Windows 10 fails to boot after HDD clone to SSD












4















I have been trying to migrate a laptop from a HDD to an SSD. I initially cloned the drive with the latest version of TODO Backup and then tried with Macrium Reflect. Both have the same problem. The drive clones fine and all the files appear to be present, but Windows 10 won't boot.



I have booted from a recovery disk, loaded a command prompt and run:



bootrec /RebuildBcd
bootrec /fixMbr
bootrec /fixboot
bootsect /nt60 SYS


It still doesn't boot. If I load the Windows 10 recovery disk and boot from the CD I can then select to load Windows it will load. Likewise, if I select reboot rather than shutdown, the machine loads.



This is how the SSD drive looks in drive manager:
SSD partition



When trying to start the system after shutdown, it permanently sits on a black screen with a flash _.



The partitioning on the source disk is MBR. I am cloning to an Integral P Series 2.5 inch Solid State Drive (120 GB, 4 SSD, SATA III Drive).










share|improve this question

























  • I ran into similar issues attempting to clone my Win 10 SSD (40GB) to my new one (256GB) using Acronis. I spent a good week on it before I gave up and reinstalled it on the new drive completely.

    – Thebluefish
    Jun 24 '16 at 22:48











  • I don't normally recommend software, but the program I am going to suggest has never failed me, paragon-software.com/technologies/components/migrate-OS-to-SSD up to you if it's worth a try or not though

    – Ramhound
    Jun 24 '16 at 23:07






  • 2





    one lazy way , is to install the system normal, which gets all the mbr/gpt stuff set, then drop the partition clone in overwriting the partition, which has all your additions and customisations. That trick worked with most of the windows systems.

    – Psycogeek
    Jun 25 '16 at 4:54













  • What is your source disk partitioning MBR or GPT howtogeek.com/193669/… ? How old is your cloning software? What is your SSD type?

    – Vojtěch Dohnal
    Jun 27 '16 at 8:44













  • And what is the type/brand of computer you are trying to run it on? Some laptops have BIOS limitations.

    – Vojtěch Dohnal
    Jun 27 '16 at 9:31


















4















I have been trying to migrate a laptop from a HDD to an SSD. I initially cloned the drive with the latest version of TODO Backup and then tried with Macrium Reflect. Both have the same problem. The drive clones fine and all the files appear to be present, but Windows 10 won't boot.



I have booted from a recovery disk, loaded a command prompt and run:



bootrec /RebuildBcd
bootrec /fixMbr
bootrec /fixboot
bootsect /nt60 SYS


It still doesn't boot. If I load the Windows 10 recovery disk and boot from the CD I can then select to load Windows it will load. Likewise, if I select reboot rather than shutdown, the machine loads.



This is how the SSD drive looks in drive manager:
SSD partition



When trying to start the system after shutdown, it permanently sits on a black screen with a flash _.



The partitioning on the source disk is MBR. I am cloning to an Integral P Series 2.5 inch Solid State Drive (120 GB, 4 SSD, SATA III Drive).










share|improve this question

























  • I ran into similar issues attempting to clone my Win 10 SSD (40GB) to my new one (256GB) using Acronis. I spent a good week on it before I gave up and reinstalled it on the new drive completely.

    – Thebluefish
    Jun 24 '16 at 22:48











  • I don't normally recommend software, but the program I am going to suggest has never failed me, paragon-software.com/technologies/components/migrate-OS-to-SSD up to you if it's worth a try or not though

    – Ramhound
    Jun 24 '16 at 23:07






  • 2





    one lazy way , is to install the system normal, which gets all the mbr/gpt stuff set, then drop the partition clone in overwriting the partition, which has all your additions and customisations. That trick worked with most of the windows systems.

    – Psycogeek
    Jun 25 '16 at 4:54













  • What is your source disk partitioning MBR or GPT howtogeek.com/193669/… ? How old is your cloning software? What is your SSD type?

    – Vojtěch Dohnal
    Jun 27 '16 at 8:44













  • And what is the type/brand of computer you are trying to run it on? Some laptops have BIOS limitations.

    – Vojtěch Dohnal
    Jun 27 '16 at 9:31
















4












4








4


2






I have been trying to migrate a laptop from a HDD to an SSD. I initially cloned the drive with the latest version of TODO Backup and then tried with Macrium Reflect. Both have the same problem. The drive clones fine and all the files appear to be present, but Windows 10 won't boot.



I have booted from a recovery disk, loaded a command prompt and run:



bootrec /RebuildBcd
bootrec /fixMbr
bootrec /fixboot
bootsect /nt60 SYS


It still doesn't boot. If I load the Windows 10 recovery disk and boot from the CD I can then select to load Windows it will load. Likewise, if I select reboot rather than shutdown, the machine loads.



This is how the SSD drive looks in drive manager:
SSD partition



When trying to start the system after shutdown, it permanently sits on a black screen with a flash _.



The partitioning on the source disk is MBR. I am cloning to an Integral P Series 2.5 inch Solid State Drive (120 GB, 4 SSD, SATA III Drive).










share|improve this question
















I have been trying to migrate a laptop from a HDD to an SSD. I initially cloned the drive with the latest version of TODO Backup and then tried with Macrium Reflect. Both have the same problem. The drive clones fine and all the files appear to be present, but Windows 10 won't boot.



I have booted from a recovery disk, loaded a command prompt and run:



bootrec /RebuildBcd
bootrec /fixMbr
bootrec /fixboot
bootsect /nt60 SYS


It still doesn't boot. If I load the Windows 10 recovery disk and boot from the CD I can then select to load Windows it will load. Likewise, if I select reboot rather than shutdown, the machine loads.



This is how the SSD drive looks in drive manager:
SSD partition



When trying to start the system after shutdown, it permanently sits on a black screen with a flash _.



The partitioning on the source disk is MBR. I am cloning to an Integral P Series 2.5 inch Solid State Drive (120 GB, 4 SSD, SATA III Drive).







boot windows-10 bootloader






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jun 27 '16 at 8:57







psych

















asked Jun 24 '16 at 21:55









psychpsych

71114




71114













  • I ran into similar issues attempting to clone my Win 10 SSD (40GB) to my new one (256GB) using Acronis. I spent a good week on it before I gave up and reinstalled it on the new drive completely.

    – Thebluefish
    Jun 24 '16 at 22:48











  • I don't normally recommend software, but the program I am going to suggest has never failed me, paragon-software.com/technologies/components/migrate-OS-to-SSD up to you if it's worth a try or not though

    – Ramhound
    Jun 24 '16 at 23:07






  • 2





    one lazy way , is to install the system normal, which gets all the mbr/gpt stuff set, then drop the partition clone in overwriting the partition, which has all your additions and customisations. That trick worked with most of the windows systems.

    – Psycogeek
    Jun 25 '16 at 4:54













  • What is your source disk partitioning MBR or GPT howtogeek.com/193669/… ? How old is your cloning software? What is your SSD type?

    – Vojtěch Dohnal
    Jun 27 '16 at 8:44













  • And what is the type/brand of computer you are trying to run it on? Some laptops have BIOS limitations.

    – Vojtěch Dohnal
    Jun 27 '16 at 9:31





















  • I ran into similar issues attempting to clone my Win 10 SSD (40GB) to my new one (256GB) using Acronis. I spent a good week on it before I gave up and reinstalled it on the new drive completely.

    – Thebluefish
    Jun 24 '16 at 22:48











  • I don't normally recommend software, but the program I am going to suggest has never failed me, paragon-software.com/technologies/components/migrate-OS-to-SSD up to you if it's worth a try or not though

    – Ramhound
    Jun 24 '16 at 23:07






  • 2





    one lazy way , is to install the system normal, which gets all the mbr/gpt stuff set, then drop the partition clone in overwriting the partition, which has all your additions and customisations. That trick worked with most of the windows systems.

    – Psycogeek
    Jun 25 '16 at 4:54













  • What is your source disk partitioning MBR or GPT howtogeek.com/193669/… ? How old is your cloning software? What is your SSD type?

    – Vojtěch Dohnal
    Jun 27 '16 at 8:44













  • And what is the type/brand of computer you are trying to run it on? Some laptops have BIOS limitations.

    – Vojtěch Dohnal
    Jun 27 '16 at 9:31



















I ran into similar issues attempting to clone my Win 10 SSD (40GB) to my new one (256GB) using Acronis. I spent a good week on it before I gave up and reinstalled it on the new drive completely.

– Thebluefish
Jun 24 '16 at 22:48





I ran into similar issues attempting to clone my Win 10 SSD (40GB) to my new one (256GB) using Acronis. I spent a good week on it before I gave up and reinstalled it on the new drive completely.

– Thebluefish
Jun 24 '16 at 22:48













I don't normally recommend software, but the program I am going to suggest has never failed me, paragon-software.com/technologies/components/migrate-OS-to-SSD up to you if it's worth a try or not though

– Ramhound
Jun 24 '16 at 23:07





I don't normally recommend software, but the program I am going to suggest has never failed me, paragon-software.com/technologies/components/migrate-OS-to-SSD up to you if it's worth a try or not though

– Ramhound
Jun 24 '16 at 23:07




2




2





one lazy way , is to install the system normal, which gets all the mbr/gpt stuff set, then drop the partition clone in overwriting the partition, which has all your additions and customisations. That trick worked with most of the windows systems.

– Psycogeek
Jun 25 '16 at 4:54







one lazy way , is to install the system normal, which gets all the mbr/gpt stuff set, then drop the partition clone in overwriting the partition, which has all your additions and customisations. That trick worked with most of the windows systems.

– Psycogeek
Jun 25 '16 at 4:54















What is your source disk partitioning MBR or GPT howtogeek.com/193669/… ? How old is your cloning software? What is your SSD type?

– Vojtěch Dohnal
Jun 27 '16 at 8:44







What is your source disk partitioning MBR or GPT howtogeek.com/193669/… ? How old is your cloning software? What is your SSD type?

– Vojtěch Dohnal
Jun 27 '16 at 8:44















And what is the type/brand of computer you are trying to run it on? Some laptops have BIOS limitations.

– Vojtěch Dohnal
Jun 27 '16 at 9:31







And what is the type/brand of computer you are trying to run it on? Some laptops have BIOS limitations.

– Vojtěch Dohnal
Jun 27 '16 at 9:31












7 Answers
7






active

oldest

votes


















2














Since you have a way of booting into Windows on the SSD, you can do a
Repair install of Windows 10 by performing an in-place upgrade without
losing anything.



You should first verify the partition alignment as described here.






share|improve this answer































    2














    The solution that worked at first try for me:



    Windows 10
    Fix Error After Cloning HDD SSD - Error in file winload.efi




    • With Windows 10 installation/recovery media open the command prompt in advanced tools


    • Diskpart


    • list volume (take note of boot partition volume and windows partition letter)


    • select volume X (X partition responsible for booting the system, hidden partition in fat32)


    • assign letter w (to be able to recover the boot files)


    • exit (exit diskpart)


    • bcdboot X:Windows /s w: /f UEFI (X partition letter that contains the Windows folder)


    • reeboot system (select the new boot option if more than one)


    • msconfig (Boot - delete the Windows options and leave only the c:Windows option)



    Hope this helps many of you!






    share|improve this answer































      0














      I think there is some problem with boot files or boot order.



      The first thing you can do is disable fast startup by going to power options.



      As fast startup uses a kind of hibernation techniques.



      If it doesn't work perform an in-place upgrade without loosing your data. This will create new boot files and settings.






      share|improve this answer
























      • I have tried an in place upgrade, but I still see the same problem.

        – psych
        Jun 29 '16 at 15:44



















      0














      I struggle with similar problem with Windows 8.1.



      When cloning from HDD to SSD, partitions serial and GUID kept intact.
      But I not want to remove original HDD from system. So I needed to change GUID (in GPT for FAT EFI partition) and remove windows system partition from original HDD after cloning and before boot recovery.



      When partition ID is non unique windows work strange, for example PE recovery unable to detect both HDD and SSD.






      share|improve this answer
























      • I don't believe this will help me. I am removing the old HDD from the system so it shouldn't be a problem.

        – psych
        Jun 29 '16 at 15:26



















      0














      I had this same problem, just create windows installation usb drive from official site, boot up from installation usb, then go to troubleshooting, start CMD there and copy all files (and folders) that start with boot* and efi* from installation usb to root directory of cloned SSD drive, after doing that my cloned SSD was able to boot. Also check your boot settings in bios.






      share|improve this answer































        0














        I ran into this same issue cloning my OS drive to a new SSD and was able to resolve it.

        I noticed I had two Windows Boot Manager listed that pointed to the original drive.

        1: I downloaded BootIce v1.3.4 by Pualy.

        2: I went to the UEFI tab>> Edit boot entries button

        3: There were two Windows Boot Manger listed in the listbox on the left, they both pointed to the same hard drive.

        4: I selected one of them and changed it to point to my new SSD>> Click Save current boot entry button.
        5: When I rebooted and went into the BIOS i was able to change the boot priority to the Windows Boot Manager of the new drive.

        Success! I am now typing this from the Windows 10 loaded from the new SSD.

        I plan on formatting the old one for secondary storage once I feel comfortable this is stable.






        share|improve this answer

































          0














          just met the same problem, actually a small mistake on 2nd clone of 2nd new laptop.



          1st laptop clone, connect alone and boot up ok, the default hard disk connect on 2nd boot and formatted without problem.



          But on 2nd laptop clone, connect newly clone SSD and original hard disk still with win10 in it, although choose boot with SSD, then wipe the hard disk OS, next time failed.



          Solution: use Macrium Reflect bootable disc, go to restore > fix Windows Boot problem, it auto fix the boot manager.
          Remind next time after clone, boot the cloned disk alone without original source disk, connect after 1st boot.






          share|improve this answer























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            7 Answers
            7






            active

            oldest

            votes








            7 Answers
            7






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            2














            Since you have a way of booting into Windows on the SSD, you can do a
            Repair install of Windows 10 by performing an in-place upgrade without
            losing anything.



            You should first verify the partition alignment as described here.






            share|improve this answer




























              2














              Since you have a way of booting into Windows on the SSD, you can do a
              Repair install of Windows 10 by performing an in-place upgrade without
              losing anything.



              You should first verify the partition alignment as described here.






              share|improve this answer


























                2












                2








                2







                Since you have a way of booting into Windows on the SSD, you can do a
                Repair install of Windows 10 by performing an in-place upgrade without
                losing anything.



                You should first verify the partition alignment as described here.






                share|improve this answer













                Since you have a way of booting into Windows on the SSD, you can do a
                Repair install of Windows 10 by performing an in-place upgrade without
                losing anything.



                You should first verify the partition alignment as described here.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Jun 29 '16 at 10:56









                harrymcharrymc

                256k14267566




                256k14267566

























                    2














                    The solution that worked at first try for me:



                    Windows 10
                    Fix Error After Cloning HDD SSD - Error in file winload.efi




                    • With Windows 10 installation/recovery media open the command prompt in advanced tools


                    • Diskpart


                    • list volume (take note of boot partition volume and windows partition letter)


                    • select volume X (X partition responsible for booting the system, hidden partition in fat32)


                    • assign letter w (to be able to recover the boot files)


                    • exit (exit diskpart)


                    • bcdboot X:Windows /s w: /f UEFI (X partition letter that contains the Windows folder)


                    • reeboot system (select the new boot option if more than one)


                    • msconfig (Boot - delete the Windows options and leave only the c:Windows option)



                    Hope this helps many of you!






                    share|improve this answer




























                      2














                      The solution that worked at first try for me:



                      Windows 10
                      Fix Error After Cloning HDD SSD - Error in file winload.efi




                      • With Windows 10 installation/recovery media open the command prompt in advanced tools


                      • Diskpart


                      • list volume (take note of boot partition volume and windows partition letter)


                      • select volume X (X partition responsible for booting the system, hidden partition in fat32)


                      • assign letter w (to be able to recover the boot files)


                      • exit (exit diskpart)


                      • bcdboot X:Windows /s w: /f UEFI (X partition letter that contains the Windows folder)


                      • reeboot system (select the new boot option if more than one)


                      • msconfig (Boot - delete the Windows options and leave only the c:Windows option)



                      Hope this helps many of you!






                      share|improve this answer


























                        2












                        2








                        2







                        The solution that worked at first try for me:



                        Windows 10
                        Fix Error After Cloning HDD SSD - Error in file winload.efi




                        • With Windows 10 installation/recovery media open the command prompt in advanced tools


                        • Diskpart


                        • list volume (take note of boot partition volume and windows partition letter)


                        • select volume X (X partition responsible for booting the system, hidden partition in fat32)


                        • assign letter w (to be able to recover the boot files)


                        • exit (exit diskpart)


                        • bcdboot X:Windows /s w: /f UEFI (X partition letter that contains the Windows folder)


                        • reeboot system (select the new boot option if more than one)


                        • msconfig (Boot - delete the Windows options and leave only the c:Windows option)



                        Hope this helps many of you!






                        share|improve this answer













                        The solution that worked at first try for me:



                        Windows 10
                        Fix Error After Cloning HDD SSD - Error in file winload.efi




                        • With Windows 10 installation/recovery media open the command prompt in advanced tools


                        • Diskpart


                        • list volume (take note of boot partition volume and windows partition letter)


                        • select volume X (X partition responsible for booting the system, hidden partition in fat32)


                        • assign letter w (to be able to recover the boot files)


                        • exit (exit diskpart)


                        • bcdboot X:Windows /s w: /f UEFI (X partition letter that contains the Windows folder)


                        • reeboot system (select the new boot option if more than one)


                        • msconfig (Boot - delete the Windows options and leave only the c:Windows option)



                        Hope this helps many of you!







                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered Nov 14 '18 at 22:59









                        ZinomZinom

                        211




                        211























                            0














                            I think there is some problem with boot files or boot order.



                            The first thing you can do is disable fast startup by going to power options.



                            As fast startup uses a kind of hibernation techniques.



                            If it doesn't work perform an in-place upgrade without loosing your data. This will create new boot files and settings.






                            share|improve this answer
























                            • I have tried an in place upgrade, but I still see the same problem.

                              – psych
                              Jun 29 '16 at 15:44
















                            0














                            I think there is some problem with boot files or boot order.



                            The first thing you can do is disable fast startup by going to power options.



                            As fast startup uses a kind of hibernation techniques.



                            If it doesn't work perform an in-place upgrade without loosing your data. This will create new boot files and settings.






                            share|improve this answer
























                            • I have tried an in place upgrade, but I still see the same problem.

                              – psych
                              Jun 29 '16 at 15:44














                            0












                            0








                            0







                            I think there is some problem with boot files or boot order.



                            The first thing you can do is disable fast startup by going to power options.



                            As fast startup uses a kind of hibernation techniques.



                            If it doesn't work perform an in-place upgrade without loosing your data. This will create new boot files and settings.






                            share|improve this answer













                            I think there is some problem with boot files or boot order.



                            The first thing you can do is disable fast startup by going to power options.



                            As fast startup uses a kind of hibernation techniques.



                            If it doesn't work perform an in-place upgrade without loosing your data. This will create new boot files and settings.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Jun 29 '16 at 9:37









                            Rohit kumarRohit kumar

                            31918




                            31918













                            • I have tried an in place upgrade, but I still see the same problem.

                              – psych
                              Jun 29 '16 at 15:44



















                            • I have tried an in place upgrade, but I still see the same problem.

                              – psych
                              Jun 29 '16 at 15:44

















                            I have tried an in place upgrade, but I still see the same problem.

                            – psych
                            Jun 29 '16 at 15:44





                            I have tried an in place upgrade, but I still see the same problem.

                            – psych
                            Jun 29 '16 at 15:44











                            0














                            I struggle with similar problem with Windows 8.1.



                            When cloning from HDD to SSD, partitions serial and GUID kept intact.
                            But I not want to remove original HDD from system. So I needed to change GUID (in GPT for FAT EFI partition) and remove windows system partition from original HDD after cloning and before boot recovery.



                            When partition ID is non unique windows work strange, for example PE recovery unable to detect both HDD and SSD.






                            share|improve this answer
























                            • I don't believe this will help me. I am removing the old HDD from the system so it shouldn't be a problem.

                              – psych
                              Jun 29 '16 at 15:26
















                            0














                            I struggle with similar problem with Windows 8.1.



                            When cloning from HDD to SSD, partitions serial and GUID kept intact.
                            But I not want to remove original HDD from system. So I needed to change GUID (in GPT for FAT EFI partition) and remove windows system partition from original HDD after cloning and before boot recovery.



                            When partition ID is non unique windows work strange, for example PE recovery unable to detect both HDD and SSD.






                            share|improve this answer
























                            • I don't believe this will help me. I am removing the old HDD from the system so it shouldn't be a problem.

                              – psych
                              Jun 29 '16 at 15:26














                            0












                            0








                            0







                            I struggle with similar problem with Windows 8.1.



                            When cloning from HDD to SSD, partitions serial and GUID kept intact.
                            But I not want to remove original HDD from system. So I needed to change GUID (in GPT for FAT EFI partition) and remove windows system partition from original HDD after cloning and before boot recovery.



                            When partition ID is non unique windows work strange, for example PE recovery unable to detect both HDD and SSD.






                            share|improve this answer













                            I struggle with similar problem with Windows 8.1.



                            When cloning from HDD to SSD, partitions serial and GUID kept intact.
                            But I not want to remove original HDD from system. So I needed to change GUID (in GPT for FAT EFI partition) and remove windows system partition from original HDD after cloning and before boot recovery.



                            When partition ID is non unique windows work strange, for example PE recovery unable to detect both HDD and SSD.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Jun 29 '16 at 11:20









                            Mikhail MoskalevMikhail Moskalev

                            1,4871112




                            1,4871112













                            • I don't believe this will help me. I am removing the old HDD from the system so it shouldn't be a problem.

                              – psych
                              Jun 29 '16 at 15:26



















                            • I don't believe this will help me. I am removing the old HDD from the system so it shouldn't be a problem.

                              – psych
                              Jun 29 '16 at 15:26

















                            I don't believe this will help me. I am removing the old HDD from the system so it shouldn't be a problem.

                            – psych
                            Jun 29 '16 at 15:26





                            I don't believe this will help me. I am removing the old HDD from the system so it shouldn't be a problem.

                            – psych
                            Jun 29 '16 at 15:26











                            0














                            I had this same problem, just create windows installation usb drive from official site, boot up from installation usb, then go to troubleshooting, start CMD there and copy all files (and folders) that start with boot* and efi* from installation usb to root directory of cloned SSD drive, after doing that my cloned SSD was able to boot. Also check your boot settings in bios.






                            share|improve this answer




























                              0














                              I had this same problem, just create windows installation usb drive from official site, boot up from installation usb, then go to troubleshooting, start CMD there and copy all files (and folders) that start with boot* and efi* from installation usb to root directory of cloned SSD drive, after doing that my cloned SSD was able to boot. Also check your boot settings in bios.






                              share|improve this answer


























                                0












                                0








                                0







                                I had this same problem, just create windows installation usb drive from official site, boot up from installation usb, then go to troubleshooting, start CMD there and copy all files (and folders) that start with boot* and efi* from installation usb to root directory of cloned SSD drive, after doing that my cloned SSD was able to boot. Also check your boot settings in bios.






                                share|improve this answer













                                I had this same problem, just create windows installation usb drive from official site, boot up from installation usb, then go to troubleshooting, start CMD there and copy all files (and folders) that start with boot* and efi* from installation usb to root directory of cloned SSD drive, after doing that my cloned SSD was able to boot. Also check your boot settings in bios.







                                share|improve this answer












                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer










                                answered Dec 24 '16 at 11:53









                                user3749233user3749233

                                1




                                1























                                    0














                                    I ran into this same issue cloning my OS drive to a new SSD and was able to resolve it.

                                    I noticed I had two Windows Boot Manager listed that pointed to the original drive.

                                    1: I downloaded BootIce v1.3.4 by Pualy.

                                    2: I went to the UEFI tab>> Edit boot entries button

                                    3: There were two Windows Boot Manger listed in the listbox on the left, they both pointed to the same hard drive.

                                    4: I selected one of them and changed it to point to my new SSD>> Click Save current boot entry button.
                                    5: When I rebooted and went into the BIOS i was able to change the boot priority to the Windows Boot Manager of the new drive.

                                    Success! I am now typing this from the Windows 10 loaded from the new SSD.

                                    I plan on formatting the old one for secondary storage once I feel comfortable this is stable.






                                    share|improve this answer






























                                      0














                                      I ran into this same issue cloning my OS drive to a new SSD and was able to resolve it.

                                      I noticed I had two Windows Boot Manager listed that pointed to the original drive.

                                      1: I downloaded BootIce v1.3.4 by Pualy.

                                      2: I went to the UEFI tab>> Edit boot entries button

                                      3: There were two Windows Boot Manger listed in the listbox on the left, they both pointed to the same hard drive.

                                      4: I selected one of them and changed it to point to my new SSD>> Click Save current boot entry button.
                                      5: When I rebooted and went into the BIOS i was able to change the boot priority to the Windows Boot Manager of the new drive.

                                      Success! I am now typing this from the Windows 10 loaded from the new SSD.

                                      I plan on formatting the old one for secondary storage once I feel comfortable this is stable.






                                      share|improve this answer




























                                        0












                                        0








                                        0







                                        I ran into this same issue cloning my OS drive to a new SSD and was able to resolve it.

                                        I noticed I had two Windows Boot Manager listed that pointed to the original drive.

                                        1: I downloaded BootIce v1.3.4 by Pualy.

                                        2: I went to the UEFI tab>> Edit boot entries button

                                        3: There were two Windows Boot Manger listed in the listbox on the left, they both pointed to the same hard drive.

                                        4: I selected one of them and changed it to point to my new SSD>> Click Save current boot entry button.
                                        5: When I rebooted and went into the BIOS i was able to change the boot priority to the Windows Boot Manager of the new drive.

                                        Success! I am now typing this from the Windows 10 loaded from the new SSD.

                                        I plan on formatting the old one for secondary storage once I feel comfortable this is stable.






                                        share|improve this answer















                                        I ran into this same issue cloning my OS drive to a new SSD and was able to resolve it.

                                        I noticed I had two Windows Boot Manager listed that pointed to the original drive.

                                        1: I downloaded BootIce v1.3.4 by Pualy.

                                        2: I went to the UEFI tab>> Edit boot entries button

                                        3: There were two Windows Boot Manger listed in the listbox on the left, they both pointed to the same hard drive.

                                        4: I selected one of them and changed it to point to my new SSD>> Click Save current boot entry button.
                                        5: When I rebooted and went into the BIOS i was able to change the boot priority to the Windows Boot Manager of the new drive.

                                        Success! I am now typing this from the Windows 10 loaded from the new SSD.

                                        I plan on formatting the old one for secondary storage once I feel comfortable this is stable.







                                        share|improve this answer














                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer








                                        edited Nov 4 '17 at 0:19









                                        mic84

                                        2,29721817




                                        2,29721817










                                        answered Nov 3 '17 at 23:27









                                        PhilipPhilip

                                        1




                                        1























                                            0














                                            just met the same problem, actually a small mistake on 2nd clone of 2nd new laptop.



                                            1st laptop clone, connect alone and boot up ok, the default hard disk connect on 2nd boot and formatted without problem.



                                            But on 2nd laptop clone, connect newly clone SSD and original hard disk still with win10 in it, although choose boot with SSD, then wipe the hard disk OS, next time failed.



                                            Solution: use Macrium Reflect bootable disc, go to restore > fix Windows Boot problem, it auto fix the boot manager.
                                            Remind next time after clone, boot the cloned disk alone without original source disk, connect after 1st boot.






                                            share|improve this answer




























                                              0














                                              just met the same problem, actually a small mistake on 2nd clone of 2nd new laptop.



                                              1st laptop clone, connect alone and boot up ok, the default hard disk connect on 2nd boot and formatted without problem.



                                              But on 2nd laptop clone, connect newly clone SSD and original hard disk still with win10 in it, although choose boot with SSD, then wipe the hard disk OS, next time failed.



                                              Solution: use Macrium Reflect bootable disc, go to restore > fix Windows Boot problem, it auto fix the boot manager.
                                              Remind next time after clone, boot the cloned disk alone without original source disk, connect after 1st boot.






                                              share|improve this answer


























                                                0












                                                0








                                                0







                                                just met the same problem, actually a small mistake on 2nd clone of 2nd new laptop.



                                                1st laptop clone, connect alone and boot up ok, the default hard disk connect on 2nd boot and formatted without problem.



                                                But on 2nd laptop clone, connect newly clone SSD and original hard disk still with win10 in it, although choose boot with SSD, then wipe the hard disk OS, next time failed.



                                                Solution: use Macrium Reflect bootable disc, go to restore > fix Windows Boot problem, it auto fix the boot manager.
                                                Remind next time after clone, boot the cloned disk alone without original source disk, connect after 1st boot.






                                                share|improve this answer













                                                just met the same problem, actually a small mistake on 2nd clone of 2nd new laptop.



                                                1st laptop clone, connect alone and boot up ok, the default hard disk connect on 2nd boot and formatted without problem.



                                                But on 2nd laptop clone, connect newly clone SSD and original hard disk still with win10 in it, although choose boot with SSD, then wipe the hard disk OS, next time failed.



                                                Solution: use Macrium Reflect bootable disc, go to restore > fix Windows Boot problem, it auto fix the boot manager.
                                                Remind next time after clone, boot the cloned disk alone without original source disk, connect after 1st boot.







                                                share|improve this answer












                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer










                                                answered Dec 29 '18 at 5:27









                                                gl7gl7

                                                1




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