Choosing the default OS or removing an option...

mattsears18

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I have win7 installed on my computer. I'm helping a friend fix his computer. He has a netbook with no DVD drive and I couldn't find my external DVD drive. I plugged his hard drive into my computer to access it. I successfully installed windows to his hard drive form my computer. I then removed the drive and will place it back in his computer soon.

Problem is... now when my computer boots it tries to boot from the win7 installation I did to his hard drive. I get an error saying that the drive has been removed or is not accessible or whatever. Obviously that's because I removed it.

Question is... can I change the default OS to boot from? I have 2 win7 options (mine and the installation I just did on his). Can I remove the option to boot from the recent installation I did on his hard drive?

Many thanks in advance!!
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Home PremiumAMD Phenom 9650 Quad-Core Processor 2.30 GHz8 GB, PC2-6400 MB/sec, 240 pin, DDR2XFX GeForce 9800 GTX
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP Pavilion / p6142p
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium
CPU
AMD Phenom 9650 Quad-Core Processor 2.30 GHz
Motherboard
Pegatron M2N78-LA / Violet-GL8E
Memory
8 GB, PC2-6400 MB/sec, 240 pin, DDR2
Graphics Card(s)
XFX GeForce 9800 GTX
Sound Card
High Definition 8-channel audio, ALC 888S chipset
Monitor(s) Displays
20″ Widescreen LCD monitor
Screen Resolution
1600 x 900
Hard Drives
640 GB SATA 3G (3.0 Gb/sec) 7200 rpm
PSU
Diablotek PHD Series 550 Watt
Yes, although if your system shows his HDD to boot from, I'm guessing the Win7 install on that HDD doesn't have boot info and you're going to run into problems when you put it into his machine - and without a DVD to boot from, you aren't going to be able to run fixmbr or run a boot repair from the setup either to fix it. I'd suggest (strongly) putting the Win7 DVD on a USB key and installing with the HDD in his netbook.

As to removing the option, yes. There's a tool you can run from a command prompt called bcdedit which allows you to modify the boot options for your system. You would run bcdedit /enum to get a list of boot options on your system, and then bcdedit /delete {<insert GUID here of boot object from list>} to remove a boot option.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 10 Pro x64Intel Core i7 4790K @ 4.5GHz32GB DDR3Nvidia GeForce GTX970
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom
OS
Windows 10 Pro x64
CPU
Intel Core i7 4790K @ 4.5GHz
Motherboard
Asus Maximus Hero VII
Memory
32GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia GeForce GTX970
Sound Card
Realtek HD Audio
Screen Resolution
1920x1200
Hard Drives
1x Samsung 250GB SSD
4x WD RE 2TB (RAIDZ)
PSU
Corsair AX760i
Case
Fractal Design Define R4
Cooling
Noctua NH-D15
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