Clone HDD to USB to SSD?
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I bought a new computer (ASUS G551JM) with a hard disk drive (1TB 7200 RPM), but I want to transfer the OS (and everything else) onto my Samsung EVO 840 (500GB). However, when I purchased the SSD from Samsung, I did not purchase the laptop kit.
I'm wondering whether I can clone the OS from the hard disk drive onto my SanDisk Extreme USB 3.0 (32GB), and then onto the SSD.
My ultimate goals are to save $120 by not buying another copy of Windows 8.1 and to retain all the pre-installed drivers and software from ASUS.
hard-drive usb ssd operating-systems clone
|
show 4 more comments
I bought a new computer (ASUS G551JM) with a hard disk drive (1TB 7200 RPM), but I want to transfer the OS (and everything else) onto my Samsung EVO 840 (500GB). However, when I purchased the SSD from Samsung, I did not purchase the laptop kit.
I'm wondering whether I can clone the OS from the hard disk drive onto my SanDisk Extreme USB 3.0 (32GB), and then onto the SSD.
My ultimate goals are to save $120 by not buying another copy of Windows 8.1 and to retain all the pre-installed drivers and software from ASUS.
hard-drive usb ssd operating-systems clone
what is your c: drive size? i mean used space size.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:29
My laptop is still in the mail, but I suspect it'll be less than 32GB. If I'm mistaken, I apologize.
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 7:31
Why not simply use the software installed on Windows 8.1 to make a recovery image (from memory its can easily fit on a USB key or 2 DVD's - its about about 6 gigs), then replace the drive and use the USB key ? If my understanding is correct, I expect that like Dell, ASUS will use an OEM disk which does not require validation - but even if you do requre a key there are lots of free tools you can run on your existing install to extract your Windows key from the registry. [ I recently did something a bit similar with a Dell laptop I bought ]
– davidgo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:34
then i would suggest imaging your C: partition to Sandisk drive then you could restore it to SSD. Similar to what @magicandre1981 suggested but you wouldn't have to buy additional equipment.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:34
Thank you, Davidgo and Haplo. When I tried to create installation media for Windows 8.1 on my current ASUS laptop, the Windows 8.1 Setup program did not accept the product key that I had extracted with Belarc Advisor and, therefore, I could not create a bootable USB flash drive with the installation media on it. Nonetheless, would I simply need to install the SSD and then boot from a USB that has the image of my C: partition?
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 8:05
|
show 4 more comments
I bought a new computer (ASUS G551JM) with a hard disk drive (1TB 7200 RPM), but I want to transfer the OS (and everything else) onto my Samsung EVO 840 (500GB). However, when I purchased the SSD from Samsung, I did not purchase the laptop kit.
I'm wondering whether I can clone the OS from the hard disk drive onto my SanDisk Extreme USB 3.0 (32GB), and then onto the SSD.
My ultimate goals are to save $120 by not buying another copy of Windows 8.1 and to retain all the pre-installed drivers and software from ASUS.
hard-drive usb ssd operating-systems clone
I bought a new computer (ASUS G551JM) with a hard disk drive (1TB 7200 RPM), but I want to transfer the OS (and everything else) onto my Samsung EVO 840 (500GB). However, when I purchased the SSD from Samsung, I did not purchase the laptop kit.
I'm wondering whether I can clone the OS from the hard disk drive onto my SanDisk Extreme USB 3.0 (32GB), and then onto the SSD.
My ultimate goals are to save $120 by not buying another copy of Windows 8.1 and to retain all the pre-installed drivers and software from ASUS.
hard-drive usb ssd operating-systems clone
hard-drive usb ssd operating-systems clone
asked Nov 1 '14 at 6:51
TechEnthusiastTechEnthusiast
612
612
what is your c: drive size? i mean used space size.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:29
My laptop is still in the mail, but I suspect it'll be less than 32GB. If I'm mistaken, I apologize.
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 7:31
Why not simply use the software installed on Windows 8.1 to make a recovery image (from memory its can easily fit on a USB key or 2 DVD's - its about about 6 gigs), then replace the drive and use the USB key ? If my understanding is correct, I expect that like Dell, ASUS will use an OEM disk which does not require validation - but even if you do requre a key there are lots of free tools you can run on your existing install to extract your Windows key from the registry. [ I recently did something a bit similar with a Dell laptop I bought ]
– davidgo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:34
then i would suggest imaging your C: partition to Sandisk drive then you could restore it to SSD. Similar to what @magicandre1981 suggested but you wouldn't have to buy additional equipment.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:34
Thank you, Davidgo and Haplo. When I tried to create installation media for Windows 8.1 on my current ASUS laptop, the Windows 8.1 Setup program did not accept the product key that I had extracted with Belarc Advisor and, therefore, I could not create a bootable USB flash drive with the installation media on it. Nonetheless, would I simply need to install the SSD and then boot from a USB that has the image of my C: partition?
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 8:05
|
show 4 more comments
what is your c: drive size? i mean used space size.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:29
My laptop is still in the mail, but I suspect it'll be less than 32GB. If I'm mistaken, I apologize.
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 7:31
Why not simply use the software installed on Windows 8.1 to make a recovery image (from memory its can easily fit on a USB key or 2 DVD's - its about about 6 gigs), then replace the drive and use the USB key ? If my understanding is correct, I expect that like Dell, ASUS will use an OEM disk which does not require validation - but even if you do requre a key there are lots of free tools you can run on your existing install to extract your Windows key from the registry. [ I recently did something a bit similar with a Dell laptop I bought ]
– davidgo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:34
then i would suggest imaging your C: partition to Sandisk drive then you could restore it to SSD. Similar to what @magicandre1981 suggested but you wouldn't have to buy additional equipment.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:34
Thank you, Davidgo and Haplo. When I tried to create installation media for Windows 8.1 on my current ASUS laptop, the Windows 8.1 Setup program did not accept the product key that I had extracted with Belarc Advisor and, therefore, I could not create a bootable USB flash drive with the installation media on it. Nonetheless, would I simply need to install the SSD and then boot from a USB that has the image of my C: partition?
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 8:05
what is your c: drive size? i mean used space size.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:29
what is your c: drive size? i mean used space size.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:29
My laptop is still in the mail, but I suspect it'll be less than 32GB. If I'm mistaken, I apologize.
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 7:31
My laptop is still in the mail, but I suspect it'll be less than 32GB. If I'm mistaken, I apologize.
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 7:31
Why not simply use the software installed on Windows 8.1 to make a recovery image (from memory its can easily fit on a USB key or 2 DVD's - its about about 6 gigs), then replace the drive and use the USB key ? If my understanding is correct, I expect that like Dell, ASUS will use an OEM disk which does not require validation - but even if you do requre a key there are lots of free tools you can run on your existing install to extract your Windows key from the registry. [ I recently did something a bit similar with a Dell laptop I bought ]
– davidgo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:34
Why not simply use the software installed on Windows 8.1 to make a recovery image (from memory its can easily fit on a USB key or 2 DVD's - its about about 6 gigs), then replace the drive and use the USB key ? If my understanding is correct, I expect that like Dell, ASUS will use an OEM disk which does not require validation - but even if you do requre a key there are lots of free tools you can run on your existing install to extract your Windows key from the registry. [ I recently did something a bit similar with a Dell laptop I bought ]
– davidgo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:34
then i would suggest imaging your C: partition to Sandisk drive then you could restore it to SSD. Similar to what @magicandre1981 suggested but you wouldn't have to buy additional equipment.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:34
then i would suggest imaging your C: partition to Sandisk drive then you could restore it to SSD. Similar to what @magicandre1981 suggested but you wouldn't have to buy additional equipment.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:34
Thank you, Davidgo and Haplo. When I tried to create installation media for Windows 8.1 on my current ASUS laptop, the Windows 8.1 Setup program did not accept the product key that I had extracted with Belarc Advisor and, therefore, I could not create a bootable USB flash drive with the installation media on it. Nonetheless, would I simply need to install the SSD and then boot from a USB that has the image of my C: partition?
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 8:05
Thank you, Davidgo and Haplo. When I tried to create installation media for Windows 8.1 on my current ASUS laptop, the Windows 8.1 Setup program did not accept the product key that I had extracted with Belarc Advisor and, therefore, I could not create a bootable USB flash drive with the installation media on it. Nonetheless, would I simply need to install the SSD and then boot from a USB that has the image of my C: partition?
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 8:05
|
show 4 more comments
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
I've used an USB 3.0 to SATA adapter to connect the SSD to my laptop:
(example, not the one I used).
Now I used EaseUS Partition Manager to clone the HDD to the SSD. When this is finished I removed the HDD from my Laptop and added the SSD.
Now you can use the SSD and put the HDD into an external USB3.0 HDD enclosure.
Thank you for your reply. The SSD 840 EVO 2.5-inch SATA 500GB also comes with a laptop-kit version that includes the Migration Software, USB3.0 to SATA Cable, and Drive Spacer. However, I purchased only the internal SSD, so I don't have the USB3.0 to SATA Cable. Would it be possible to use my SanDisk Extreme USB 3.0 (32GB) as the intermediary hardware instead?
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 7:29
I think the 32GB drive is too small. Such a cable is not that expensive.
– magicandre1981
Nov 1 '14 at 7:37
Yes, it's not expensive. However, before spending an additional $20 or $30 on a USB3.0 to SATA Cable, I want to try to find a few alternatives.
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 8:09
If you had that cable i would say use it, but if you have not, that Sandisk drive would be a lot more handy imho.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 11:16
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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oldest
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oldest
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oldest
votes
I've used an USB 3.0 to SATA adapter to connect the SSD to my laptop:
(example, not the one I used).
Now I used EaseUS Partition Manager to clone the HDD to the SSD. When this is finished I removed the HDD from my Laptop and added the SSD.
Now you can use the SSD and put the HDD into an external USB3.0 HDD enclosure.
Thank you for your reply. The SSD 840 EVO 2.5-inch SATA 500GB also comes with a laptop-kit version that includes the Migration Software, USB3.0 to SATA Cable, and Drive Spacer. However, I purchased only the internal SSD, so I don't have the USB3.0 to SATA Cable. Would it be possible to use my SanDisk Extreme USB 3.0 (32GB) as the intermediary hardware instead?
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 7:29
I think the 32GB drive is too small. Such a cable is not that expensive.
– magicandre1981
Nov 1 '14 at 7:37
Yes, it's not expensive. However, before spending an additional $20 or $30 on a USB3.0 to SATA Cable, I want to try to find a few alternatives.
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 8:09
If you had that cable i would say use it, but if you have not, that Sandisk drive would be a lot more handy imho.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 11:16
add a comment |
I've used an USB 3.0 to SATA adapter to connect the SSD to my laptop:
(example, not the one I used).
Now I used EaseUS Partition Manager to clone the HDD to the SSD. When this is finished I removed the HDD from my Laptop and added the SSD.
Now you can use the SSD and put the HDD into an external USB3.0 HDD enclosure.
Thank you for your reply. The SSD 840 EVO 2.5-inch SATA 500GB also comes with a laptop-kit version that includes the Migration Software, USB3.0 to SATA Cable, and Drive Spacer. However, I purchased only the internal SSD, so I don't have the USB3.0 to SATA Cable. Would it be possible to use my SanDisk Extreme USB 3.0 (32GB) as the intermediary hardware instead?
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 7:29
I think the 32GB drive is too small. Such a cable is not that expensive.
– magicandre1981
Nov 1 '14 at 7:37
Yes, it's not expensive. However, before spending an additional $20 or $30 on a USB3.0 to SATA Cable, I want to try to find a few alternatives.
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 8:09
If you had that cable i would say use it, but if you have not, that Sandisk drive would be a lot more handy imho.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 11:16
add a comment |
I've used an USB 3.0 to SATA adapter to connect the SSD to my laptop:
(example, not the one I used).
Now I used EaseUS Partition Manager to clone the HDD to the SSD. When this is finished I removed the HDD from my Laptop and added the SSD.
Now you can use the SSD and put the HDD into an external USB3.0 HDD enclosure.
I've used an USB 3.0 to SATA adapter to connect the SSD to my laptop:
(example, not the one I used).
Now I used EaseUS Partition Manager to clone the HDD to the SSD. When this is finished I removed the HDD from my Laptop and added the SSD.
Now you can use the SSD and put the HDD into an external USB3.0 HDD enclosure.
answered Nov 1 '14 at 7:18
magicandre1981magicandre1981
82.3k20126204
82.3k20126204
Thank you for your reply. The SSD 840 EVO 2.5-inch SATA 500GB also comes with a laptop-kit version that includes the Migration Software, USB3.0 to SATA Cable, and Drive Spacer. However, I purchased only the internal SSD, so I don't have the USB3.0 to SATA Cable. Would it be possible to use my SanDisk Extreme USB 3.0 (32GB) as the intermediary hardware instead?
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 7:29
I think the 32GB drive is too small. Such a cable is not that expensive.
– magicandre1981
Nov 1 '14 at 7:37
Yes, it's not expensive. However, before spending an additional $20 or $30 on a USB3.0 to SATA Cable, I want to try to find a few alternatives.
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 8:09
If you had that cable i would say use it, but if you have not, that Sandisk drive would be a lot more handy imho.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 11:16
add a comment |
Thank you for your reply. The SSD 840 EVO 2.5-inch SATA 500GB also comes with a laptop-kit version that includes the Migration Software, USB3.0 to SATA Cable, and Drive Spacer. However, I purchased only the internal SSD, so I don't have the USB3.0 to SATA Cable. Would it be possible to use my SanDisk Extreme USB 3.0 (32GB) as the intermediary hardware instead?
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 7:29
I think the 32GB drive is too small. Such a cable is not that expensive.
– magicandre1981
Nov 1 '14 at 7:37
Yes, it's not expensive. However, before spending an additional $20 or $30 on a USB3.0 to SATA Cable, I want to try to find a few alternatives.
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 8:09
If you had that cable i would say use it, but if you have not, that Sandisk drive would be a lot more handy imho.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 11:16
Thank you for your reply. The SSD 840 EVO 2.5-inch SATA 500GB also comes with a laptop-kit version that includes the Migration Software, USB3.0 to SATA Cable, and Drive Spacer. However, I purchased only the internal SSD, so I don't have the USB3.0 to SATA Cable. Would it be possible to use my SanDisk Extreme USB 3.0 (32GB) as the intermediary hardware instead?
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 7:29
Thank you for your reply. The SSD 840 EVO 2.5-inch SATA 500GB also comes with a laptop-kit version that includes the Migration Software, USB3.0 to SATA Cable, and Drive Spacer. However, I purchased only the internal SSD, so I don't have the USB3.0 to SATA Cable. Would it be possible to use my SanDisk Extreme USB 3.0 (32GB) as the intermediary hardware instead?
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 7:29
I think the 32GB drive is too small. Such a cable is not that expensive.
– magicandre1981
Nov 1 '14 at 7:37
I think the 32GB drive is too small. Such a cable is not that expensive.
– magicandre1981
Nov 1 '14 at 7:37
Yes, it's not expensive. However, before spending an additional $20 or $30 on a USB3.0 to SATA Cable, I want to try to find a few alternatives.
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 8:09
Yes, it's not expensive. However, before spending an additional $20 or $30 on a USB3.0 to SATA Cable, I want to try to find a few alternatives.
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 8:09
If you had that cable i would say use it, but if you have not, that Sandisk drive would be a lot more handy imho.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 11:16
If you had that cable i would say use it, but if you have not, that Sandisk drive would be a lot more handy imho.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 11:16
add a comment |
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what is your c: drive size? i mean used space size.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:29
My laptop is still in the mail, but I suspect it'll be less than 32GB. If I'm mistaken, I apologize.
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 7:31
Why not simply use the software installed on Windows 8.1 to make a recovery image (from memory its can easily fit on a USB key or 2 DVD's - its about about 6 gigs), then replace the drive and use the USB key ? If my understanding is correct, I expect that like Dell, ASUS will use an OEM disk which does not require validation - but even if you do requre a key there are lots of free tools you can run on your existing install to extract your Windows key from the registry. [ I recently did something a bit similar with a Dell laptop I bought ]
– davidgo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:34
then i would suggest imaging your C: partition to Sandisk drive then you could restore it to SSD. Similar to what @magicandre1981 suggested but you wouldn't have to buy additional equipment.
– Haplo
Nov 1 '14 at 7:34
Thank you, Davidgo and Haplo. When I tried to create installation media for Windows 8.1 on my current ASUS laptop, the Windows 8.1 Setup program did not accept the product key that I had extracted with Belarc Advisor and, therefore, I could not create a bootable USB flash drive with the installation media on it. Nonetheless, would I simply need to install the SSD and then boot from a USB that has the image of my C: partition?
– TechEnthusiast
Nov 1 '14 at 8:05