial SSD setups. The one I linked attaches via USB2 and eSata, which may be practical later to use as external drive with the HDD that you recovered from the laptop. Also for hot swapping bare bone HDDs. But there are cheaper enclosures for USB2 only and also some that allow attachment to USB3.

Transfer the Operating System

There are two ways to transfer the operating system from your current HDD to the SSD:
1. The Geeky way which comes for free and
2. The easy way that costs $19.95.

1.The Geeky way requires the following steps:

Prepare the SSD – You first have to initialize the SSD to create the MBR. You can do that with Disk Management or with this program (which you will need later anyhow).

Then you need to align the SSD and define an active partition on it. You use an elevated Command Prompt with the following commands:

Diskpart
List disk
Select disk n (where n is the number that was given for your SSD in List disk)
Clean
Create partition primary align=1024
Format fs=ntfs quick
Active (assuming you want to install an OS)
Exit

Note: If you are more comfortable working with Disk Management, you can also define a primary active partition with Disk Management. On a SSD, the partition will be automatically aligned by 1024.


If you want to verify that the alignment is correct, you use these commands:

Diskpart
List disk
Select disk n
List partition



You should see a result like this:

Partition ### Type Size Offset


------------- ---------------- ------- -------
Partition 1 Primary 59 GB

1024 KB - but 64KB or any number divisible by 4 is also good. The offset has to be divisible by 4.

In Windows7, you may have the 100MB active boot partition. The easiest way to deal with that is to move the bootmgr to the C: partition using EasyBCD. That you do on your HDD before you transfer anything to the SSD. Then you do not have to worry about it and you need only transfer the C: partition to the SSD.


But if you care to keep the 100MB partition, then the partition you just created on the SSD is for that 100MB partition. The next step is to shrink the partition you just created to a 100MB size (make sure it is not any smaller). With Disk Management you will have trouble to do that. I recommend this program for the operation.

From the free space you gained, you create the C: partition for the OS. This partition must not be active and need not be a primary (because the 100MB partition contains the boot manager).

Alternatively and easier is if you first create the 100MB partition with these commands:

Diskpart
List disk
Select disk n (where n is the number that was given for your SSD in List disk)
Clean
Create partition primary size=100 align=1024
Format fs=ntfs quick
Active
Exit

Note: The unit in the size parameter is MB

After this action you can use Disk Management to create the C partition from the remaining unallocated space. That can be a logical partition.

If there is no 100MB partition, things are easy. The partition you created with Command Prompt will receive the C partition including boot manager and all.

There may be more partitions on your factory HDD – e.g., the Recovery partition and a Tools Partition. Those you should not transfer to the SSD because of space constraints. I would back them up – e.g., with an imaging program. The Recovery Partition you can also burn to DVDs.

The OS transfer

This is done with an image. There are a variety of free imaging programs (e.g., the free editions of Macrium, Paragon, Acronis, etc.) that are suitable for the task. You can also use the Windows7 imaging, which has the advantage that it deals with the 100MB active boot partition automatically. Disadvantage is that you never know exactly what it does.

You image your partitions to an external disk (you may have to assign a drive letter to the 100MB partition so that the imaging program can identify it) and then pull the images back in to the SSD (using the bootable recovery program of the imaging program).
The recovery is partition by partition. So you have to make separate runs for the 100MB partition (if any) and the C: partition.

Note: Many free imaging programs cannot shrink the originating partition to fit into the usually much smaller C: partition on the SSD - even if the amount of data in that partition would fit. In that case you will need to shrink the C: partition on the HDD prior to imaging it. The HDD C: partition must be smaller or equal in size to the designated partition on the SSD. For that operation I also recommend this program because Disk Management might not be able to shrink it enough. Note: Free Macrium can image to a smaller disk if the data fits.

It is, of course, understood, that the amount of data on your HDD C: partition must not exceed the capacity of the designated C: partition on the SSD. Should you have more data on your HDD C: partition than the size of the SSD C: partition can hold, I suggest you first create a data partition on the HDD system and move the user data there. Here is my video tutorial that explains how this is done. When you finally are on the SSD system, you then right click on the user folders in the data partition (Documents, Pictures, etc.) and Include them into the appropriate library. That approach does not require you to move the user folders later.

Next step is to change the boot sequence in the BIOS to set the SSD as second boot device (leave the CD/DVD reader as first boot device) and, hopefully, your system will boot.

2.The easy way for transferring the OS requires you to purchase this program. It does everything for you – alignment, deals with the 100MB partition, transfers C:, shrinks the originating partition, etc. All you will have to do is change the boot sequence.

Note: Before you activate the SSD, it is recommended to set the BIOS to AHCI. Best time to do that is just before you change the boot sequence. Once Windows7 is running, you make the corresponding settings in the OS. Here is a tutorial on how to do that.
Many people claim that there is a significant performance gain with AHCI. I, however, did not see that. But it may be different from system to system.

Settings after the OS transfer

Disk Defragmentation makes no sense on an SSD. For a laptop, go into Services, navigate to Disk Defragmenter, right click on it and go to Properties. Here you set the service to Disabled.
For a desktop, you may want to disable defrag in the Disk Defragmenter and only for the SSD so that the remaining HDDs can still be defragmented.

Note: As long as Defrag Service is turned off, you cannot shrink any partition. The partition shrink process requires the Defrag service. If you need to shrink a partition later, turn the Defragmentation Service temporarily on.

Hibernation File – most of us do not use Hibernation, but Sleep instead. But, the hiberfile takes precious space on your SSD – to the same tune as the size as your RAM. To get rid of it, run the following command in elevated Command Prompt: powercfg –h off. If you ever want it back, it is powercfg – h on.

Superfetch – many “experts” suggest to turn Superfetch off. I think that is not appropriate. Fetching a program or data from RAM is still a lot faster than fetching it from a disk – even from an SSD.

There are no other settings that are necessary. On the SSD forums you will find a lot of tweaks. I recommend you stay away from them.


Move the user folders to the HDD

To move the user folders to the HDD is very simple. Create a Data partition on the HDD. Define folders in that partition – e.g., Documents, Music, Pictures, etc. One for each folder you want to move off the SSD. The name of those folders can be anything. The system will rename them anyhow. It is just more obvious if you call them by the same name as the originating folders.

Then, open the Explorer and right click on, e.g., My Documents folder (not the Documents Library) in the left pane. Go to Properties and click on the Location tab. Here you click on Move and navigate to the corresponding folder in your Data Partition on the HDD. Then you Select that folder and Apply it.

Very Important: You must move the SSD folder to the corresponding Data Partition folder – NOT to the root of the partition itself. That would create a mess.








 
Last edited:
Delete volume is graded out.
Shrink volume is available.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo Z710 #59400485
OS
Windows 8.1.1 64bit
CPU
i7-4700MQ
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8.0GB PC3-12800 DDR3L SDRAM 1600 MHz
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Hitachi, 1Tb external,(B'up)
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Ext. HP 2311 Monitor
Yeah, that is probably because it was a former OS partition. We'll have to get help. Partition Wizard will do the job. Best is to get the bootable CD.

Download the .iso from here (last box on the webpage). Burn the .iso to a CD and boot the PC with that CD. Once it is loaded, highlight the partition and delete it. You have to hit Apply (top left). Same for the 100MB partition.

Alternatively you could just reformat the C (old) partition and work with this. Then you will have the little 100MB partition hanging around. But that is so small, it does not really matter. Your choice which solution you prefer.
 

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Good tutorial whs, I'm planning to get an SSD soon and this will help.
 

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Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-3570K CPU OC@ 4.5GHZ Turbo
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MSI Z77A-G45 Gaming
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8.00 GB DDR3 1600Mhz
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MSI DS100 Interceptor
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Good tutorial whs, I'm planning to get an SSD soon and this will help.
Thanks. Migrating to an SSD is simple. Just make one step after the other.
 

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HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
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from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
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OK, made the DVD, removed the partitions and volumes.
Now I have one "New Volume (D)
I take it I can rename it at a later time ?

If all is good to go now ?, I want to thank you for all your time and advice with this newbie experience.
 
Last edited:

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo Z710 #59400485
OS
Windows 8.1.1 64bit
CPU
i7-4700MQ
Memory
8.0GB PC3-12800 DDR3L SDRAM 1600 MHz
Graphics Card(s)
Intel® HD Graphics 4600
Sound Card
on-board
Monitor(s) Displays
17.3"
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
1TB 5400 RPM;(OS,programs)



Hitachi, 1Tb external,(B'up)
PSU
4 Cell 41 Watt Hour Lithium-Ion
Case
Lenovo
Cooling
Air in, Air out.
Keyboard
Logitech - Y-UY95 - Illuminated
Mouse
M$ - Arc Touch
Internet Speed
59 Mb down / 25 Mb up
Antivirus
Defender
Browser
Firefox (newest)
Other Info
MBAM Pro, SAS Pro, Revo Pro.

Ext. HP 2311 Monitor
I spoke too soon.
When doing a restart, I only get a black screen with a blinking cursor on the top left corner.
The only way to start Win7 is to press escape which brings up the boot order, then press enter.
Any ideas ?
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo Z710 #59400485
OS
Windows 8.1.1 64bit
CPU
i7-4700MQ
Memory
8.0GB PC3-12800 DDR3L SDRAM 1600 MHz
Graphics Card(s)
Intel® HD Graphics 4600
Sound Card
on-board
Monitor(s) Displays
17.3"
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
1TB 5400 RPM;(OS,programs)



Hitachi, 1Tb external,(B'up)
PSU
4 Cell 41 Watt Hour Lithium-Ion
Case
Lenovo
Cooling
Air in, Air out.
Keyboard
Logitech - Y-UY95 - Illuminated
Mouse
M$ - Arc Touch
Internet Speed
59 Mb down / 25 Mb up
Antivirus
Defender
Browser
Firefox (newest)
Other Info
MBAM Pro, SAS Pro, Revo Pro.

Ext. HP 2311 Monitor
Looks like you never changed the boot order in the BIOS. Go into the BIOS and set the SSD as second (first should be the CD/DVD reader).

That's probably why you had activity on the HDD. Not a big deal though. You can test it easily - when you disconnect the HDD, the SSD will boot.
 

My Computer My Computer

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HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
OS
Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
CPU
from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
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2x HP w2207
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5x HDD, 7x SSD, 12x Externals
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with trackball - no mices
Mouse
Trackball mice
Internet Speed
DSL 6000
Wolfgang I am planning on putting a Samsung 256GB in when I return from my trip and I have a 120GB Samsung 830 in at present and was looking at getting the 840 standard or the 840 Pro now forgetting the price I was wondering how I should go about this as I read something about changing the EUFI BIOS before installing - something I didn't know about until I had installed the OS on to the 830.

So if I set up the change in the EUFI before I transfer the OS / data over I am concerned that this may not work?
So do you think that I would be better off just changing the BIOS set up and re installing from scratch and then transfer over what I want from the old install or go with your tutorial?
 

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Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Own build (new) Desk1 / Asus ROG Win 7 / Desk2 1st build
OS
Desk1 7 Home Prem / Desk2 10 Pro / Main lap Asus ROG 10 Pro 2 laptop Toshiba 7 Pro Asus P2520 7 & 10
CPU
Desk1 i5 3750K / Laptop i7 GTX 860M / Desk2 i5 2500
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Desk1 Asus P877-V / Desk2 Gigabyte H67 UD3H / Laptop ?
Memory
Desk1 8GB (1866) / Desk2 16GB (1333) / Laptop 8Gb DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Desk 1& 2NVidia GTX 650 & Laptops on board Intel
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Desk 1 & 2 -XONAR DG Realtek High Def audio Laptop
Monitor(s) Displays
Desk 1 Benq HD 2450 / Desk2 Philips 24" / Laptop 17.5"
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Hard Drives
Desk1 Samsung 120GB 830 SSD
Asus ROG 256GB 850 Pro SSD
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Desk 1 MS Sidewinder X6 Desk 2 MS Sidewinder X 4
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ADSL2+
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One other Desktop (tester) and spare Toshba laptop both with SSD's
Running Kaspersky 2016 ISS on all machines config'd identically
Logitec audio stereo systems on each machine (x3)
Canon MG5250MFC
Router/modem TP-Link running WPA2SK
That should do it !
The boot order I had set right, but it was trying to boot from the HDD instead.
Hence the sound from the HDD on restart.
All is good now.
Thank's a lot for everything.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo Z710 #59400485
OS
Windows 8.1.1 64bit
CPU
i7-4700MQ
Memory
8.0GB PC3-12800 DDR3L SDRAM 1600 MHz
Graphics Card(s)
Intel® HD Graphics 4600
Sound Card
on-board
Monitor(s) Displays
17.3"
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
1TB 5400 RPM;(OS,programs)



Hitachi, 1Tb external,(B'up)
PSU
4 Cell 41 Watt Hour Lithium-Ion
Case
Lenovo
Cooling
Air in, Air out.
Keyboard
Logitech - Y-UY95 - Illuminated
Mouse
M$ - Arc Touch
Internet Speed
59 Mb down / 25 Mb up
Antivirus
Defender
Browser
Firefox (newest)
Other Info
MBAM Pro, SAS Pro, Revo Pro.

Ext. HP 2311 Monitor
Make sure you format/remove/delete the 100MB partition form the HDD.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built Desktop By DataTech
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate X64 SP1
CPU
Intel i5-2550K, Differing ~4.4-4.8GHz No built in GPU
Motherboard
ASUS P8Z68-V PRO/GEN3
Memory
16GB G.Skill Sniper 1866MHz @ 2133MHz 2x8GB
Graphics Card(s)
ASUS GTX650TIB-DC2OC-2GD5, (650TI Boost)
Sound Card
Onboard Realtek 5-1
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung P2570HD
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Samsung 840 Pro 256GB SSD for OS, 500GB Seagate Constellation (Enterprise drive) for Data
PSU
Corsair HX650W
Case
Inwin Dragon Rider
Cooling
Hyper 212 EVO w/two Noctua fans, push-pull, @1300 RPM
Keyboard
E-Z Eyes, bright yellow keys with large characters
Mouse
steelseries SENSEI Laser Pro Gaming
Internet Speed
48-51Mbs Mbs down, 11 Mbs up Xfinity Cable
Antivirus
Norton Internet Security 2013
Browser
IE 10, Opera, Pale Moon if needed
Other Info
4 case fans, LG BluRay-RE, ASUS DVD-RW, Mr. Fusion power supply, 1.21 gigawatts.
Already gone !
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo Z710 #59400485
OS
Windows 8.1.1 64bit
CPU
i7-4700MQ
Memory
8.0GB PC3-12800 DDR3L SDRAM 1600 MHz
Graphics Card(s)
Intel® HD Graphics 4600
Sound Card
on-board
Monitor(s) Displays
17.3"
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
1TB 5400 RPM;(OS,programs)



Hitachi, 1Tb external,(B'up)
PSU
4 Cell 41 Watt Hour Lithium-Ion
Case
Lenovo
Cooling
Air in, Air out.
Keyboard
Logitech - Y-UY95 - Illuminated
Mouse
M$ - Arc Touch
Internet Speed
59 Mb down / 25 Mb up
Antivirus
Defender
Browser
Firefox (newest)
Other Info
MBAM Pro, SAS Pro, Revo Pro.

Ext. HP 2311 Monitor
That should do it !
The boot order I had set right, but it was trying to boot from the HDD instead.
Hence the sound from the HDD on restart.
All is good now.
Thank's a lot for everything.
Well good. Have fun. The 'New Volume' you can rename in Computer - very simple.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
OS
Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
CPU
from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
Monitor(s) Displays
2x HP w2207
Hard Drives
5x HDD, 7x SSD, 12x Externals
Keyboard
with trackball - no mices
Mouse
Trackball mice
Internet Speed
DSL 6000
Thank's, Keep up the Great work !
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo Z710 #59400485
OS
Windows 8.1.1 64bit
CPU
i7-4700MQ
Memory
8.0GB PC3-12800 DDR3L SDRAM 1600 MHz
Graphics Card(s)
Intel® HD Graphics 4600
Sound Card
on-board
Monitor(s) Displays
17.3"
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
1TB 5400 RPM;(OS,programs)



Hitachi, 1Tb external,(B'up)
PSU
4 Cell 41 Watt Hour Lithium-Ion
Case
Lenovo
Cooling
Air in, Air out.
Keyboard
Logitech - Y-UY95 - Illuminated
Mouse
M$ - Arc Touch
Internet Speed
59 Mb down / 25 Mb up
Antivirus
Defender
Browser
Firefox (newest)
Other Info
MBAM Pro, SAS Pro, Revo Pro.

Ext. HP 2311 Monitor
Wolfgang I am planning on putting a Samsung 256GB in when I return from my trip and I have a 120GB Samsung 830 in at present and was looking at getting the 840 standard or the 840 Pro now forgetting the price I was wondering how I should go about this as I read something about changing the EUFI BIOS before installing - something I didn't know about until I had installed the OS on to the 830.

So if I set up the change in the EUFI before I transfer the OS / data over I am concerned that this may not work?
So do you think that I would be better off just changing the BIOS set up and re installing from scratch and then transfer over what I want from the old install or go with your tutorial?
John, I would love to help you and give you good advice. But since I am not using Windows 8, I am really not up to speed on UEFI. I would hate to give you the wrong advice. A reinstall from scratch should be the safest bet, but with this darn Win8 you never know.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
OS
Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
CPU
from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
Monitor(s) Displays
2x HP w2207
Hard Drives
5x HDD, 7x SSD, 12x Externals
Keyboard
with trackball - no mices
Mouse
Trackball mice
Internet Speed
DSL 6000
Make sure you format/remove/delete the 100MB partition form the HDD.
Gary, I think the 100MB partition cannot do any harm if the HDD is #3 in the BIOS boot order. But as far as I can see on his latest DM screenshot, it is gone anyhow.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
OS
Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
CPU
from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
Monitor(s) Displays
2x HP w2207
Hard Drives
5x HDD, 7x SSD, 12x Externals
Keyboard
with trackball - no mices
Mouse
Trackball mice
Internet Speed
DSL 6000
OK, back to the corner for me! :p

John will be using w7 but he (and I) have a motherboard which has a UEFI/BIOS.
John, I would just reinstall as normal, the UEFI does not need to come into play unless you use Win 8 really.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built Desktop By DataTech
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate X64 SP1
CPU
Intel i5-2550K, Differing ~4.4-4.8GHz No built in GPU
Motherboard
ASUS P8Z68-V PRO/GEN3
Memory
16GB G.Skill Sniper 1866MHz @ 2133MHz 2x8GB
Graphics Card(s)
ASUS GTX650TIB-DC2OC-2GD5, (650TI Boost)
Sound Card
Onboard Realtek 5-1
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung P2570HD
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Samsung 840 Pro 256GB SSD for OS, 500GB Seagate Constellation (Enterprise drive) for Data
PSU
Corsair HX650W
Case
Inwin Dragon Rider
Cooling
Hyper 212 EVO w/two Noctua fans, push-pull, @1300 RPM
Keyboard
E-Z Eyes, bright yellow keys with large characters
Mouse
steelseries SENSEI Laser Pro Gaming
Internet Speed
48-51Mbs Mbs down, 11 Mbs up Xfinity Cable
Antivirus
Norton Internet Security 2013
Browser
IE 10, Opera, Pale Moon if needed
Other Info
4 case fans, LG BluRay-RE, ASUS DVD-RW, Mr. Fusion power supply, 1.21 gigawatts.
OK, back to the corner for me! :p

John will be using w7 but he (and I) have a motherboard which has a UEFI/BIOS.
John, I would just reinstall as normal, the UEFI does not need to come into play unless you use Win 8 really.
Ok mate to be honest I don't understand what they were on about in the first place and Ivy is working just fine as is and I have no intentions of going to 8.

So what are your thoughts on the bog standard 840 and the Pro version apart from the $65 price difference?

So I'll just go ahead and follow Wolfgang's tutorial its the go anyway:)
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Own build (new) Desk1 / Asus ROG Win 7 / Desk2 1st build
OS
Desk1 7 Home Prem / Desk2 10 Pro / Main lap Asus ROG 10 Pro 2 laptop Toshiba 7 Pro Asus P2520 7 & 10
CPU
Desk1 i5 3750K / Laptop i7 GTX 860M / Desk2 i5 2500
Motherboard
Desk1 Asus P877-V / Desk2 Gigabyte H67 UD3H / Laptop ?
Memory
Desk1 8GB (1866) / Desk2 16GB (1333) / Laptop 8Gb DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Desk 1& 2NVidia GTX 650 & Laptops on board Intel
Sound Card
Desk 1 & 2 -XONAR DG Realtek High Def audio Laptop
Monitor(s) Displays
Desk 1 Benq HD 2450 / Desk2 Philips 24" / Laptop 17.5"
Screen Resolution
1920x1080 D1 & D2 & Laptop 1
Hard Drives
Desk1 Samsung 120GB 830 SSD
Asus ROG 256GB 850 Pro SSD
Desk2 Samsung 840 256 SSD
Toshiba 120GB EVO
PSU
Desk 1 Corsair HX 1050/ Laptop ? / Desk 2 Corsair HX 650
Case
Desk 1 Cooler HAF XM ? Toshiba laptop / Desk2 Coolermaster
Cooling
Fans on all Desk1 -2 Desk2 - all Coolermasters 5 Laptop ?
Keyboard
Desk 1 MS Sidewinder X6 Desk 2 MS Sidewinder X 4
Mouse
Desk 1&2 - Gigabyte MS 900 gamer - laptop - Logitec wireless
Internet Speed
ADSL2+
Other Info
One other Desktop (tester) and spare Toshba laptop both with SSD's
Running Kaspersky 2016 ISS on all machines config'd identically
Logitec audio stereo systems on each machine (x3)
Canon MG5250MFC
Router/modem TP-Link running WPA2SK
If I had to decide for myself, I would save the $65 and buy the plain 840. Yes the Pro version has better measurement numbers but not with the 4K size blocks where it counts for the OS. In real life you won't notice a difference.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
OS
Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
CPU
from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
Monitor(s) Displays
2x HP w2207
Hard Drives
5x HDD, 7x SSD, 12x Externals
Keyboard
with trackball - no mices
Mouse
Trackball mice
Internet Speed
DSL 6000
If I had to decide for myself, I would save the $65 and buy the plain 840. Yes the Pro version has better measurement numbers but not with the 4K size blocks where it counts for the OS. In real life you won't notice a difference.
I agree with this too, it's what I'd do if I were buying one. :)
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built Desktop By DataTech
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate X64 SP1
CPU
Intel i5-2550K, Differing ~4.4-4.8GHz No built in GPU
Motherboard
ASUS P8Z68-V PRO/GEN3
Memory
16GB G.Skill Sniper 1866MHz @ 2133MHz 2x8GB
Graphics Card(s)
ASUS GTX650TIB-DC2OC-2GD5, (650TI Boost)
Sound Card
Onboard Realtek 5-1
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung P2570HD
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Samsung 840 Pro 256GB SSD for OS, 500GB Seagate Constellation (Enterprise drive) for Data
PSU
Corsair HX650W
Case
Inwin Dragon Rider
Cooling
Hyper 212 EVO w/two Noctua fans, push-pull, @1300 RPM
Keyboard
E-Z Eyes, bright yellow keys with large characters
Mouse
steelseries SENSEI Laser Pro Gaming
Internet Speed
48-51Mbs Mbs down, 11 Mbs up Xfinity Cable
Antivirus
Norton Internet Security 2013
Browser
IE 10, Opera, Pale Moon if needed
Other Info
4 case fans, LG BluRay-RE, ASUS DVD-RW, Mr. Fusion power supply, 1.21 gigawatts.
If I had to decide for myself, I would save the $65 and buy the plain 840. Yes the Pro version has better measurement numbers but not with the 4K size blocks where it counts for the OS. In real life you won't notice a difference.
Thanks my friend I was rather hoping I could do that :D
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Own build (new) Desk1 / Asus ROG Win 7 / Desk2 1st build
OS
Desk1 7 Home Prem / Desk2 10 Pro / Main lap Asus ROG 10 Pro 2 laptop Toshiba 7 Pro Asus P2520 7 & 10
CPU
Desk1 i5 3750K / Laptop i7 GTX 860M / Desk2 i5 2500
Motherboard
Desk1 Asus P877-V / Desk2 Gigabyte H67 UD3H / Laptop ?
Memory
Desk1 8GB (1866) / Desk2 16GB (1333) / Laptop 8Gb DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Desk 1& 2NVidia GTX 650 & Laptops on board Intel
Sound Card
Desk 1 & 2 -XONAR DG Realtek High Def audio Laptop
Monitor(s) Displays
Desk 1 Benq HD 2450 / Desk2 Philips 24" / Laptop 17.5"
Screen Resolution
1920x1080 D1 & D2 & Laptop 1
Hard Drives
Desk1 Samsung 120GB 830 SSD
Asus ROG 256GB 850 Pro SSD
Desk2 Samsung 840 256 SSD
Toshiba 120GB EVO
PSU
Desk 1 Corsair HX 1050/ Laptop ? / Desk 2 Corsair HX 650
Case
Desk 1 Cooler HAF XM ? Toshiba laptop / Desk2 Coolermaster
Cooling
Fans on all Desk1 -2 Desk2 - all Coolermasters 5 Laptop ?
Keyboard
Desk 1 MS Sidewinder X6 Desk 2 MS Sidewinder X 4
Mouse
Desk 1&2 - Gigabyte MS 900 gamer - laptop - Logitec wireless
Internet Speed
ADSL2+
Other Info
One other Desktop (tester) and spare Toshba laptop both with SSD's
Running Kaspersky 2016 ISS on all machines config'd identically
Logitec audio stereo systems on each machine (x3)
Canon MG5250MFC
Router/modem TP-Link running WPA2SK
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