I have an older computer running windows 7 for specific software and the configuration has not changed for years hardware or software wise. I know windows 7 is old but some software is better when used on it and has excellent older software compatibly. It is an Alienware Aurora R4 using UEFI and windows boot manager.
I brought an ssd to install windows 10 on and I read that installation and boot issues can and have occurred when installing windows 10 when an existing OS drive (windows 7) is still connected.
I read that people deconnected all other hard drives except the drive intended for Windows 10 and installed W10 successfully that way and afterwards reconnected the disconnected drives with no problems dual booting.
If I disconnect all the drives (Windows 7, video, backup) except the ssd I brought for W10 then reconnect them afterwards will windows boot manager list both the Win7 drive and the Win10 drive as selections? I am concerned that the boot area of the hard drive the Win7 is installed will be corrupted/damaged or not.
I intend to switch the computer to Win10 primarily but the old Win7 OS has been specifically configured, for specific use; which is reasonable as some things work better on older system. That is why industrial computers that are very old but used offline are in factories, they have been carefully configured and do the job without the complications of newer computers.
I brought an ssd to install windows 10 on and I read that installation and boot issues can and have occurred when installing windows 10 when an existing OS drive (windows 7) is still connected.
I read that people deconnected all other hard drives except the drive intended for Windows 10 and installed W10 successfully that way and afterwards reconnected the disconnected drives with no problems dual booting.
If I disconnect all the drives (Windows 7, video, backup) except the ssd I brought for W10 then reconnect them afterwards will windows boot manager list both the Win7 drive and the Win10 drive as selections? I am concerned that the boot area of the hard drive the Win7 is installed will be corrupted/damaged or not.
I intend to switch the computer to Win10 primarily but the old Win7 OS has been specifically configured, for specific use; which is reasonable as some things work better on older system. That is why industrial computers that are very old but used offline are in factories, they have been carefully configured and do the job without the complications of newer computers.