Backup Partitions when moving HDD ?

JerometheGiraff

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When physically moving a HDD that was on one motherboard to a another motherboard is it recommended to back up all partitions for the HDD or just as long as you have the active windows partition HDD backed up, it doesn't matter ?
 

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You should have your data backed up, regardless of which partition it is on and regardless of whether or not you are changing motherboards.

You don't have to back up any partitions.

The hard drive may or may not boot on the new motherboard.
 

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Ignatz Special; 4 speed manual gearbox; factory air conditioning; one of one
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Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
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Intel Skylake i5-6600K, not overclocked
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AsRock Z170M Extreme 4, micro ATX
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8 GB HyperX DDR4-2666 (2 x 4 GB)
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Windows 7 Pro 64 bit SP1
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Intel Core i7 950 Quad OC'ed to 3.2 GHZ
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ASRock X58
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You should have your data backed up, regardless of which partition it is on and regardless of whether or not you are changing motherboards.

You don't have to back up any partitions.

The hard drive may or may not boot on the new motherboard.

The hard drive may or may not boot. The backup I have claims they can install the backup to different hardware. Why I ask, do I need to back up the other partitions that are not the boot partitions, just as long as I have the main windows boot partition backed up all other partitions will restore with ease, of course putting into consideration if the backup is capable of a task. Why do I need to run sysprep ?
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Built
OS
Windows 10 Pro
CPU
Core2Quad (2.6 Ghz)
Motherboard
nVidia 775
Memory
8 Gigs DDR2
Graphics Card(s)
Geforce Titan Black
Sound Card
Motherboard Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
25" Asus LCD
Screen Resolution
1680x1050
Hard Drives
120 Gig SSD
60 Gig SSD
750 Gig HDD
PSU
850 Watts
Case
Mid-Size
Keyboard
Logitech
Mouse
Logitech - I love logitech mouses
Internet Speed
DSL 25Mbps - Although extremely expensive
Antivirus
Microsoft Anti-Virus
Browser
FireFox 36.x
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