Hello,
I would like to clone my system disk from an ATA drive to a SATA on. I'm running WindowsXPproSP2. I only have IDE drives hooked up at the moment. I've learned enough here and there to understand that I will need SATA drivers for Windows to recognise my new drive.
I'm quite familiar with cloning system drives IDE to IDE, but just want to check that I'm not missing the boat on the change to SATA. Here's the procedure as I now understand it (in short):
- install the SATA drivers in Windows before beginning;
- backup EVERYTHING (always);
- power down and hook up the SATA drive;
- boot to BIOS, activate the SATA option, verify that the drive is detected in the BIOS;
- boot to Windows and see if the (still empty) SATA drive is recognised (test it perhaps...);
- clone the system drive to the new SATA drive (Norton GHOST);
- power down, remove the former system drive (IDE);
- boot to BIOS and change the boot sequence;
- boot to Windows and sing hallelujah, it's working!
Can anyone wiser than I see a problem with this? If I have to run the system repair, that's ok. I'd rather avoid reinstalling from scratch - that's what cloning's all about, right?
Thanks in advance,
kowderoi
I would like to clone my system disk from an ATA drive to a SATA on. I'm running WindowsXPproSP2. I only have IDE drives hooked up at the moment. I've learned enough here and there to understand that I will need SATA drivers for Windows to recognise my new drive.
I'm quite familiar with cloning system drives IDE to IDE, but just want to check that I'm not missing the boat on the change to SATA. Here's the procedure as I now understand it (in short):
- install the SATA drivers in Windows before beginning;
- backup EVERYTHING (always);
- power down and hook up the SATA drive;
- boot to BIOS, activate the SATA option, verify that the drive is detected in the BIOS;
- boot to Windows and see if the (still empty) SATA drive is recognised (test it perhaps...);
- clone the system drive to the new SATA drive (Norton GHOST);
- power down, remove the former system drive (IDE);
- boot to BIOS and change the boot sequence;
- boot to Windows and sing hallelujah, it's working!
Can anyone wiser than I see a problem with this? If I have to run the system repair, that's ok. I'd rather avoid reinstalling from scratch - that's what cloning's all about, right?
Thanks in advance,
kowderoi