- Designating new drive as (C) boot drive
- Posted by Frank on March 6th, 2004
Hi!
I installed and partitioned a second hard drive (F). I want to use it as my
C (boot) drive. (D,E are CD-ROMS)
How do I do this? I am using Windows 2000. I used back-up/restore to copy
all system files and settings (everything on my current C drive) over to the
new one. Simply changing the jumpers on the drives (master, slave) does not
work. I'm not proficient in DOS commands (i.e. Recovery Console), is there
a simpler way? Thanks.
- Posted by Pegasus \(MVP\) on March 6th, 2004
"Frank" <frank.french@sympatico.ca> wrote in message
news:sof2c.16338$JZ6.562276@news20.bellglobal.com. ..
To successfully transfer your installation to your new drive,
you would have to do this:
1. Back up your system from the old drive.
2. Restore your system to the new drive.
3. Disconnect the old drive.
4. Make the new drive the primary master disk.
5. Reboot your system.
If you leave the old disk (with its installation of Win2000)
connected then Windows is likely to change your drive
letters about. I am not aware of a reliable method to reverse
this action.
- Posted by philo on March 6th, 2004
"Frank" <frank.french@sympatico.ca> wrote in message
news:sof2c.16338$JZ6.562276@news20.bellglobal.com. ..
assuming you did not merely use windows backup
all you need do is...from disk management...
set the drive active then unassign the drive letter
now remove the original drive and put the cloned drive in it's
place
if it does not boot
use your win2k cd to bootup
then from the recovery console
you can use:
fixboot
fixmbr
- Posted by Dummy on March 6th, 2004
In the BIOS you could try changing which drive is the active partition.
This theoretically tell the computer which hard drive to boot from.
I do not know if Win2k will like this or not.
Another option is just to remove or disconnect the other drive and see if it
can still boot.
"Frank" <frank.french@sympatico.ca> wrote in message
news:sof2c.16338$JZ6.562276@news20.bellglobal.com. ..