Data From Old HDD To New

2

2005

My XP computer died. I replaced it with a Vista PC. Since the old
machine simply died (never could get it back to the desktop), I was
unable to copy/back up my files. Stupid me, I know. Should've been
doing back ups all along.

My question is this: In my new computer (Gateway GT5432) there is
what appears to be a slot or space where I could insert my old drive.
Can I do this safely (for the purposes of getting my old pics, docs,
music transferred to my new HDD)?

I have removed my old HDD (it's sitting on my desk now).

If anyone knows how to do this, and can explain it in fairly simple
steps, I would really, really appreciate your help!

Thanks!
 
D

DL

If your old PC stopped due to a failed hard drive then you are unlikely to
be able to recover anything.

The simplest way, for the uninitiated, would be to buy a hard drive external
caddy, fit the hd, and connect via usb / firewire

Otherwise you would probably advised to set the jumper on the hd to slave -
a series of small pins next to the main cable connector, there is usually a
graphic on the drive showing various pin connections.
Connect the ide cable (about 4cm wide) - I'm assuming a none sata drive
All with the PC power supply disconnected, then reboot
If it fails to reboot, either the connections are wrong or the hd has failed
 
2

2005

If your old PC stopped due to a failed hard drive then you are unlikely to
be able to recover anything.

The simplest way, for the uninitiated, would be to buy a hard drive external
caddy, fit the hd, and connect via usb / firewire

Otherwise you would probably advised to set the jumper on the hd to slave -
a series of small pins next to the main cable connector, there is usually a
graphic on the drive showing various pin connections.
Connect the ide cable (about 4cm wide) - I'm assuming a none sata drive
All with the PC power supply disconnected, then reboot
If it fails to reboot, either the connections are wrong or the hd has failed










- Show quoted text -

I've set the jumpers on my old HD to "slave" (remove the plastic
bridge to make the jumpers match the diagram. Next, I opened up the
side panel on my new machine. While there is a space (next to the
existing HDD), and a female connector, it (the connector) isn't the
same type as the male pins on my old HDD.

I did, however, find a female connector on a grey ribbon. The
connector marries up with the pins on my old HDD. This connector,
though, is in the middle of the ribbon that leads from my CD drive.
Unsure whether it was okay to plug my old drive into it, I decided not
to do so. Instead, I closed up the computer and thought I would post
this note to see if I could get a little more guidance.

Any thoughts?

Thank you for your first reply!

Mark
 
B

Bob I

I've set the jumpers on my old HD to "slave" (remove the plastic
bridge to make the jumpers match the diagram. Next, I opened up the
side panel on my new machine. While there is a space (next to the
existing HDD), and a female connector, it (the connector) isn't the
same type as the male pins on my old HDD.

I did, however, find a female connector on a grey ribbon. The
connector marries up with the pins on my old HDD. This connector,
though, is in the middle of the ribbon that leads from my CD drive.
Unsure whether it was okay to plug my old drive into it, I decided not
to do so. Instead, I closed up the computer and thought I would post
this note to see if I could get a little more guidance.

Any thoughts?

Thank you for your first reply!

Mark

That would make it the "Slave" on the IDE subsystem with the CD drive
being the master.
 
2

2005

That would make it the "Slave" on the IDE subsystem with the CD drive
being the master.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

Bob,

Will connecting the old hard drive to the IDE connector (that is
located mid-ribbon) allow me to view the old HDD? Any danger in this
type of temporary configuration?

Thanks,

mark
 
B

Bob I

Bob,

Will connecting the old hard drive to the IDE connector (that is
located mid-ribbon) allow me to view the old HDD? Any danger in this
type of temporary configuration?

Thanks,

mark

Yes, it will, and no it shouldn't. It doesn't even have to be temporary.
 
2

2005

Yes, it will, and no it shouldn't. It doesn't even have to be temporary.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

PROGRESS!!!!

Thanks to everyone who posted replies! Could never have done it
without you. Here's the latest. I connected the HDD, "found" it, and
was able to get all of my old docs, xls, ppt, files onto my new
system. Oh happy day!

I hope it's okay to fire off one more question?

Since there's an empty space in my new PC, I thought I might make the
old HDD a permanent fixture in my new machine.

Here's the question...

I want to format the old 40 GB drive after I install it. Since all I
really want it for is extra storage, do I need to load Windows (or
anything else, for that matter) on the old 40 GB drive?

Also, can anyone tell me how to format the old drive? (the steps)

Thanks again!

Mark
 
B

Bob I

PROGRESS!!!!

Thanks to everyone who posted replies! Could never have done it
without you. Here's the latest. I connected the HDD, "found" it, and
was able to get all of my old docs, xls, ppt, files onto my new
system. Oh happy day!

I hope it's okay to fire off one more question?

Since there's an empty space in my new PC, I thought I might make the
old HDD a permanent fixture in my new machine.

Here's the question...

I want to format the old 40 GB drive after I install it. Since all I
really want it for is extra storage, do I need to load Windows (or
anything else, for that matter) on the old 40 GB drive?

Also, can anyone tell me how to format the old drive? (the steps)

Thanks again!

Mark

No problem, just r-click on it in Disk Management and pick format.
 

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