Hey Guys. So here's what's going on. I have an ssd that has only my windows OS with windows 7 pro on it which is set to the C: drive. I then have another drive set on D: which is my data drive. I have all my applications andtag_hash_106_user profile stored on this drive. It recently started to have space issues since it was only a 186GB drive.

The only thing that was left for me to do is change the drive letter to D: on the mirrored drive so that Windows can see it as a replacement for the data drive. Of course, I can't have both the mirrored drive and data drive set to D: so I shut down the machine and disconnected the old data drive. I booted into windows and it did not see the user profile. I get the error:


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No worries, I just have to set the mirrored drive D: so that windows can reference the D: drive for the user profile which is set in the registry as such. I did this and rebooted. And I still have the same issue. I swapped back to the old data drive and disconnected the mirrored drive so both drive letters don't conflict and same problem. Only when I did a system restore did it fix the issue.

Here the issue. When I swap it back to the mirrored drive and disconnect the old data drive, I still have the same problem regardless of system restore. Windows for some reason lost its settings for the user profile location when on this drive which is weird since the new mirrored drive has the same drive letter and is a clone of the original drive. The registry was not changed. The user profile path is still set on the D: drive. Any advice or suggestions? Thanks in advance.

Larry, wouldn't hardware raid produce the same result? The C:\windows\system32\config\systemprofile still would not have the necessary information that it needs for the OS to recognize that D: is where the user profile is. Also, doing system restore fixed it the first time on the original drive which leads me to believe that it has nothing to do with hardware versus software raid The OS is missing something in that directory. What it is, I'm not sure of. Now, because system restore somehow got rid of the restore dates I needed, I can't get it back to what it was. Both the original and new mirrored drive will not get the OS to recognize that the user profile is there.


FYI: I tried copying and pasting D:\users\default\desktop to the C:\windows\system32\config\systemprofile directory. It semi-sort of fixed it, but that is not my original users folder. When I try to copy my original user's desktop folder, the SSD drive doesn't have enough space for it. It's only a 60gb drive. My current desktop folder surpasses that. This was all working before with the same hardware, which is mind boggling. Again, I put back the original drive with the OS drive, and it still won't work. Something may have automatically changed in the windows directory while changing drive letters.

Well that is just the thing, I've already put the original drive back and it the same thing happens. It can't link to the user profile correctly. So even if I re-copy the new drive from old drive, same thing will happen.

But main basic necessity is that the motherboard its chipset north bridge south bridge chips processor should be SIMILAR exactly same models in new PC as of dead PC as windows 7 8 10 installs drivers of board and chipset automatically while installing windows and it also write configuration settings in many config and system files which is hard to find and remove and these drivers and configurations crashes when windows installs in other motherboard configuration changes

My experience earlier was that without using the load driver options during Windows Installation it will not load AHCI driver somehow (thought there was a windows version but guess it varies by the motherboard) and it will fail around 85% during the installation process.

I think I made the matter way too complicated for my own good. The setup with Win 7 OS in AHCI in SATA failed with my spare hardrive. However, as I went back to using my original drive (installed with RAID in SATA mode) and updated the Intel RST to a even more updated version (2014 version 12.9.4.1000) and plugged this new 5TB drive as a secondary SATA RST finally saw it as 4.68GB (5TB) !!! Wooo hooo

I intiatlly thought this may be a windows update issue and restored to a few days ago and there has been no change in the status. I once again pulled out the DVD-Rom drive and plugged this new 5TB drive in as another secondary SATA drive.

Upon rebooting Windows asked if I wanted to do chdisk but I was not fast enough to stop the chdisk from starting and my heart skipped a beat when I started seeing deleting millions of orphaned file segment messages across the screen and there was no way I could stop it. With Windows finally started now this secondary SATA drive is seen as another 4GB drive and worst it is now in accessible under windows even thought it sees the drive (and only as 4GB once again)

However the main difference was I had already allowed chkdisk to runs its course to do the so called repair by deleting the orphan file system segment...now not only did windows not see it as raw 4GB drive but it was also inaccessible as well.

Restoring a computer to its factory settings will delete all personal files: music, movies, pictures and any installed software applications or drivers that were not included in the original configuration of that computer.

This professional software can help you replace hard drive on Windows 11/10/8/7 without reinstalling OS and inside applications by cloning the hard disk. Moreover, you can boot your computer from the destination hard drive after clone. Here are the detailed steps on how to clone the system hard disk for hard drive replacement.

1. Will I lose Windows if I replace hard drive?

If you just install a new disk on your Windows to replace your old hard drive, and wish to make it bootable, yes, you'll lose all data on the disk, and you'll need to reinstall a new Windows. The only way to keep all data is to clone hard drive to your new disk.

Cloning is to create a duplicate of the original disk. The cloned disk is just the same as the source disk. You don't need to reinstall OS and all apps and reset everything.

How to transfer an OS to SSD? Actually, it is not as difficult as a lot of people think as long as a piece of professional third-party app could be available to help. In this article, we are going to show you some necessary clone processes to transfer Windows from HDD drive to SSD properly with a diskpart manager.

As for this question, the destination drive is smaller than the original drive. To clone Windows 10 to smaller SSD successfully, you need to make sure the new SSD has enough space to hold the entire operating system.

If you find C drive is small, you can easily move space from D to C drive with MiniTool Partition Wizard. As a professional Windows partition manager, it can resize partition and extend disk partition with its powerful features.

Make sure the target drive has enough space. It's okay that the target hard drive or SSD is smaller than the source drive, you just make sure it is large enough to store all data of the original drive. It'll be better if there can be extra free space on the target drive after the cloning, for this can guarantee drive performance to some extent.

Hard drive cloning means an exact copy of the original hard drive, so the operating system will be cloned to the target disk if it exists on the original hard disk. However, if you want to make the OS of the destination disk bootable as before, cloning hard drive might not be enough, and system migration will be the better choice.

When you clone a hard drive, all partitions and files on the original disk will be copied to the target hard disk. And, in this way, you can get a one-to-one copy of the hard drive, and also replace the original disk with the target disk.

Ensure that the old HDD has an operating system (OS) installed and fix any bad sectors on it. Without an OS, you won't be able to boot your computer, and if the cloned SSD contains bad sectors from the original drive, it may not boot either.

If the SSD disk is larger than the original hard drive, the cloned SSD may show the wrong size because the software makes an exact copy of the hard drive and leaves the extra space as unallocated space unless you adjust the partition size.

To boot from the cloned SSD, you can either change the boot order in the BIOS and set the SSD as the primary boot device and then restart the computer, or remove the original hard drive and install the cloned SSD. Afterward, you can set the boot order and boot mode in the BIOS and boot from the cloned SSD.

Older machines like my ReadyNAS Pro 6 are getting slow. Even when I upgraded it with OS6 and capacity (I am running 76TB) now. My machine has been a very dependable workhorse for 15 years! But these older machines are way too slow now with large drives (about 50X the original capacity the unit came with). ff782bc1db

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