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Software Troubleshooting
moving system win 10 partition to another disk
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<blockquote data-quote="shmu26" data-source="post: 960580" data-attributes="member: 37647"><p>You can use Macrium Reflect free version. First make a backup of your system partitions -- this usually means the C drive and all the little partitions to the left of it. However, you may find that your recovery partition is to the right of the C drive, so include that, too, in your backup.</p><p>Then you simply restore your backup onto the target disk, which in your case is disk 0.</p><p></p><p>If you don't have a media available to store your backup, you can partition your disk 0. Make a big partition of 430 Gb, and a small one of whatever is left. Store your backup on the small one, restore the backup onto the big one, and then delete the small partition, if you want to. </p><p></p><p>Your BIOS might not boot to disk 0 because it is used to booting to disk 1. You can run the Macrium Reflect boot recovery tool and point it to disk 0, which will probably be identified as disk D, at this point. That should sort things out. </p><p>Or you can change the boot order in the BIOS settings if you feel comfortable with that.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="shmu26, post: 960580, member: 37647"] You can use Macrium Reflect free version. First make a backup of your system partitions -- this usually means the C drive and all the little partitions to the left of it. However, you may find that your recovery partition is to the right of the C drive, so include that, too, in your backup. Then you simply restore your backup onto the target disk, which in your case is disk 0. If you don't have a media available to store your backup, you can partition your disk 0. Make a big partition of 430 Gb, and a small one of whatever is left. Store your backup on the small one, restore the backup onto the big one, and then delete the small partition, if you want to. Your BIOS might not boot to disk 0 because it is used to booting to disk 1. You can run the Macrium Reflect boot recovery tool and point it to disk 0, which will probably be identified as disk D, at this point. That should sort things out. Or you can change the boot order in the BIOS settings if you feel comfortable with that. [/QUOTE]
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