943,800 Members | Top Members by Rank

Ad:
  • Storage Discussion Thread
  • Unsolved
  • Views: 3823
  • Storage RSS
Jun 22nd, 2005
0

Replacing and old hard drive

Expand Post »
I have a very crappy power supply and am worried about having power issues if i put my new hard drive in as a second hard drive. I recently put in a new graphics card that is a power hog compared to my old one (128 mb 9800 pro compared to a geforce 4 mx 420). My computer is really starting to get sluggish (havent reformatted in 2 years). So, instead of putting my second hard drive in and backing up data and reformatting, I was wondering if this was possible: could I just replace my old hard drive (120 gb) with my new hard drive (200 gb), boot from the windows xp cd, partition it and install windows xp? If I wanted to go back to my other windows for some reason, could i switch out the hard drives again and boot from that windows?

Thanks
Similar Threads
Reputation Points: 10
Solved Threads: 0
Newbie Poster
Zathras is offline Offline
4 posts
since Jun 2005
Jun 23rd, 2005
0

Re: Replacing and old hard drive

yha, u should be able to boot from that old hardrive, if u havent formated the old one.

if ur power supply is so crapy why dont u just buy a new one.
Reputation Points: 10
Solved Threads: 1
Junior Poster in Training
zalakes is offline Offline
53 posts
since Jun 2005
Jun 23rd, 2005
0

Re: Replacing and old hard drive

What wattage is your power unit? It won't be the reason for the slowdowns. A genral buildup of rubbish on your Windows drive will be doing that
Team Colleague
Reputation Points: 229
Solved Threads: 149
Grandad
Catweazle is offline Offline
3,826 posts
since Mar 2004
Jun 24th, 2005
0

Re: Replacing and old hard drive

correct, a lack of power will lead to hardware sometimes not working.
For example when I first installed a DVD writer one of my harddrives would no longer work, but only AFTER I'd used the DVD drive.
After rebooting the drive would work again.
When I disconnected the DVD drive the harddisk worked flawlessly.
That's a clear sign of lack of power, a general slowness of the system is not.
Team Colleague
Reputation Points: 1658
Solved Threads: 331
duckman
jwenting is offline Offline
7,719 posts
since Nov 2004
Jun 24th, 2005
0

Re: Replacing and old hard drive

I know the power supply isn't causing the slow down. Its definately the hard drive, since it hasn't been formatted in 2 years and is full of junk. The reason I was talking about the power supply is because I'm afraid if I put my second hard drive in to back stuff up before formatting, that it will cause problems because I doubt I have enough to power from a 250W power supply to run 2 hard drives, a cd burner and a dvd burner, and my 9800 pro.

Anyway, I think i've just decided to buy a new case (w/power supply), motherboard, processor, and ram, and build a new computer out of that, and out of my old stuff (and put my fresh 200gb hard drive in there). This will only cost me 400 dollars or so, and the reason I'm doing this is because I wanted to upgrade my RAM but discovered I can only use RDRAM, which would cost me 200 dollars for 2x256 sticks, when i could spend less than half that for twice the RAM if I upgraded to a mobo/processor that used DDR.
Reputation Points: 10
Solved Threads: 0
Newbie Poster
Zathras is offline Offline
4 posts
since Jun 2005
Jun 24th, 2005
0

Re: Replacing and old hard drive

Okay, and sorry I neglected to answer your original question.

You can install a new replacement drive, partition it and install Windows XP from the XP CD. You can also swap your original drive back in later and it'd work, as long as you don't change much hardware.

You can't use your original drive in a newly assembled PC, because Windows won't boot in the new machine - but you can add the original drive as a slave drive in the new PC and copy your data across.
Team Colleague
Reputation Points: 229
Solved Threads: 149
Grandad
Catweazle is offline Offline
3,826 posts
since Mar 2004

This thread is more than three months old

No one has posted to this discussion for at least three months. Please let old threads die and do not reply to them unless you feel you have something new and valuable to contribute that absolutely must be added to make the discussion complete. Otherwise, please start a new thread in this forum instead.
Message:
Previous Thread in Storage Forum Timeline: laptop N3350
Next Thread in Storage Forum Timeline: CD ROM Won't open





About Us | Contact Us | Advertise | Acceptable Use Policy
Forum Index | Build Custom RSS Feed


Follow us on Twitter


© 2011 DaniWeb® LLC