Windows Vista Tips

Windows Vista Tips > Newsgroups > Windows Vista Hardware > replace m/b after installing vista x64

Reply
Thread Tools Display Modes

replace m/b after installing vista x64

 
 
Ward Taylor
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      04-24-2007
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
 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
Rock
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      04-24-2007
"Ward Taylor" <> wrote
> 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



You might need to run startup repair several times. Good luck and report
back the results. Also you can do an upgrade over an installed Vista with
the same version. This is similar to the repair install in XP. There isn't
much experience with this. One person posted he used it on two different
systems to correct operating problems (not startup issues) and it worked. A
couple others reported it didn't. Darrell Gorter from MS opined it should
be a viable procedure. In any event do the startup repair a few times first
to see what happens.

--
Rock [MS-MVP User/Shell]

 
Reply With Quote
 
R. C. White, MVP
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      04-24-2007
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


 
Reply With Quote
 
Ward Taylor
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      04-25-2007
Gentlemen
I appreciate your replies and will let you know the results. Will be
going down for the swap in a few minutes, if you don't hear from me for
a few days, send a search party and some coffee.
Cheers
 
Reply With Quote
 
Ward Taylor
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      04-25-2007
Hi
An update. It appears that my new tyan 2877 is doa so I won't be
providing any more information any time soon. I will note that when I
tried to remove the hardware in device manager specific to the old
board, vista just kept redetecting it and adding it back in. I was
unable to find a "hardware profiles" section as in previous versions of
windows, I have used that method to move to new hardware, it worked
really slick with windows 98. Just created a new profile and then when
you boot and it asks which profile to load you chose none, and it would
redetect everything. Have they moved the hardware profiles somewhere
else in vista, or is that not included anymore.
Cheers
 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Replace shell in Vista? Dave R. Windows Vista General Discussion 9 11-14-2008 12:03 AM
remove Vista/replace XP? lmo Windows Vista General Discussion 17 11-29-2007 12:19 PM
How to replace a Vista DLL Tom Windows Vista General Discussion 2 04-25-2007 03:55 AM
Replace Vista with XP - how? marcel Windows Vista General Discussion 3 03-24-2007 01:48 AM
Replace Vista RC2 with XP Ken M Windows Vista Installation 7 11-13-2006 02:11 PM



1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59