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New SSD

Started by shankle, July 10, 2015, 01:01:11 AM

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shankle

Things seem to be changing so fast with SSDs I hate to buy one now.
And they are to pricey. BUT I lost my extra HD and now am at the mercy
of just 1 HD. I have read that it is a good idea to put Windows on the SSD
and everything else on the spinner. I have also read that this can be a bit
of a challenge. Wonder how that will act with Windows 7 64-bit?

Also I read that some motherboards won't work with certain versions of
a SSD. Maybe my best choice would be to just get another spinner and
wait for developments......

I have no Windows 7 pro 64-bit cd as Microsoft saw fit to not let me have one..
That makes my Clonezilla-live backup iffy. I would be going from a 1T spinner
to a 126G SSD. This would cause a problem with the 1st install of windows on
the SSD. Clonezilla-live will most likely work after I create an image to the spinner
then most likely I will be able to restore to the SSD.
Your thoughts would most appreciated.


sinsi

Some SSDs come with software specially for cloning an existing HDD to an SSD.
If you have a "genuine" Windows 7 key (OEM? not sure) you can download a Windows 7 iso from Microsoft
http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/software-recovery

shankle

Thanks Sinsi for your informative reply.

shankle

Hi Sinsi,
Didn't work as usual.
I had the computer built for me with the tech using his windows DVD.
I have the license # but Microsoft doesn't like it for some reason. :icon_confused:

shankle

I might have found the answer to the SSD migration.
Minitool Partition wizard 9.0 has an OS migration tool for moving an
OS to a SSD. It also has a tool  for aligning the SSd .
Hope it works as that is the way I will go.
In the past I have found Minitool Partition Wizard to be a very good
piece of software. 

hutch--

Jack,

Unless you can see a big gain from using an SSD on an older computer, you would probably be better off with a late hard disk. You can buy a WD Blue 1tb disk these days for peanuts and they are a lot faster than the older HDDs. The longer you leave it the price goes down on SSDs the reliability goes up and they keep getting larger so I would be inclined to use one on your next new computer.

shankle

Thanks Hutch for responding.
Sounds like good advice and I will follow it. :biggrin:

sinsi

I can get a 128GB SATA3 SSD for $69, or a 1TB WD Blue for $62.
Your average user can get by easily with 128GB, or you go for a 256GB for $129.
Up the RAM to at least 8GB and even a Vista computer will fly :biggrin:

The biggest gains with an SSD is in a laptop - low power, no moving parts, better than SATA2/5400 RPM spinners.