Hi, Ward.
I'll be watching this thread with interest.
As soon as Vista RTM arrived in November, I installed Vista Ultimate x64 on
my AMD Athlon 64 3200+ system, just like I had all the beta builds. Then,
in December, I installed a new motherboard (EPoX MF570SLI) and CPU (AMD
Athlon 64 X2 Dual Core Processor 5000+).
My intent was to "repair install", but that didn't work. I don't recall all
the hang-ups, but the new chipset and its drivers were the biggest
obstacles. Also, I had tried earlier to upgrade some of the beta builds,
but upgrades had never worked for me, even though other testers reported
success. Since the "old" installation was only a month old, I finally
concluded that my best course was to backup my data and do a reformat and
clean install to the original location. I've not regretted that decision,
even though it did take a day or two to re-install my apps. (Since I have
multiple Vista licenses, I also installed Vista Ultimate x86 onto a separate
volume and have been very grateful to be able to dual-boot into that on a
few occasions.)
RC
--
R. C. White, CPA
San Marcos, TX
Microsoft Windows MVP
(Running Windows Mail in Vista Ultimate x64)
"Ward Taylor" <> wrote in message
news:...
> Hello
> I have been using vista x64 ultimate with relatively good success for
> several months now and have decided to replace my motherboard with a newer
> model and then attempt to do a "repair" install rather than a clean one.
> I can always do a fresh install if it doesn't work, but would like to try
> that first. I have tried to use google to find a walk through, and I have
> come up with very little except that vista does not include a full repair
> install like windows 2000/xp did. From what I have been able to find, my
> plan would be to use device manager to remove all the hardware that would
> be specific to my current m/b before actually doing the hardware swap.
> Then, replace hardware, and since the storage controller is going to be
> different, use vista's startup repair option to load the new driver and
> then attempt to boot vista and see if it can detect the other new hardware
> and install the chipset drivers. I will be moving from and amd chipset to
> an nvidia nforce chipset. Does this sound like a plan to you folks? Has
> anyone done this or have any better ideas? I will be imaging by
> system/boot drives before I start this process so I will have the ability
> to "go back".
> Thank you for any and all replies