I'm pretty sure I can do this, though I'm wary of pitfalls. I could use some guidance from someone who's actually done it.
I bought a new faster Gen4 M.2 drive. I currently boot from an older/smaller Gen3 M.2 drive.
I need to move my C: partition to the new drive, but I don't want to remove the old drive.
I have software that will backup & restore the Boot partition (launched from a USB flash drive at boot), but after I backup the old C: partition then restore it to the new drive, I'll have TWO boot partitions masquerading as C:.
I assume at this point I simply tell BIOS to boot from the NEW C: partition, and if successful, I can simply delete the OLD C: partition.
But you know what they say about "assuming". Any pitfalls I should be aware of? TIA
I bought a new faster Gen4 M.2 drive. I currently boot from an older/smaller Gen3 M.2 drive.
I need to move my C: partition to the new drive, but I don't want to remove the old drive.
I have software that will backup & restore the Boot partition (launched from a USB flash drive at boot), but after I backup the old C: partition then restore it to the new drive, I'll have TWO boot partitions masquerading as C:.
I assume at this point I simply tell BIOS to boot from the NEW C: partition, and if successful, I can simply delete the OLD C: partition.
But you know what they say about "assuming". Any pitfalls I should be aware of? TIA