Thanks for the link. That was a lot to digest. The Seagate Disk Utility
made it look so simple. But I guess it assumed that when adding a new and
larger disk, that the user would be happy to see the new disk assigned J/K
drive letters. It does say that you can "simply" use Disk Management to
reassign the letters. Which is what I tried to do.
"PaulB" <> wrote in message
news:7070D340-51AF-416F-A802-...
> Have a look at this article. What you should have done is after cloning
> the
> vista drive,
> diconnect the old drive before booting to the new drive. You also may have
> to rename the drives in the registry (see article) if configuring desk top
> comes up. Then reconnect the old drive.
> http://www.multibooters.co.uk/cloning.html
> --
> Paul
>
>
> "3putt in coastal SC" wrote:
>
>> I installed a second SATA drive, and imaged my partioned C/D drive to the
>> new drive. My new drive became drives J/K. Switching drive cables on
>> the
>> board made no difference. Relettering them caused problems. After I
>> thought I had moved my DVD drive letter and memory card reader letters
>> further down the chain, I relettered the C/D drive letters, made my J/K
>> drive (new hard drive) the C/D drive. I also set it as bootable drive.
>> As
>> the system booted a blue screen came up "Preparing your desktop"....... I
>> waited many hours as the hard drive, which one I don't know, chugged
>> along,
>> most times not doing anything. Frustrated, I did a backup/restore (alt
>> f10)
>> resetting the drives to their original letters. What I wanted to
>> accomplish
>> was to rename the new, larger drives as C/D and move the smaller drive to
>> the E/F positions. This seems logical to me, making my boot drive C:,
>> and
>> the backup drive the E: drive. But something, Vista or the mainboard,
>> didn't agree on that solution. So now I have my J: drive bootable system
>> drive, and the C/D drives as my backup/imaged drives.
>>
>> The procedure, which seems the same, worked very well in XP.
>>
>>