Which is exactly what a SATA III SSD drive will do.Shouldnt it be able to give me at least 500-600MBps? Thats still much faster than my mechanical drives
Yes.Can you actually take an image of your system drive on a mechanical hard drive and put it on an nvme drive?
Thanks in advance for the help
Yes.
Macrium Reflect can do this easily.
What, specifically, are you looking to do?
What specific drive, and what specific motherboard?HI , I want to get an nvme drive and put my os and all the programs I got my c drive on it, while a clean install is the best thing to do, I wanna do that later because ive got lots of programs configured and it would waste me a day or two at least
What is the make/model of your motherboard? Presumably it can mount a m.2 pcie ssd.
Easily done.
Buy a samsung ssd of sufficient capacity to hold the contents of your C drive HDD
Install the m.2
Download the samsung nvme driver, the ssd migration app and instructions here:
You install the driver and run the app.Tool & Software Download | Samsung Semiconductor Global
Download various software related to your product, including Samsung Magician, designed for use with Samsung's memory products, and find related information.www.samsung.com
When done, set the boot order to the new m.2 drive.
You can then do what you wish with the old HDD.
Keep it as a backup in time snapshot.
Or, consider repurposing as an external backup device.
Unfortunately its an old asus P8P67 and trying to get a samsung 970 evo plus or 980 and use with a pci express adaptorWhat specific drive, and what specific motherboard?
Give us a rundown of ALL the parts associated with this.Unfortunately its an old asus P8P67
DO NOT BOTHER with an NVMe drive in that system. With or without a PCIe adapter.Unfortunately its an old asus P8P67 and trying to get a samsung 970 evo plus or 980 and use with a pci express adaptor
DO NOT BOTHER with an NVMe drive in that system. With or without a PCIe adapter.
You won't be able to boot from that drive.
A SATA III SSD will do just fine, be a drop in replacement, and you won't notice ANY "speed" difference.
Which is exactly what a SATA III SSD drive will do.Shouldnt it be able to give me at least 500-600MBps? Thats still much faster than my mechanical drives
Even then, a waste.Adding a pcie m.2 device via a pcie adapter might work for data files.
Any of the current cloning/imaging tools will recreate partitions on the new drive just as they are on the old.Also ive a few partitions on this drive , When migrating to the ssd would it it create partitions or can I just move them as data
Any of the current cloning/imaging tools will recreate partitions on the new drive just as they are on the old.
This is just a secondary drive?Hey ! Thanks for coming
Any chance I can actually make folders of those instead of partitions on the new drive? Ordering as we speak, Getting a 860 evo 250gb for boot and and 1 tb for games ! Gonna make a new system as soon as the 3070 or 3080 series card are spotted on planet earth then sell these and replace with nvme ones
This is just a secondary drive?
Changing partitions into folders is done manually.
Create the relevant folders on the new drive.
Copy/paste the data in each partition as applicable.