Tech Support > Microsoft Windows > Replacing Hard Drive
Replacing Hard Drive
Posted by Steve R on April 29th, 2006


Current system: Win XP Home SP2, AMD Athlon(tm) 64 processor, 3400+, 2.20
GHz, 1.00 GB of RAM, 200 GB Western Digital hard drive, NVIDIA GeForce FX
5900XT display adapter, SONY CD-RW CRX-230E, SONY DVD RW DW-U18A, Creative SB
Audigy 2 sound system

I am having hard drive problems with a number of recent bad sectors
developing that suggests the drive may be beginning to fail. I have backups
of all critical data. I would like to replace the drive with a larger one
but do a fresh install of Win XP Home (and program files) on the new drive
rather than use a disk imaging technique to clone the old drive. In other
words, I want Win XP Home on the new drive which I will partition with
Partition Magic then reinstall the programs I want and copy the backed-up
data files. I plan to have two partitions on the new drive - one for the OS
and program files and the other for data. This is the present configuration
of the old drive. Is there a step -by-step tutorial available for this
procedure or is there a better strategy? Thanks.

Posted by steam3801 on April 30th, 2006


On Sat, 29 Apr 2006 16:45:02 -0700, Steve R
<SteveR@discussions.microsoft.com> - in a blinding flash of brilliance
- wrote:

You really don't need much more detail than tyhe steps you've outlined
above.

However, a better "strategy" might be to consider 2 HDD instead of one
large one. If either one crashes you only have to either re-install or
copy, not both if the 1 HDD is partitioned.

This is an even better suggestion when you consider you don't have to
use PM which has gone downhill totally since Symantec bought it out.
--
steam3801
ASCII a silly question, get a silly ANSI

Posted by John Barnes on April 30th, 2006


Sounds like a good plan to me. You will need to reactivate, but if you have
a retail version that shouldn't be a problem. Never try to image a failing
drive, even if it works, odds are you will have problems down the road.


"Steve R" <SteveR@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
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Posted by DL on April 30th, 2006


Since you are clean installing, why do you need PM? since the wincd has all
the tools to partition/format, single or multiple partitions.
If your wincd is actually pre sp1 (I know you show sp2 installed) the large
hd will not be identified

"Steve R" <SteveR@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
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Posted by Steve R on May 1st, 2006


Thanks for the input. I'm not committed to PM. It's just that I have been
using it successfully for many years and I feel comfortable with it.

One other question. How do I determine the actual number of bad sectors on
the drive?

"DL" wrote:

Posted by DL on May 1st, 2006


The HD manu, diagnostic tool may help, available free on their site.
However if the disk shows bad sectors you would be advised to dump it

"Steve R" <SteveR@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
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