Install windows 7 upgrade on new hard drive
As for the mentioned system clone tool, you may follow this link to download EaseUS Todo Backup for help. After installing the new drive on your laptop, you can now move to the next part to set up your hard drive, making it work for you. To save your time and energy, we'd like to recommend a reliable partition manager software - EaseUS Partition Master to help you effectively initialize disk and partition hard drive with ease.
Assume that the installed new drive is now unallocated on your computer or laptop, you'll need to initialize it first. Step 2. Execute the operation and click "Apply". This video tells you how to do it:.
If you plan to make the second hard drive as a data disk, you may apply the partition hard drive feature in this software to create new partitions with ease:. On the main window, right-click on the unallocated space on your hard drive or external storage device and select "Create". Adjust the partition size, file system Choose the file system based on your need , label, etc. Step 3. Click on the "Execute Operation" button and create a new partition by clicking "Apply". If you have bought a new hard drive home, you may directly skip this part and follow the guide to install the new hard drive or SSD.
If you haven't yet chosen a suitable drive, here below are some critical factors that may help you to decide which drive you would like to apply and install on your computer - a regular hard drive or an SSD disk. If you don't plan to offer too much money on purchasing a new disk, a regular hard drive will be your best shot.
Compared to a regular hard drive, we know that although recently the price of SSD disk indeed goes down, yet a solid-state disk is still charging regular people quite a bunch of bucks. Another important factor that may affect your decision is to make clear about your purpose of installing a new drive - to Migrate OS or Increase Storage Capacity. If your computer system performance degrades, your system hard drive is old, you will need to upgrade the system disk. Your wise choice is to get a new SSD disk.
If your computer hard drive is out of space for saving data, you will need to add a second hard drive into your computer as a data drive. In this case, all you need is a regular hard drive with enough storage capacity. Usually, the number of SATA Interfaces on the motherboard of your computer decides how many hard drives that you can add to your computer. This time, it tells me the product requires a valid existing OS in order to upgrade. So, my only solution is to wipe the drive, install vista, then install the upgrade to get back to where I already am.
All this just to get Windows to allow this to be activated? That is not a good user experience model. I have three valid Vista licenses I would gladly prove that I already own, but am not glad to actually have to install them to verify that I have them.
This looks so helpful. Thank you so much for this link. What you need to know Carey Frisch Carey, the link you pointed out essentially confirms what several of us having been saying. It's the license that determines the validity, not the actual method of installation. From the article: " Now there are many, many, many, many of you out there that already own Windows licenses that qualify for the Windows 7 Upgrade, so this is a non-issue for you.
I am talking about people who own a FULL license for a previous version of Windows for their computers already, as shown in the first picture example above. A lot of people are going to waste a lot of money and time trying to obtain lost recovery disks because this isn't made clear. Why make people waste time on the phone with their vendors trying to buy recovery disks that aren't necessary? If you have them, great. If you just feel like sitting around watching different Windows installers, great.
If you don't, great. If so, then no - you do NOT have to reinstall it if you don't want to. While it is recommended to start the install from a previous installation, as that will preserve your data and for Vista, your applications , it is not technically necessary.
Let me add, also from the linked page: re: Regardless of what any hack says, a Windows 7 Upgrade is an Upgrade. What you need to know. Wednesday, October 28, AM by mssmallbiz. Make sense?
You don't have to reinstall Vista to use your upgrade keys. You can do an in-place upgrade of Windows 7 over your current Windows 7 installation. Afterwards, your upgrade key will work. Alternately, you can use the registry patch method that essentially does the same thing, only without the second install. It's a bit of a sensitive subject, but Paul Thurrott's window supersite has a tutorial on it. Microsoft reps have actually given customers, myself included, instructions to do the second upgrade install over a Windows 7 "custom" install for certain situations - such as where it would be difficult or impossible to restore the original licensed OS.
The registry patch method is a shortened version of that procedure. That is a direct question and as others have already explained the answer to it is "yes!
When prompted for an install key click on 'Next'. Do not enter your install key at this point. This will give you a fully working, completely legitimate and perfectly valid Windows 7 install. Your license upgrade is adequately 'qualified' by your ownership of the Windows license which was provided with the PC. You can afterwards format the original hard drive and reuse it for data storage.
You must NOT reuse that hard drive in a different machine, or reuse that previous license on a different machine. What you need to know Carey Frisch Carey, wiith respect, as Seth Henry has pointed out that document clearly indicates that what people are saying here is correct. Suggestions to the contrary are, quite frankly, incorrect! Your statement "the valid ownership of a previous legitimately qualifying license is enough While you may own a valid Windows license that qualifies for the upgrade version of Windows 7, that license must be installed on the hard drive for verification.
What you are saying is similar to someone that wishes to upgrade to a new car, trade-in the old car and pay the difference, then keep the old car, too.
Carey, that's not correct. JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding. You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly. You should upgrade or use an alternative browser. How to install Windows 7 upgrade on new hard drive? Thread starter MoreDents Start date Feb 7, MoreDents Limp Gawd. Joined Mar 9, Messages My hard drive is really old as well and I fear it might die soon.
When I buy a brand new hard drive, how can I install my Windows 7 Student Upgrade version on it when it requires either XP or Vista to be on the hard drive in the first place. If it's not possible, then I think the "upgrade system" is really flawed because old hard drives do indeed die
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