I have an Aspire Desktop TC model TC-885-EB11. SSD seen in files but won't boot

fanlandcheese
fanlandcheese Member Posts: 4 New User
edited March 2024 in 2018 Archives
I can boot using the HDD that came with the computer.  I can see the SSD i took out and was using in my old computer. I tried running the ssd without the HDD and the bios doesn't find it.  Im not sure what the next course of action is.... Bios update??

Answers

  • wis
    wis Member Posts: 713 Seasoned Specialist WiFi Icon
    Presuming that you have a 2.5" SSD, how did you transfer the OS to it?
  • fanlandcheese
    fanlandcheese Member Posts: 4 New User
    I cloned the disk using the adata software.  The old system was a dell optiplex running core 2 processor
  • fanlandcheese
    fanlandcheese Member Posts: 4 New User
    Im thinking I need to
    1. either need to copy all the files over to the new disk and then wipe the ssd and reclone onto it? 
    2 copy the ssd contents to a blank HDD and then reclone ?
    3 boot from hdd and try to repair windows on ssd?
  • wis
    wis Member Posts: 713 Seasoned Specialist WiFi Icon
    If the Dell desktop had shipped with Windows 7, there may be incompatibilities with the Acer Windows 10 minitower.
    It is not necessary to reformat the SDD beforehand.
    Suggestions:
    1) Externalize 2.5" SSD with enclosure akin to this or use any external HDD that is lying around.
    2) Create a system image (not a clone) of Acer HDD with Macrium Reflect using external SSD or external HDD as the destination drive.
    3) If external HDD had been used in step 2, restore system image to SSD that you had swapped in for the Acer HDD. 
  • fanlandcheese
    fanlandcheese Member Posts: 4 New User
    I updated the system from windows 7 to windows 10 and had it working on the dell system for about a year before this upgrade.  will that make a difference to your advice?

  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,932 Trailblazer
    edited November 2018
    Not really, the issue is likely that your clone resized all the partitions by a percentage in order to fit the data on the smaller drive. Those small partitions need to be the original size in order to work, so the boot was broken. Macrium Reflect is a bit better than most at smart drive cloning, but even it has problems with this type of scenario. Better is to select the manual cloning option and only resize the C drive, force everything else to stay the same size. I'm not familiar enough with the Adata software to know if it'll handle it or not.
    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.
  • wis
    wis Member Posts: 713 Seasoned Specialist WiFi Icon
    The fact, that it was not possible to boot from the SSD in the Acer desktop, suggests that we need to take a different route. 
    1. Decide if you want to use an external HDD or a SDXC card as the destination drive. Ideally its capacity should be double that of the SSD.
    2. Create a Macrium Reflect system image of the Acer HDD & send it to the drive in Step 1.
    3. Replace the HDD with the SSD in the Acer desktop.
    4. Restore the system image created in Step 2 to the SSD.