"Mike" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news

AA1C901-64F4-4499-B536-(E-Mail Removed)...
> The operating system is there. I did a fresh install on drive F.
But the *boot files are on C*, not on F.
> When the
> computer boots up it gives me the choice to either boot from C or F.
> Either
> one works. I would rather it not give me a choice and boot from drive F.
You can edit the boot.ini to remove the reference to the C installation.
>
> This gets kind of strange...I unplugged drive C and tried booting and it
> does not detect an O/S.
It's not strange, it's because the boot files are on the drive you removed,
the C drive. The system has no idea where to look for an OS.
> I go under the bios and it says I have a hard drive
> in port 3 (it gives it a number in brackets). While still in bios I go
> over
> to the boot options. It shows the same number but with SM in front of it.
> For some reason its detecting this drive as a master--even without another
> drive connected. Remember, this is a SATA setup so I can't tell the comp
> if
> its a master or slave--its automatic.
So all SATA drives will be master on their channel.
>
> What do I need to do to get rid of the SM in front of the boot options. I
> think this is the problem...then again maybe not.
Probably not, and probably not relevant.
The problem is more likely that you installed to F with the C drive
attached, and the boot files went to the C drive. It's best to disconnect
other drives while doing an install, as this prevents other drives being
given any precedence.
Some options include editing the boot.ini, trying the fixboot command from
the recovery console, and yanking the excess drives and starting over - if
you moved, rather than copied, data from the C drive to the F, that may not
be a great idea just now. You'd have to move the data back to C first, as
you'll be wiping the F drive, and it will become C at the reinstall. You
will have to reinstall everything.
Another option if the C drive is in its original condition is to clone it to
the new drive. This will erase what's on the new drive. At the end,
remove the old drive, put the new one in its place, do NOT attach the old
drive until after the first boot. The new drive will become C. You can
use the free trial of Acronis TrueImage for this. Run it in Manual mode,
which will give you the option to select how much of the F drive you want to
use (probably all of it).
How much work do you have in the system at this point? That's going to be
an influencing factor in what works best.
HTH
-pk
> That's why I'm here...
>
> "Jim" wrote:
>
>>
>> "Mike" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>> news:08EE3EF8-EC16-4DF2-B530-(E-Mail Removed)...
>> >I just recently installed a new hard drive. My computer detected it as
>> >drive
>> > F. The old drive is C: I transfered all my files from C to F. Now i
>> > would
>> > like to use the C drive as storage. However, whenever I boot the
>> > computer
>> > it
>> > sees 2 operating sytems-- C and F and I have to choose one of them. I
>> > went
>> > back to the bios and told it to boot only from the floppy, drive F and
>> > the
>> > CD
>> > (in that order). I also disabled drive C. When I rebooted it told me
>> > no
>> > operating system was installed. Both drives are SATA.
>> >
>> > I tried to remove the windows directory from C but it won't let me.
>> >
>> > What is the best way, besides formatting C or unplugging it, to have
>> > the
>> > computer boot the F drive only?
>> Since the BIOS has already told you that it cannot find an OS on drive F,
>> I
>> gather that you just copied files. This procedure won't work.
>>
>> What you need to do is to clone the new drive from the old. Then, you
>> can
>> just unplug the old drive and reboot. The computer should recognize the
>> new
>> drive as drive C.
>> Jim
>>
>>
>>