I would make a Disk Image of your working drive off to a backup storage drive or device and then REMOVE your WORKING OS Drive, Boot with a MReflect Recovery Disc and recover your image to the new NVMe drive. This is what I posted earlier and it may not have been seen by you… Hope this helps you… Remember, Test, Test, Test… Once you are used to Macrium Reflect, I believe you will be very happy. If something goes wrong, your good boot drive is safely out of your system. This recovery method PHYSICALLY REMOVES your existing OS Drive from harm during the recovery process. I created both a DVD and a Thumb Drive recovery device to make sure one or the other would boot from my computer. Make sure your computer will boot from this disc. Remember, you have to install Macrium Reflect on your working OS drive to create the image and to create the VERY IMPORTANT Recovery Disc. I would make a Disk Image of your working drive off to a backup storage drive or device and then REMOVE your WORKING OS Drive, Boot with a MReflect Recovery Drive and Recover your image to the new NVMe drive. I remember having to activate the NVMe access in BIOS before my motherboard would see the drive.īut think about this… I DO NOT recommend CLONING. I do not believe it would be necessary, however, if MReflect has difficulty seeing the NVMe drive, you may have to create a NTFS partition on the drive while still in windows.
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