Last time I tried cloning a drive it failed miserably and I was stuck doing everything manually and took forever
CloneZilla. Command line scary? RescueZilla. Both free, easy to use, and I use them in an enterprise business and have for many years if you want some proof they’re safe and reliable.
Quick note: If it’s your OS drive: Clone it. Shut down. Disconnect source drive before turning back on or you’ll have boot issues and be scratching your head why.
Another vote for clonezilla. I’ve used it 20+ times for this exact thing. One tip: you might want to chkdsk your drive from windows before you clone it. I’ve had that screw up the copy a few times.
deleted by creator
CloneZilla has worked well for me in the past
deleted by creator
Yes
Why don’t you Google that?
deleted by creator
You are asking the best way to do something, they are replying the best way to do something. Sometimes with technology you need to actually learn something.
deleted by creator
This
The CloneZilla website has a good walkthrough for doing a Disk to Disk image using their tools.
Macrium reflect free addition.
deleted by creator
I’m surprised by that. I’ve used it several times and it’s worked just fine.
Sorry to hear that. It’s my go to.
That’s rare.
Perhaps use ddrescue on a mint or Ubuntu live cd / usb. It’ll duplicate the drive bit for bit.
Or if you don’t want to learn this stuff, buy a Samsung SSD and use Samsung’s free but temperamental cloning app
+1 for Macrium Reflect Free. Done several Windows install migrations between HDD to SSD and SSD to SSD and it never failed me.
I use Acronis TrueImage. There is a free version you can make a bootable USB drive from which has a simple GUI that’ll back up your drive to an external location, then swap drives and restore that backup to the new drive. Partitioning can get kinda weird but you can define it all manually and as long as your main working space gets written at the end you can simply extend it in disk management to fill out the new drive. Added bonus to this method is that when you’re done you’ve got a ready-to-deploy backup.
Clonezilla. If you don’t know how to use it, it’s a good time To learn 👍
Samsung Data Migration if you’re using a Samsung drive.
Edit: it seems that it works without a Samsung drive too. I have used it in the past for my boot disk, worked perfectly.
Seconded. I just used it this weekend to go from a 1TB drive to 2TB drive on a system with a single NVMe slot. Connected new NVMe in an enclosure, ran the copy, and the system shut down when done, I physically swapped the new drive in and it booted first try.
It worked so well I started using it for all my hds even if they weren’t Samsung. It seems to work regardless of the manufacturer.
Honestly, just reinstall a clean copy of windows on the new drive and spend the time re-applying all your settings. I know it sucks but you’ll have less issues that way. It’s worth it.
Edit: typo
deleted by creator
They meant to type „clean“.
Thanks for the call out. I meant clean. I fixed it!
Probably not the most popular opinion but back in the day Minitool Partition Wizard was really good. Up until version 9.1 it was awesome. So if you can find yourself a copy of v9.1, you’ll be able to clone the drive. It was freeware at the time.
What are you missing from simple file copying?
deleted by creator
You can change drive letters. So you could copy, then swap the drive letters between partitions.
But for the OS it’s not so simple - at least for Windows. Specifically because of the Windows registry and hidden profile data and Windows activation.
By that point I’d consider a file copy, registry backup (for selective restore; but may not be worth it), and reinstall Windows on the new partition. Trying to clone-move in a working way is a hassle and error-prone. I’d consider ensuring getting the Windows license over much easier. (A documented workflow by Microsoft.)
Loss of registry means many things may have to be reinstalled and reactivated, but I’d still prefer that.
deleted by creator
I bought a cloner. It’s not free, but it has paid it’s investment many times when I’ve had to copy a whole drive that’s close to being dead or basically wanting to up size my SSD/HDD without losing anything.
This is the one I got: https://a.co/d/0R57miy
deleted by creator
Hasn’t fucked up for me. Plus if it fucks up, the source drive is left alone and your target drive is what is being written on. All it’s doing for source drive is reading it.
Once you get to the bigger drive you can either make the extra space part of that drive or partition it as a separate drive. It’s your choice after that.
I used Aomei partition assistant a lot to do this, it’s free and can clone the same drive that is currently running windows too.
Plug both disks into your PC. Then use a gparted boot disk. There you can clone the partitions and then grow your primary partition on the new disk.
I’ve been using this method for years without problems.
deleted by creator
Google it.
Gparted is a partition editor. They provide it as a bootable iso. They have instructions on how to put that on a USB drive and make it bootable.
You would boot gparted from usb, not windows, to do the work.
But seriously, Google it.
I think the easiest route would be to just use the built in windows disk image tool? MS have increasingly hidden it over the years but it still works. Basically you take an image of your current system, then remove the old HDD, install the new one, restore the image. It does require having enough space on a spare disk to create the image.
This guide looks to cover creating an image:
https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/all/how-to-create-a-system-image-in-windows-10/84fa6683-e3ac-4e93-9139-368af9267869
and this one covers restoring it: https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/all/how-to-restore-a-windows-10-system-image-to-an/e20992ca-5641-4f7c-bb09-3895d0732162Edit: You can of course keep and reuse the old HDD. I just suggest pulling it for the initial restore if you aren’t comfortable with boot settings/wiping disks etc as you might just keep booting to the old existing windows. Once the new one is setup you can then connect the old one and format it.
FTK Imager should have you covered. You might need to do partitioning resizing on the destination though.