I need to take the hdd out and replace it with a ssd.
do I need the laptop's drivers on the flash drive along with the operating system?
1. Do I need a usb flash drive to transfer the operating system?
2. And do I need the laptop's drivers on the flash drive along with the operating system?
Short answer - no! I just cloned the HDD to the SSD, then removed the HDD and put the SSD in its place and life went on normally. I then put the HDD away as an emergency backup.
Hello,
I am replacing the oriignal SSD M2 SATA 512GB
with a
Samsung EVO plus M2 NVMe 2TB
in a Lenovo Thinkpad T460s with windows7 sp1.
Connected the new SSD thorugh a USB holder,
cloning the original SSD operating system partition (Cwith windows7, using
Samsung Data Migration software
(NB: I run it on the same windows7 that I am cloning),
The cloning ends successfully.
When I insert the new SSD instead of the old SSD and boot,
i see the page with windows 7 logo loading for 1-2 seconds,
but then the blue screen.
I tried also with
Norton Ghost booting form a bootable USB key with winPE, same problem.
Any special setting to apply? in the BIOS maybe?
Or different procedure for cloning?
( I am not expert)
Thank you
Hi Quartz, I am trying to do something similar. I do not have defrag scheduled, but I do not know what is TRIM ?don't take what I say as the 'expert' reply, but I just connected my 500GB SSD (replacing 500GB HDD) via a USB-to-SATA cable, ran macrium reflect, cloned Windows 7, then powered down and replaced the drive. I had to make sure to disable scheduled defrag. Also ran Samsung's software to make sure TRIM was enabled.
Thank you very much. I will try it this weekend. Since the disk will be fit in the same M2 connector and it is anyway a SSD I do not need to enter the BIOS to change the boot unit, or any other parameter, do I ?When you clone a Windows installation from a SATA drive to a NVMe SSD, you should let it fail to boot and reboot automatically several times in a row, after which it will offer you the menu that gives you the option to boot into safe mode. After Windows has successfully booted into safe mode once, you can reboot and everything will work fine. This is because booting into safe mode forces Windows to re-detect hardware, and it'll notice that the boot volume is on a NVMe device rather than a SATA device.
It's stupid and silly, but that's Windows.
When you clone a Windows installation from a SATA drive to a NVMe SSD, you should let it fail to boot and reboot automatically several times in a row, after which it will offer you the menu that gives you the option to boot into safe mode. After Windows has successfully booted into safe mode once, you can reboot and everything will work fine. This is because booting into safe mode forces Windows to re-detect hardware, and it'll notice that the boot volume is on a NVMe device rather than a SATA device.
It's stupid and silly, but that's Windows.