Wouldn't work for what?Just called up system information on the spare and was kind of surprised. Looks like a CPU swap wouldn't work:
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Wouldn't work for what?Just called up system information on the spare and was kind of surprised. Looks like a CPU swap wouldn't work:
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TBH the Intel one would probably work. It's already in legacy mode. I'm not making any recommendations here and it's not ideal, but you'd be surprised how adaptable modern Windows installs are to being moved into completely different computers.I thought the spare had an am3+ mobo with an even older bulldozer and I was gonna swap 'em and use the stable mobo but since it's an Intel I don't thjik that will work.
Gonna check my basement, should be a couple of 3-4 am3+ mobos down there. Hopefully one is good. Else I talk the wife into an upgrade, we'll see.
Not yet but the comments under the memory said it seemed to like AMD mobos. I'll check once I get approval.Have you checked the mboard qvl list for that memory ?
Because the not clone is almost 2 years old and if I'm gonna do it I'll do it with the fresh one.how about installing a new windows on a new SSD... make sure it boots fine... and then copy the content of the windows partition (not clone) to the new SSD?
Damn it Dav and thanks! Checked the mobo qvl and it had it divided into core family names to download the support lists. It only went down to Pinnacle, not Summit Ridge like the 1600 non-AF I have on my desk so it would either mean me giving up my 2600x or swapping mobos.Have you checked the mboard qvl list for that memory ?
Good gods yes! I've been trying to get any am3+ mobo even to boot without any luck. Either or would be an improvement over bulldozer tech too if I'm not mistaken. (I still got a lot to learn about Intel's post pentium iv stuff)Would a P67 3570k or a Z77 4770 mboard/cpu/ram combo be of any use here as replacement?
Throw me a DM, I'll hook you up with some hardware.Good gods yes! I've been trying to get any am3+ mobo even to boot without any luck. Either or would be an improvement over bulldozer tech too if I'm not mistaken. (I still got a lot to learn about Intel's post pentium iv stuff)
Sorry for the late reply, life's been going too fast the past few days.
"Digi is so rich he has his own private swimming pool"Have to say this is a fantastic show of generosity by Malo he's not only giving
Digi a new cpu but also a motherboard and ram to go with it even though Digi is so rich he has his own private swimming pool I've never even met someone who has their own private swimming pool So he must be awarded the (Drumroll)
"The Shrubbery of Outstandingness"
(everyone say "NI")
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And now as per tradition a few words from that fine english gentleman
Mr Terry Thomas
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"Jolly good show old chap? simply spiffing"
May the Gaming Gods scan your games and remove all the quicktime events for they are indeed the spawn of satan...
Now the pedantic among you might be thinking "thats a shrub not a full shrubbery"
Well answer this then clever clogs. If I was to award a full shrubbery how would people get it home.....
DiskPart
to format the EFI system partition with FAT32 file system, assign drive letters to your EFI system and Windows partitions, then use BCDBoot
to copy boot manager system files and rebuild the BCD (boot configuration data) on the EFI system partition.THANK YOU! I'll dive in to it the next free chance I get, truly grateful!@digitalwanderer,
judging by this Disk Management screenshot, you do have a 100 MByte EFI system partition on your GPT disk, but it looks like it's not properly configured; there are also two recovery partitions, but no MSR partition.
At a bare minimum, you need to useDiskPart
to format the EFI system partition with FAT32 file system, assign drive letters to your EFI system and Windows partitions, then useBCDBoot
to copy boot manager system files and rebuild the BCD (boot configuration data) on the EFI system partition.
You then need to enter your UEFI BIOS setup and select the Windows Boot Manager entry for the new SSD in the boot options.
I once made a short overview and a detailed step-by-step guide on how to properly copy your existing Windows partition to a brand new GPT disk - or non-destructively repartition your existing GPT/MBR disk in a Microsoft-recommended fashion; you can follow the latter guidance to make Windows boot from your new SSD, this will take far less time than cloning your hard disk all over again.
Sure, feel free to ask any questions.I'll dive in to it the next free chance I get