Changing laptop hard drive.

adm
adm Member Posts: 3 New User

Hello, I have an Aspire 3682 WXMi laptop that I am upgrading.  I'd like to replace the 40 Gb hard drive with a larger capacity drive.  The trouble is there is only room for the current drive with it being a laptop.  If I get a new drive, how can I transfer the contents of the current drive to the new drive and still have the laptop boot and run normally?

 

Would it work if I installed the new drive and tried to use the recovery disks, as I have seen in some comments.

 

Advice welcome.

 

Thanks

Answers

  • finlux
    finlux ACE Posts: 1,834 Pathfinder

    Hi adm!

     

    I think your laptop runs Vista?

     

    What you can do is download a disk imaging tool - there are many good free ones available like Macrium Reflect, Paragon's Backup & Recovery amongst others. This will allow you to create an exact image of your old hard drive (usually stored on an external hard drive as a backup) which you can then transfer to your new disk. You often need to create a Boot Disk when re-installing. Read up on them - they are very easy to use, once you know what you're doing!

     

    Alternatively, you can fit your new hard drive & use the recovery disks to install Windows from scratch (plus all the Service Packs/updates and your programs)!

     

    If you have Windows 7 on your laptop, there is a built in imaging tool, which you'll find in Control Panel>Backup & Restore>Create a system image.

     

    Hope this helps!

  • miguel69
    miguel69 Member Posts: 54 New User

    the only problem with using finlux's alternate solution is your new drive will no longer have the hidden <PQservice> recovery partition and will not be able to create any new recovery disks or use alt+F10 to re-install.

    I used Macrium Reflect in combination with Mini Tool Partition Wizard when I upgraded my Extensa 5230 from the installed 160GB drive to a 500GB drive. Macrium makes and restores the partitions (same size as original), while Mini Tool resizes the partitions so you can use the complete disk (do a little math before hand to decide how much space you want to dedicate to each partition).

    also by going the imaging route you keep all your programs/data and settings as you had them (no lengthy re-installs / setups and tweeking to get back to the way you like it). you also get to keep the image files as an extra backup of your data.

This discussion has been closed.