Install windows 7 oem licence on new hdd same pc

William Cricket

Honorable
Dec 9, 2013
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10,520
Hello everyone!

My Doubt:

My pc's 500gb hdd is no longer enough for all my stuff, so I want to replace it with a 1 terabyte hdd. The problem is that I have an oem windows 7 home premium 64 bit licence.
Can I use it on the new hdd? if so, how?

Thank you for your answers
 
Solution
You should be able to clone your current hard drive to your new, larger hard drive without issue; no need to contact Microsoft for re-activation. The Windows 7 OEM license is tied to your motherboard, not your hard drive.

-Wolf sends

Wolfshadw

Titan
Moderator
You should be able to clone your current hard drive to your new, larger hard drive without issue; no need to contact Microsoft for re-activation. The Windows 7 OEM license is tied to your motherboard, not your hard drive.

-Wolf sends
 
Solution

Dark Lord of Tech

Retired Moderator
With windows 7 OEM the license is tied to the first motherboard it's installed on.With Windows 8.1 you can move it to another build when you are done with this one , but only one computer at a time.With Windows 8.1 you can change all the hardware you want including the motherboard.


Windows7-2.jpg



OEM versions of Windows 7 are identical to Full License Retail versions except for the following:

- OEM versions do not offer any free Microsoft direct support from Microsoft support personnel

- OEM licenses are tied to the very first computer you install and activate it on

- OEM versions allow all hardware upgrades except for an upgrade to a different model motherboard

- OEM versions cannot be used to directly upgrade from an older Windows operating system


Microsoft.com ^


OEM vs. Retail

OEM Windows 7 comes preinstalled on computers. This is the cheapest way to buy windows. Large PC manufacturers like Dell, HP etc. (collectively called royalty OEMs) install windows on millions of such PCs. The main characteristics of such systems are:

The license agreement and support agreement is between you and the PC makes.

Activation by the end user is not required. Windows is preactivated at the factory by the OEM using images and standard SLP keys.

Your copy of windows is locked to that PC. The license is not transferable.

OEM system builder is what you get when you buy from say Newegg or from a local "white box" vendor. It too has the characteristics of Royalty OEM windows. Although it is possible for an individual to buy a System Builder copy, the license requires that the software be installed using the OPK (OEM preinstall kit) and then resold.

Retail version is what you buy from a retailer like Amazon or Bestbuy. Its a full price version that comes packaged in a retail box with a retail product key. It has to be activated online via MS servers using the key on the box, it is not tied to the PC it was first installed on, though it can only be used on a single computer at a time. And, MS directly provides the support for it. It is also more expensive than OEM copies.

As far as functionality is concerned, theres no difference between any of the versions above, given any specific edition (i.e. between OEM pro and retail pro, or between OEM ultimate and retail ultimate).

sevenforums.com


Windows8-1_zps0f2f36f7.png



Windows 8 is a whole different ballgame.

License agreement for the transfer of a Windows 8 license
http://personaluselicense.windows.com/en-US/default.aspx
 

William Cricket

Honorable
Dec 9, 2013
21
0
10,520


I hadn't thought of that, good idea! thanks