March 6, 20215 yr I really want to give MSFS a go but I can't until I get my Windows updated. I have a $2,700 PC loaded pretty good and do not want to buy another PC, I can't afford it. I am totally familiar with the ability to upgrade from Win7 pro to Win10 pro, I have tried it twice. Both times it failed. Meaning I could go through the process but due to some sorts of errors I get well known and posted problems. One, the launch to black screen. For which I found five possible solutions, which I tried all five and all failed to fix this issues. Two, I can launch in safe mode but I get greyed out menus making it impossible to work with the OS. I have tried about five ways to install the MS downloader, reassign boot order and launch but all fail. I also have tried to do a dual boot system following video tutorials online which I was also not able to get to work. All I want it a Win10 OS installed on my PC. How do I get one? Can one buy an HD with Win10 installed and license activated and plug into a PC currently with WIn7? Any ideas or suggestions that allow me to retain my current PC? Bryan Bryan Wallis aka "fltsimguy" Maple Bay, British Columbia Near CAM3
March 6, 20215 yr I would suggest a clean install of Windows 10, https://www.howtogeek.com/224342/how-to-clean-install-windows-10/ Jude BradleyBeech Baron: Uh, Tower, verify you want me to taxi in front of the 747?ATC: Yeah, it's OK. He's not hungry. X-Plane 12 and MSFS2020 🙂 System specs: Windows 11 Pro 64-bit, Ubuntu Linux 20.04 i7-13700KF Gigabyte Z790 RTX-4060-Ti , 32GB RAM 1X 2TB M2 for X-Plane 12, 1x256GB SSD for OS. 1TB drive MSFS2020
March 6, 20215 yr Author 1 hour ago, Jude Bradley said: I would suggest a clean install of Windows 10, https://www.howtogeek.com/224342/how-to-clean-install-windows-10/ OK this is interesting, I didn't think the selection of ..for another PC applied. I will read this through thoroughly. Basically I have used the approach but always selected "upgrade this PC" option and gone from there. I want to retain my C drive personal files, settings if possible, if not well I'll just reinstall everything and upgrade. Bryan Wallis aka "fltsimguy" Maple Bay, British Columbia Near CAM3
March 6, 20215 yr I've done this a number of times. I backup the important stuff from the c drive to a external storage drive, then do a clean install and restore your info. You might think about using a cloud based backup service such as "Backblaze" before you make the move. Then you have two choices for the re-install. Jim Driskell James M Driskell, Maj USMC (Ret)
March 6, 20215 yr Author 12 minutes ago, jmdriskell said: I've done this a number of times. I backup the important stuff from the c drive to a external storage drive, then do a clean install and restore your info. You might think about using a cloud based backup service such as "Backblaze" before you make the move. Then you have two choices for the re-install. Jim Driskell Thanks you guys and @jmdriskell, this actually gives me "strength" to give it a go, again! Yes I have plenty of HD space to backup my C drive. Bryan Wallis aka "fltsimguy" Maple Bay, British Columbia Near CAM3
March 6, 20215 yr I don't know how often you will need to return to windows 7 or whether you just want it as a backup. What I have done with some of the win 7 computers in my house is remove the working win 7 SSD and put in a new SSD for win10. That way I could always put the win 7 drive back in and be up and running if I needed to. After I had win 10, all my other software, and data installed and working on the new drive I still kept my win 7 drive as another backup. The last time I checked SSDs were still reasonably priced and available. Ted [email protected] ghz, Noctua C12P CPU air cooler, Asus Z77, 2 x 4gb DDR3 Corsair 2200 mhz cl 9, EVGA 1080ti, Sony 55" 900E TV 3840 x 2160, Windows 7-64, FSX, P3dv3, P3dv4
March 6, 20215 yr Author 42 minutes ago, Ted Striker said: I don't know how often you will need to return to windows 7 or whether you just want it as a backup. What I have done with some of the win 7 computers in my house is remove the working win 7 SSD and put in a new SSD for win10. That way I could always put the win 7 drive back in and be up and running if I needed to. After I had win 10, all my other software, and data installed and working on the new drive I still kept my win 7 drive as another backup. The last time I checked SSDs were still reasonably priced and available. Ted This is exactly where I want to be. Bryan Wallis aka "fltsimguy" Maple Bay, British Columbia Near CAM3
March 10, 20215 yr I had similar problems couldn’t get w10 installed on my c dive. Turn out I had a very small partition where I think some w7 os was placed. Had to enlarge the partition and then the W10 installation went on ok. Recently changed the c drive for a 1 tb , bought a usb/ sata cable for the old c drive and use it as additional storage.
December 10, 20214 yr You could install a fresh drive, SSD or a HD and do a fresh install of Win 10 on it. Keep your old HD (Win 7) installed and just change the boot order in the BIOS screen when you want to go back and use the old drive/software. When you are done, you just reboot and use the BIOS to use the new drive again. Ive done this successfully many times over the years. Just takes a few moments to switch.
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