dualboot partition question (2 SSD)

ishidamitsunari
ishidamitsunari Member Posts: 34 Troubleshooter
edited July 2021 in Nitro Gaming
i have a Kingston KC2500 1TB ssd and a WD SN530 512GB ssd.
i put Kingston in slot 1 & WD in slot 2.
i've installed Windows 10 on Kingston.

i will dualboot ubuntu.
is it better to install ubuntu also on slot 1 (kingston), or slot 2 (WD)?

(is it better to install both OS on same ssd, or different ssd?)

Best Answer

  • Tachi13
    Tachi13 Member Posts: 135 Skilled Fixer WiFi Icon
    Answer ✓
    @ishidamitsunari

    No it doesn't make it run slower, the speed of the SSD is decided by the Read and write speed the SSD has, it depends on the SSD itself. For example, Seagate's Firecuda is one of the fastest SSD out there. But talking in general, it is just a partition with operating system, RAM takes care after that. But yes, you can install both the OS in the same disk, but part the disk. Open the RUN command and enter diskmgmt.msc and select a disc for partition. Lot of work but it lets you have multiple OS without confusions. And you can install a lot of OS and OS versions on a Harddisk as long as it has enough space, doesn't make the disk slower. 
    Please click on "Yes" if you find this answer helpful. :):)

Answers

  • Tachi13
    Tachi13 Member Posts: 135 Skilled Fixer WiFi Icon
    Hey @ishidamitsunari

    The best option is install on different slot, because, it will be easier for you to know what softwares you install and on where, it will be easier to set boot priorities. 
    Please click on "Yes" if you find this answer helpful. :):)
  • ishidamitsunari
    ishidamitsunari Member Posts: 34 Troubleshooter
    thanks @Tachi13
    i was thinking to have a common drive for common files (pictures, mp3) which both OS can access.

    would installing in slot 2 make it run slower?
  • Tachi13
    Tachi13 Member Posts: 135 Skilled Fixer WiFi Icon
    Answer ✓
    @ishidamitsunari

    No it doesn't make it run slower, the speed of the SSD is decided by the Read and write speed the SSD has, it depends on the SSD itself. For example, Seagate's Firecuda is one of the fastest SSD out there. But talking in general, it is just a partition with operating system, RAM takes care after that. But yes, you can install both the OS in the same disk, but part the disk. Open the RUN command and enter diskmgmt.msc and select a disc for partition. Lot of work but it lets you have multiple OS without confusions. And you can install a lot of OS and OS versions on a Harddisk as long as it has enough space, doesn't make the disk slower. 
    Please click on "Yes" if you find this answer helpful. :):)