HOW TO INSTALL A SECOND INTERNAL HARD DRIVE ON YOUR WINDOWS 10 DEVICE - sokoletu
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HOW TO INSTALL A SECOND INTERNAL HARD DRIVE ON YOUR WINDOWS 10 DEVICE

HOW TO INSTALL A SECOND INTERNAL HARD DRIVE ON YOUR WINDOWS 10 DEVICE

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1.Turn off your PC. Crack open the case, put in the new hard drive, attach the cables, and secure the drive, probably with screws. Close the case. Turn on the power, and log in to Windows.
If you need help, the manufacturer’s website has instructions. Adding the physical drive inside the computer case is really very simple — even if you’ve never seen the inside of your computer — as long as you’re careful to get a drive that will hook up with the connectors inside your machine. For example, you can attach an IDE drive to only an IDE connector; ditto for SATA.

2.Right-click in the lower-left corner of the screen, and choose Disk Management.
The Disk Management dialog box appears.


Windows10 internal hard drive
Add the new internal hard drive to your Windows 10compputer here.

3.Scroll down the list, and find your new drive, probably marked Unallocated.
The new drive is identified as Disk 0.

4.On the right, in the Unallocated area, tap and hold down or right-click, and choose New Simple Volume.
The New Simple Volume Wizard appears.


The wizard takes you through all the steps.

5.Tap or click Next.
You’re asked to specify a volume size.

6.Leave the numbers just as they are — you want to use the whole drive — and tap or click Next.
The wizard asks you to specify a drive letter. D: is most common, unless you already have a D: drive.

7.If you really, really want to give the drive a different letter, go ahead and do so (most people should leave it at D:). Tap or click Next.
The wizard wants to know whether you want to use something other than the NTFS file system, or to set a different allocation unit. You don’t.

8.Tap or click Next; then tap or click Finish.
Windows whirs and clunks, and when it’s finished, you have a spanking new drive, ready to be used.

If you have three or more drives in or attached to your PC, consider setting up Storage Spaces. It’s a remarkable piece of technology that’ll keep redundant copies of all your data and protect you from catastrophic failure of any of your data drives.

CHANGING YOUR WINDOWS 10 C: DRIVE
Whoa nelly! If you’ve never seen a Windows 10 PC running an SSD (solid-state drive) as the system drive, you better nail down the door and shore up the, uh, windows. Changing your C: drive from a run-of-the-mill rotating platter to a fast, shiny new solid-state drive can make everything work so much faster. Really.

Unfortunately, getting from an HDD (hard disk drive) C: to an SSD C: ain’t exactly 1-2-3.

Part of the problem is the mechanics of transferring your Windows 10 system from an HDD to an SSD: You need to create a copy (not exactly a clone) that’ll boot Windows. Part of the problem is moving all the extra junk off the C: drive, so the SSD isn’t swamped with all the flotsam and jetsam you’ve come to know and love in Windows.

Most of the drive cloning/backup/restore techniques developed over the past decade work when you want to move from a smaller drive to a bigger one. However, replacing your HDD C: drive with an SSD C: drive almost always involves going from a larger drive to a smaller one.

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