AVS › AVS Forum › Video Components › Home Theater Computers › reload from scratch or clone my drive?
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:

reload from scratch or clone my drive?

post #1 of 9
Thread Starter 
well, I've bought an SSD to use as my main OS drive and am curious about options.

a: clone the existing 30gigs of data already on my 1tb seagate.
b: load from scratch and risk never getting xbmc and wmc setup correctly as they are now.
post #2 of 9
Thread Starter 
no one has switched to an ssd after the fact?
post #3 of 9
Theoretically it's better to do a fresh install so the partitions will be ideally aligned for SSD's physical layout. How much better, hard to say, will depend on the drive and what you're doing.
post #4 of 9
Thread Starter 
ocz 2.

just running win7 wmc xbmc.
post #5 of 9
Its not going to hurt anything to try cloning it. Only potential issue is performance may not be as good as it could be.
post #6 of 9
Thread Starter 
gotcha. im just not keen on trying to get all the settings dialed back in on wmc and xbmc. thats a fight and a half
post #7 of 9
Thread Starter 
37gig clone took 5 mins. reboot, change boot drive. bam bam thank you mam done. no boot disk creation and all that.
post #8 of 9
Thread Starter 
also, as most of us probably installed with IDE parameters, ssds work much better with ahci but win7 has it disabled. here's how to fix that.

AHCI (Advanced Host Controller Interface) enables native command queuing and hot-plugging through SATA host controllers (Serial-ATA) for your hard drives. In many scenarios it enables more efficient multi-tasking. Vista was the first Windows OS to support AHCI out of the box, where as Windows 7 does the same. But an issue with AHCI is that if you install the OS without enabling AHCI in the BIOS, enabling it after installation will render your OS unusable. This is because Windows disable the AHCI driver since it is not needed during the installation.

There is one way to fix this, although you need to have knowledge of registry editing. The detailed steps from Microsoft are as follows:

To resolve this issue, enable the AHCI driver in the registry before you change the SATA mode of the boot drive. To do this, follow these steps:

Exit all Windows-based programs.
Click Start, type regedit in the Start Search box, and then press ENTER.
If you receive the User Account Control dialog box, click Continue.
Locate and then click the following registry subkey:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESystemCurrentControlSetServicesMsahci

In the right pane, right-click Start in the Name column, and then click Modify.
In the Value data box, type 0, and then click OK.
On the File menu, click Exit to close Registry Editor.
After this you'll have to restart your computer, go to BIOS and enable AHCI. When you log in to Windows again, you'll notice the installation of drivers for AHCI. Another restart will be required to finish the driver installation.
post #9 of 9
If it's a 'mature' installation, i.e., with lots of previous installed apps, I would suggest a fresh install. Also, for SSD you really need to use Win7 instead of XP; you can still use the latter but you need to add new drivers and I still don't think those support all the SSD features.

Good tip about swapping an existing install to AHCI, I'd always taken MS at their word that it wasn't possible. Never been an issue for me, however, as I've been installing everything as AHCI since it was introduced.
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:
  Return Home
  Back to Forum: Home Theater Computers
AVS › AVS Forum › Video Components › Home Theater Computers › reload from scratch or clone my drive?