New Hard Drive - Same Vista

G

Guest

I am slightly confused about adding a new hard drive with the new Vista
License.

1. I want to buy a fast Raptor type drive.
2. I want to copy my currently installed Vista Premium system to this
drive, to run in the current system.
3. The License agreement, I think, allows you to replace a HD or
Motherboard, but not both.
4. Can I use a tool like Partition Commander 10 to copy my existing system
to the new HD?
5. Do I have to reinstall?? It was an upgrade from XP Pro. I don't want to
reinstall XP then upgrade again. Help.

Any other suggestions???
 
S

Sly Dog

JD,

I recmmmend you copy your current OS image to your new hard drive, and then
make the Indi-6 call to reactivate your VISTA.
If the attendant asks why your reactivating, tell him/her you had to replace
your hard drive. If he/she wants to know why, tell him/her it was
defective, or tell him/her the old one was outdated and too slow.

It's really no big deal since you are on the up-and-up and not intending to
go outside of the license agreement.
 
R

Rick Rogers

Hi,

No reason you can't do that, though you may need to reactivate (but that's
certainly allowed). Make sure whatever tool you use to copy the existing
installation is Vista-compatible, as there will be problems with the file
system if it is not.

--
Best of Luck,

Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP

Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
 
C

Carl G

Man don't that really SUCK to have to get permission to repair your own
computer.
You would think in this day and age there has to be a better way.
 
R

Rock

JohnnyD said:
I am slightly confused about adding a new hard drive with the new Vista
License.

1. I want to buy a fast Raptor type drive.
2. I want to copy my currently installed Vista Premium system to this
drive, to run in the current system.
3. The License agreement, I think, allows you to replace a HD or
Motherboard, but not both.

Where did you get this? Have you read it? You can reinstall and change
parts in the same computer as many times as you want. The activation may
need to be done by phone. For OEM Vista there is some uncertainty about
upgrading a motherboard, but for retail it's no issue and for OEM it's not
an issue for changing drives.
 
G

Guest

Thanks - That was very informative. Does the raptor x drive make a
difference in Vista performance. I will find out soon enough. Thanks.
 
D

DevilsPGD

In message <[email protected]> JohnnyD
Thanks - That was very informative. Does the raptor x drive make a
difference in Vista performance. I will find out soon enough. Thanks.

I can't speak to the newer Raptors, I have a first generation Raptor
36.7GB 10,000rpm SATA drive. While it performs surprisingly well in
benchmarks, my experience has shown that a more modern Seagate 400GB
7200.10 7200rpm drive w/NCQ&TCQ can run circles around the Raptor in
everything other then a single sustained read or write.

In other words, for day to day general use in a multitasking operating
system, accessing files scattered around the drive or accessing
fragmented files, the Seagate vastly outperforms the Raptor.

In the rare case where I'm disk-bound doing an operation on a single
huge file, the Raptor is a good choice.

In my case, I use my two Raptors, one for virtual machines, the other
for my pagefile and temporary file storage, and my two 400GB Seagate
drives for day to day use.
 
G

Guest

Thanks again for the info. I bought my Raptor X and the following is what
occurred.
1. I made a copy of my C Drive and restored it to my Raptor X.
2. When booting from the new drive I received a boot error. The message
told me to insert the Vista CD/DVD into the drive and chose REPAIR. When
this finished I was instructed to reboot.
3. The system rebooted and I was told I had to activate(just as you said).
4. MS gave me a new key which I typed into the activate screen and IT WORKED.

An interesting situation followed: The next day I changed the SATA port
that the drive had been plugged into. This was done because I keep my system
disk in a removable drawer, for easy removal etc. The Vista boot process
keeps track of where the C drive is plugged in. SO - I had to do the whole
process again. And that is my story.
 
S

Sly Dog

Yup - Merely moving your OS drive from one controller port to another
de-activates VISTA.

VISTA; the new and improved Pandora's Box! :-0
 
C

cquirke (MVP Windows shell/user)

On Mon, 19 Feb 2007 14:31:15 -0800, JohnnyD
An interesting situation followed: The next day I changed the SATA port
that the drive had been plugged into. This was done because I keep my system
disk in a removable drawer, for easy removal etc.

Better watrch that HD temperature...


--------------- ---- --- -- - - - -
Saws are too hard to use.
Be easier to use!
 

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