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2 hard drives 2 Windows XP

 
 
matrixmainframe
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      17th Mar 2008
I plan to add a second hard drive to my computer (not yet decided on internal
or external) to back up all my music and other files from my primary drive.

All licensing issues aside (I've read the threads) can I install Windows XP
on the secondary drive so that if the primary drive failed I could boot from
the secondary drive without, as I suspect may be the case, having to open the
computer and changing the jumpers so that the surviving secondary drive can
be made the primary and vice versa.

Also, having never had a drive fail on me this may be a stupid question but,
if the primary drive failed and I got the secondary drive up and running as
the primary, would I still be able to see all folders and files on the failed
drive?
 
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Avi Greenbury
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      17th Mar 2008
On Mon, 17 Mar 2008 08:36:02 -0700, matrixmainframe wrote:

> I plan to add a second hard drive to my computer (not yet decided on
> internal or external) to back up all my music and other files from my
> primary drive.
>
> All licensing issues aside (I've read the threads) can I install Windows
> XP on the secondary drive so that if the primary drive failed I could
> boot from the secondary drive without, as I suspect may be the case,
> having to open the computer and changing the jumpers so that the
> surviving secondary drive can be made the primary and vice versa.
>
> Also, having never had a drive fail on me this may be a stupid question
> but, if the primary drive failed and I got the secondary drive up and
> running as the primary, would I still be able to see all folders and
> files on the failed drive?


If the primary drive fails, it's likely to take the boot sector with it,
which makes it less simple to switch between them.
If you just installed 'as normal' on both, then as and when the primary
fails, you could use the boot menu in your bios to go with the secondary
one.
I'd suggest just waiting the day or two it takes to get a new hard drive,
myself.
 
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Bob I
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      17th Mar 2008


matrixmainframe wrote:

> I plan to add a second hard drive to my computer (not yet decided on internal
> or external) to back up all my music and other files from my primary drive.
>

Good idea.


> All licensing issues aside (I've read the threads) can I install Windows XP
> on the secondary drive so that if the primary drive failed I could boot from
> the secondary drive without, as I suspect may be the case, having to open the
> computer and changing the jumpers so that the surviving secondary drive can
> be made the primary and vice versa.
>

No it won't work the way you envision.

> Also, having never had a drive fail on me this may be a stupid question but,
> if the primary drive failed and I got the secondary drive up and running as
> the primary, would I still be able to see all folders and files on the failed
> drive?


Not if the drive actually failed.

 
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Jim
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      17th Mar 2008

"matrixmainframe" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
message news:1C618A8B-B291-4C14-BC79-(E-Mail Removed)...
>I plan to add a second hard drive to my computer (not yet decided on
>internal
> or external) to back up all my music and other files from my primary
> drive.
>
> All licensing issues aside (I've read the threads) can I install Windows
> XP
> on the secondary drive so that if the primary drive failed I could boot
> from
> the secondary drive without, as I suspect may be the case, having to open
> the
> computer and changing the jumpers so that the surviving secondary drive
> can
> be made the primary and vice versa.
>
> Also, having never had a drive fail on me this may be a stupid question
> but,
> if the primary drive failed and I got the secondary drive up and running
> as
> the primary, would I still be able to see all folders and files on the
> failed
> drive?

If your system uses "cable select", then the answer to your first question
is "highly likely". There is no licensing issue involved.
The answer to your second question is "Very unlikely".
It is time for you to make a backup of all of your files.
Jim


 
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Pegasus \(MVP\)
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      17th Mar 2008

"matrixmainframe" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
message news:1C618A8B-B291-4C14-BC79-(E-Mail Removed)...
>I plan to add a second hard drive to my computer (not yet decided on
>internal
> or external) to back up all my music and other files from my primary
> drive.
>
> All licensing issues aside (I've read the threads) can I install Windows
> XP
> on the secondary drive so that if the primary drive failed I could boot
> from
> the secondary drive without, as I suspect may be the case, having to open
> the
> computer and changing the jumpers so that the surviving secondary drive
> can
> be made the primary and vice versa.
>
> Also, having never had a drive fail on me this may be a stupid question
> but,
> if the primary drive failed and I got the secondary drive up and running
> as
> the primary, would I still be able to see all folders and files on the
> failed
> drive?


If your aim is to back up your data files then using an internal
drive is a pointless exercise. Here is a better approach:
- Get an external USB drive.
- Backup your data to that drive. Do it often!
- Buy a copy of an imaging program, e.g. Acronis TrueImage.
- Create an image file of drive C: and store it on the external disk.
- Update this image once or twice each year.
- Keep the external disk well away from your PC for most
of the time.
- Create a "Rescue CD" with your imaging program.

To restore data, copy it back from the external disk.
If you need to restore Windows, boot the machine with
the Rescue CD and restore Windows from the image
file.

P.S. When backing up your data, remember to back
up your EMail files. Many people overlook this little
detail, sometimes with catastrophic consequences.


 
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Anna
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      17th Mar 2008

"matrixmainframe" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
message news:1C618A8B-B291-4C14-BC79-(E-Mail Removed)...
>I plan to add a second hard drive to my computer (not yet decided on
>internal
> or external) to back up all my music and other files from my primary
> drive.
>
> All licensing issues aside (I've read the threads) can I install Windows
> XP
> on the secondary drive so that if the primary drive failed I could boot
> from
> the secondary drive without, as I suspect may be the case, having to open
> the
> computer and changing the jumpers so that the surviving secondary drive
> can
> be made the primary and vice versa.
>
> Also, having never had a drive fail on me this may be a stupid question
> but,
> if the primary drive failed and I got the secondary drive up and running
> as
> the primary, would I still be able to see all folders and files on the
> failed
> drive?



matrix...
May I suggest that you really should be considering a comprehensive backup
system that you could employ on a routine basis? So that from time-to-time
depending upon how you use your PC you could systematically backup your
system in such a way as to have, in effect, a copy of your day-to-day
working HDD. A copy that would include your operating system (OS), all your
programs & applications, and all your user-created data. In short,
*everything* that's on your "source" HDD. So that in the event of a failure
of your HDD or the OS becoming so corrupt that it's unbootable you could use
the cloned HDD to restore your system to a functional state with a minimum
of effort.

You could accomplish this through the use of a disk-to-disk cloning (or disk
imaging) program by using another HDD (either internal or external) to be
the recipient of the clone (or disk image). If you used an internal HDD as
the recipient of the clone that drive would be bootable without the need of
opening your computer case, changing jumpers, & the like. There would be no
need to do so.

On the other hand, should you use an external HDD - say a USB external HDD -
as the recipient of the clone that HDD would not ordinarily be bootable
however, you could clone back the contents of that external HDD to a
non-defective internal HDD resulting in a bootable, functioning system once
again. The process is relatively simple & straightforward.

The advantage of using an external HDD is that it gives you somewhat more
security than another internal HDD since the external drive will ordinarily
be disconnected from the system when not in use.
Anna


 
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John
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      17th Mar 2008
It sounds like you want storage redundancy. Here are a couple choices:

1) Disk mirroring (RAID1) - needs a RAID controller card + 2 HDs
2) Disk cloning (Ghost, Acronis etc)

"matrixmainframe" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
message news:1C618A8B-B291-4C14-BC79-(E-Mail Removed)...
> Also, having never had a drive fail on me this may be a stupid question
> but,
> if the primary drive failed and I got the secondary drive up and running
> as
> the primary, would I still be able to see all folders and files on the
> failed
> drive?


Depends. What kind of failure is it? Normally you can't read anything off of
a failed HD without the help of recovery software such as EasyRecovery.


 
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PD43
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      17th Mar 2008
"Pegasus \(MVP\)" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

>- Create an image file of drive C: and store it on the external disk.
>- Update this image once or twice each year.


Or be obsessive like me and update it every night.

And install a THIRD drive - this one internal - and clone your main
drive to it weekly. If you set the BIOS to boot to that drive AFTER
the system drive, if the system drive fails, it will boot to the
cloned drive.

Acronis TI does both simply.
 
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smlunatick
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      17th Mar 2008
On Mar 17, 11:39*am, "John" <a> wrote:
> It sounds like you want storage redundancy. Here are a couple choices:
>
> 1) Disk mirroring (RAID1) - needs a RAID controller card + 2 HDs
> 2) Disk cloning (Ghost, Acronis etc)
>
> "matrixmainframe" <matrixmainfr...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
> messagenews:1C618A8B-B291-4C14-BC79-(E-Mail Removed)...
>
> > Also, having never had a drive fail on me this may be a stupid question
> > but,
> > if the primary drive failed and I got the secondary drive up and running
> > as
> > the primary, would I still be able to see all folders and files on the
> > failed
> > drive?

>
> Depends. What kind of failure is it? Normally you can't read anything off of
> a failed HD without the help of recovery software such as EasyRecovery.


RAID 1 can be done with software, although it will slow down.

Also, several "modern" (after 2006) come with RAID ports built-in.
These can do RAID 1.

Also, Microsoft has never designed, or patched, Windows XP to ever
work on an external USB / Firewire hard drive. Any hard drive based
on eSATA might be able to run XP since by it definition eSATA is seen
as an "internal" hard drive (same thing is possible with SCSI but only
to cost of the hard drive may prohibit the purchase (way more
expensive that reqular SATA / IDE drives.)
 
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John
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      17th Mar 2008

"smlunatick" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:1f6d50a5-9213-44d2-a876-(E-Mail Removed)...

> RAID 1 can be done with software, although it will slow down.


eeewww...

> Also, several "modern" (after 2006) come with RAID ports built-in.
> These can do RAID 1.


Yup. A few of them come with SATA RAID controller on the mobo.


 
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