Originally posted by: LTOwnalot
Thanks dclive!
Originally posted by: Phil
Originally posted by: bob4432
this should be stickied 😀
Seconded.
Originally posted by: dclive
Go into DM, pick your IDE controller (the top one, over the pri/sec choices), select Update, and pick the standard IDE choice when presented in the lists. (Select all the bottom 'non-automatic' options to get there.)
Ghost or make other image-based backups first. 🙂
Originally posted by: dclive
From what chipset to what chipset? Is your PCI HDD controller driver the same? Is the HAL the same? If so, you're fine.
Originally posted by: dclive
You can try moving it without doing anything; if the HAL matches and if the disk controllers are compatible, you'll boot up fine.
If you can pre-install the nVidia chipset SATA drivers, that would help.
Originally posted by: mechwarrior1989
I feel stupid bringing back a dead topic but I was hoping someone could help me out....
Originally posted by: dclive
Answer: Sysprep doesn't do much. It strips out unique information about the machine, and does a few other things that most people here don't need to care about, particularly if moving from one PC to another with the same licensed copy of Windows.
I suggest not using Sysprep and simply using the "Standard PCI IDE Controller" trick, and you'll be fine.
Sysprep is awesome for automated deployment - you can put twenty different drivers into the image, and no matter what hardware you deploy the image to, the drivers will PnP and be recognized - you can deploy dozens of different machines from one image easily and quickly. But in one-off situations like this where you're simply moving hard drives from one PC to another, it's not really that useful.