- May 19, 2011
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I've believed it for a long time myself, but thanks to a particularly annoying problem with Win11 Pro, C drive mirroring and feature updates (or lack thereof), I finally did an install today with both disks connected during setup (I had enough of removing M.2 drives for one day!), did a diskpart clean on each one before getting to the "where do you want to install Windows" question, and after setup completed and Windows started, diskpart shows no partitions on the second disk and Disk Management asks the 'new drive' question of "how do you want to initialise this drive?". aka. as pure as the driven snow. I need to look up the etymology of that expression at some point.
So I think I can now say with a fair degree of confidence that it no longer matters having multiple drives connected during setup. However, I would advise that if there's data you don't want to lose on those other drives, then they should only be connected if absolutely necessary (e.g. Windows dual-boot with Windows setups), because otherwise why risk it when there's software playing around with the partition table(s).
So I think I can now say with a fair degree of confidence that it no longer matters having multiple drives connected during setup. However, I would advise that if there's data you don't want to lose on those other drives, then they should only be connected if absolutely necessary (e.g. Windows dual-boot with Windows setups), because otherwise why risk it when there's software playing around with the partition table(s).