Solved how do I create a select boot for 2 hard drives

wilfj

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I have windows 7 on one drive C: and XP on D: How do I create a boot select at startup? Thanks
 

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NEW 2012 very, very fast. AMD chip still does some strange thinks as expected......
Since you have two HD's just set the preferred one to boot first in BIOS setup, then if you want to boot the other tap the one-time Boot Menu key which is F12 on Dell.

This is the cleanest method of booting two OS's because the HD's remain independent and are free to come and go as you please. A Windows-managed Dual Boot menu interlocks them and makes them harder to remove.
 
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thanks for the info but just two complex for me.

My Compaq at start up, will show me the boot files by just holding the ESC key. Easy and nothing added. I have 2 hard drives Win7 and the other XP .
I just seem to recall in Win98 we would create an Autoexec file for selecting the hard drive at start up. I think that's what I had in mind. Thanks again
 

My Computer

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HP 1212
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windows 7 home premium 64
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AMD fx6120
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8gb
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radeon hd 7450
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IDT
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lg
Hard Drives
2 tb
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tower
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?
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HP extended
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MS cordless
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hi
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NEW 2012 very, very fast. AMD chip still does some strange thinks as expected......
Hi there
every computer I've ever used has some sort of boot menu -- even if you have to go into the BIOS setup to set the default boot drive.

As others have pointed out this is definitely the best way since it preserves the TOTAL independance of the disks.

If you install a software application such as GRUB or EasyBoot etc then it's very difficult to remove one of the OS'es if you want to.

Modern computers also allow you to boot from USB devices as well -- so using the built in hardware boot menu or BIOS setup IMO is definitely the best option.

Cheers
jimbo
 

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thanks for your reply and I'll stay with the Bios selection meno which the ESC key will open and allow the drive selection to be made. Works quite well, I do find that I'm back to XP over 7 easy to find things.....
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP 1212
OS
windows 7 home premium 64
CPU
AMD fx6120
Memory
8gb
Graphics Card(s)
radeon hd 7450
Sound Card
IDT
Monitor(s) Displays
lg
Hard Drives
2 tb
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tower
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?
Keyboard
HP extended
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MS cordless
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hi
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NEW 2012 very, very fast. AMD chip still does some strange thinks as expected......
I have a related question, I have a new HP HPE410f PC with Win 7 Premium installed on the 1TB Drive, and I want to add another 2TB HDD and install Win 7 Pro on that one. When I am ready to install the OS on the 2nd drive, do I just set it as the primary boot path drive? Do I need to format the new HDD before installing Win 7 Pro?
 

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HP HPE410f
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Win 7 Home Premium 64bit
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AMD Phenom II 1045T 2.7 GHz Six-Core processor
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8GB of DDR3 RAM
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ATI Radeon HD 5570 graphics card with 1GB DDR3 dedicated
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High definition audio with up to 7.1 surround sound
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Acer 20" LCD
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1TB SATA
Larryz4
I'm curious why you'd want to do this - but to answer your question:
I would not install the 2nd Windows 7 OS while the disk with the other OS is connected. I would pull the sata cable on the disk containing the 1st OS then do an ordinary install with only the 2nd drive connected. when the 2nd OS is up & running connect the 1st drive and select boot order in BIOS. Then at boot you can select which W7 you want to boot. What you want to end up with is 2 independently bootable disks.
If the new install is to an unallocated drive then I understand you will get the 100MB system reserved partition.
 

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Initialize the HD in Disk Mgmt before install. Then unplug the first drive, plug it's cable into new HD or set it to boot in BIOS after DVD drive, Boot DVD to Custom install.

After install, plug back in other HD, set preferred HD as first HD to boot in BIOS setup, boot the other HD using HP ESC key for one-time BIOS Boot menu.

If you don't like this cleaner method of Dual Booting which keeps the HD"s independent to come and go as you please, you can interlock them using EasyBCD 2.0 to get a Windows-managed Dual Boot menu.
 
Larryz4
I'm curious why you'd want to do this - but to answer your question:
I would not install the 2nd Windows 7 OS while the disk with the other OS is connected. I would pull the sata cable on the disk containing the 1st OS then do an ordinary install with only the 2nd drive connected. when the 2nd OS is up & running connect the 1st drive and select boot order in BIOS. Then at boot you can select which W7 you want to boot. What you want to end up with is 2 independently bootable disks.
If the new install is to an unallocated drive then I understand you will get the 100MB system reserved partition.

I guess it seems strange as to why I would do this, but I finally got Premium where I want it and deleted all the bloatware that I didn't want, but I want to run AutoCad r14, and there is no XP environment on Premium, so I got Pro to run AutoCad and other XP programs that I can't in Premium. I had the 2TB drive sitting here, so I thought this would be a good way to utilize it and get what I need at the same time.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP HPE410f
OS
Win 7 Home Premium 64bit
CPU
AMD Phenom II 1045T 2.7 GHz Six-Core processor
Memory
8GB of DDR3 RAM
Graphics Card(s)
ATI Radeon HD 5570 graphics card with 1GB DDR3 dedicated
Sound Card
High definition audio with up to 7.1 surround sound
Monitor(s) Displays
Acer 20" LCD
Hard Drives
1TB SATA
Thank you Gregrocker and mjf for the steps required. I like the method you have suggested and I will do exactly that. And yes, Gregrocker, I want to use the clean method like this so that should I want to discontinue using either version it's just a matter of cables and a simple BIOS change. Thanks again!
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP HPE410f
OS
Win 7 Home Premium 64bit
CPU
AMD Phenom II 1045T 2.7 GHz Six-Core processor
Memory
8GB of DDR3 RAM
Graphics Card(s)
ATI Radeon HD 5570 graphics card with 1GB DDR3 dedicated
Sound Card
High definition audio with up to 7.1 surround sound
Monitor(s) Displays
Acer 20" LCD
Hard Drives
1TB SATA
If you want the separate system reserved partition then I believe it's best to install to an unallocated drive. For a 2TB drive I would keep the system reserved because you are almost certainly going to be using an extended partition with multiple logicals.
One of the advantages of the system reserved is that you can multiboot to these logical partitions. It also appears to play a role in the F8 recover/maintenance function. But I suggest you make the system reserved around 200MB. There are good reasons for this. All of this is reversible down the track.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Own build
OS
Windows 7x64 Home Premium SP1
CPU
Intel i7 2600k
Motherboard
ASUS P8Z68 Deluxe
Memory
G.Skill Ripjaws (DDR3-1600) 2x4GB
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia GeForce GTS 450; Intel HD Graphics 3000(GT2+)
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell Ultrasharp IPS panel U2311H, Samsung SyncMaster P2350
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Samsung 850 Pro SSD 256GB, Samsung SSD 840 120GB, Seagates 1TB Barracuda ST31000528AS x2
PSU
Seasonic M12II 520W
Case
Lian Li Lancool PC-K60
Cooling
Case: 1x120mm, 3x140mm CPU: Hyper 212+
Keyboard
Logitech MK520 (wireless)
Mouse
Logitech MK520
Internet Speed
6-7 Mbps
Antivirus
Norton Security Premium, Malwarebytes on 2 (MSE on 3rd PC)
Browser
FireFox
Other Info
Audio: Logitech Z523 2.1
Hello Larryz4, welcome to Seven Forums!



As mjf has suggested, it would be a good idea to add a separate Windows 7 "System Reserved" partition to the new 2TB HDD before you start the installaton process.

I would also suggest creating a 100GB or similar in size or any size you wish, to install Windows 7 to, we are starting to see some have issues getting Windows to install to such large partitions as 1 & 2TB, have a look at the snip and tutorial at the link below for an outline of the process.
 

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