Hi, Just waiting a computer that has the OS on a one TB hard drive although stated made for gaming I would only use it for Graphics (Lightroom and On1 Photo 2018) so would I get any advantage apart from boot up time to transfer the OS to an SSD (have a 120GB SSD) or leave as is? Also if I transfer the OS with an app like CloneZilla for example does that automatically set the SSD to 'C' drive and the old drive to maybe 'D;? Thankyou for any advice, Russ.
I did exactly this last weekend on the Mrs' PC - bought a 500Gb SSD from Crucial, used their free software to clone OS over etc.
There were a few issues - I'll highlight to save you falling for the same!
Problem 1 - Can't Clone
I bought the USB transfer kit with the SSD, the idea is to connect the SSD via USB in the first instance, clone with the free software and then open up and put the drive in and boot straight off it.
That failed at the first hurdle - first the software failed to recognise the disk as a Crucial branded disk when connected via the Crucial USB kit so won't start, and downloading other software refuses to clone the disk because the 'sector size' is different.
The solution - forget the USB kit and stick the drive inside the PC from the get go.
Problem 2 - Can't boot with blank SSD connecting inside computer
When I first connected the drive via USB, the cloning software was not recognising it unless I initialised the disk. I chose the defaults of GPT (or GUID Partition Table). However, because of this the PC would not boot with the additional disk once it was installed inside.
The solution - reformat the disk as MBR (Master Boot Record) with the USB kit and then place inside.
Problem 3 - Getting Windows to boot from the right disk.
At this stage, the MBR formatted disk inside the machine, the cloning worked perfectly and quickly. Then came the time to turn the PC back on. It would keep booting into the old hard disk. I brief glimpse into BIOS didn't show any problems - the boot order was Windows Partition Manager / USB / CD etc, but no problem I think, I'll just remove the old hard disk temporarily, and it will boot from the SSD - no, it just failed to boot, going into recovery mode.
Digging around deeper in the BIOS in the advanced settings, I noticed I had two entries in the boot table, both named identically - something like 'Windows Partition Boot Manager'; if I manually selected the second on of those, it would boot from the SSD. A lot go further digging and I found a way to disable entries individually.
The solution - Dig around in your BIOS and find the right settings to disable boot from the old disk - harder than it sounds! (or Dell has a really sucky BIOS!).
Eventually, it's all working as planned and it's a huge upgrade to the working speed of the PC (a 5 year old Dell XPS i7/32GB ram). I put it down to me not understanding how GPT works - last time I built a PC is, well, a long time ago, but if there's any learning to be taken from this, feel free.