Upgrade C hard drive
I am having difficulty planning proper procedures to upgrade my C: drive to a larger drive. My PC currently has 2 HD's and runs Win XP on the C drive. Acronis TI Home 11 is installed on the D drive. I have my C drive backup on a network drive ready to restore to the new, larger C drive. Can I connect my new HD as a 3rd & restore the old C image to it? I suspect if I start by replacing the old C drive with the new one, I won't be able to start TI to run the restore to the new drive. Can you please help me comprehend the proper procedures to follow in upgrading the Windows C: drive? Thank you for your time.
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I believe that's what I want to do, but I am uncertain I can install the new drive then start TI (installed on D: drive) from the new drive in order to restore the backup.
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Normally, you would boot to the TI CD and perform the restore instead of doing it from Windows. For example, remove the original Windows drive, install the new one, boot to the TI CD, and restore the image to the new drive.
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OK - excellent. I think I understand now. I forgot I could boot the PC from the TI CD. Thank you so much for your time.
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I have inserted the new HD & configured it as master & the old "program & data" drive as slave. The old drive has now been reassigned as the C drive & the new one as D drive. I want them reversed as Windows will be on the C drive (bootable). How can I safely restore the backup from the network drive to the new drive and reassign it as C drive and not lose my data?
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If I understand correctly, your new disk is empty and it is connected as Master.
If that is correct, then remove the slave connector to the old drive and keep it disconnected for a while.
Restore the network backup to the new large blank disk and reboot with only the new disk connected.
The system should boot into the new disk as Drive C as it is the only disk attached.
Boot a couple times into the new disk and shutdown and re-connect the slave. Disconnect any externals or removables.
Reboot and go into the BIOS and confirm that the proper disk has been selected as the correct boot disk.
Upon booting, you should find the master new disk is C and the slave disk is D.
The restore to the new larger disk will destroy any data that exists on the new larger disk before the restore. Data on the old smaller disk has not been touched and its contents should be unaffecte
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