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Swapping system locations on dual boot system using ATIH 2011.

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My PC is dual boot Windows XP/Windows 10. It started out as an XP system, but then I set up as a dual boot XP/Windows 7 machine by creating a partition on one of my hard disks and installing Windows 7. Then I upgraded Windows 7 to Windows 10 . Since it is the original OS the system disk for XP is disk0 which is an SSD. The system disk for W10 is a partition on disk1 which is a hard disk. At this point I consider Windows 10 my "main" system, but I still need to keep the dual boot configuration to run some older software.

So what I'd like to do is "swap" the locations of the system disks, to move the system disk for Windows 10 to disk0/SSD, and move the system disk for XP to the partition on disk1. I have Acronis True Image Home 2011 and have backed up both system disks.

My thought was to restore the Windows 10 system to the SSD, and to restore the XP system to the partition I'm currently using for Windows 10.  My assumption is this will do what I want and when I boot, it will behave the same way giving me the choice of what to boot from, only that now for Windows 10 I'll be booting of the SSD and for XP I'll be booting of the hard drive.

Will this work? If so, what are the specific steps to take with Acronis True Image Home 2011 to restore a backup to a different disk/partition? If there is something additional I need to do to make it work and boot properly please let me know.

Right now everything works fine, I'd just like the Windows 10 system which I use all the time now to enjoy the faster speed of the SSD. However I don't want to screw up a working setup. So if this is a bad idea please let me know.

Thanks for any help.

Steve

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ATIH 2011 does not support Win10 so I'm going to say, probably not.  2011 did not support UEFI and GPT disks was pretty limited.  You may have Win 10 installed as Legacy / MBR so that may not be an issue though, but Win 10 is going to be the kicker. 

Win 10 is a new beast and the bootloader is very different than previous OS.  While some are having success with multiboot systems and Win10, many are not.  The majority that are having luck are using legacy / MBR installs as well and third party tools. Everytime MS releases a major update to Win10, it often breaks the multiboot because the recovery partion lives on C and the third party tools modfiy the bootloader outside of what Microsoft is doing.

In the long run, you may actually be better off losing the dual boot and opting for a quick hardware solution like an icydock quick release bay and just swapping hard drives out when you need to switch OS if you have Win 10.  If you want to pursue the dual boot option still though, I don't think 2011 is going to be your best option though and you may want to consider upgrading to 2016 or waitign a few months for 2017 - be aware though that the interface is quite different than 2013 and earlier versions.

13645: Acronis True Image Home 2011: Supported Operating Systems