Thank you for that clarification, Rm30. I would like to help you with this.
1) Which motherboard mode Legacy-BIOS, UEFI-CSM, UEFI-nonCSM? 2) What PC brand, year, model #, desktop or laptop? 3) HDD, SSD 2.5", SSD M.2 SATA, SSD M.2 NVMe? 4) Hard Drive partition table MBR or GPT? 5) Aomei product tier Standard, Pro, Other? Version? 6) Windows version 10, 11, Home, Pro, Enterprise? 7) Please post a screenshot of your issue, and also of Diskpart > lis dis > sel dis # > lis par > lis vol > det dis Thank you.
Thank you for the info. I see you have attached a photo, that is good, but for people who do not like to download attachments to their PC, could you please post the photo as a photo, instead of attaching it, thank you.
Ok guys, I think I finally discovered the problem, the Windows 7 image file is using the letter G: as a source partition letter. The problem is that I can't find a way of changing that source letter to C:, I've looked everywhere within the AOMEI Backupper app and couldn't find a way to do so.
@Rm30, Did you use AOMEI Backupper to restore the win7 system backup? According to your screenshot, it seems that there are two systems on the disk. Win7 and Win10?How did you install the double system?
There are 3 systems on my SSD, Win7, Win10 and Win11. I'm using EasyBCD to boot them and AOMEI Backupper to backup and restore these systems. Both Win10 ad Win11 images use the letter C as a source, only Win7's image is using the letter G as a source for some reason.
To change the os letter you would need to first use sysprep generalize.
then boot into an different os ( or winpe ) and set the letter to whatever you want
@Rm30, What error situation did you get when you manually modified the drive letter to C via Windows Disk Management? In addition, if the disk is MBR, how did you boot Win11? Generally, windows 11 needs to run based on GPTdisk (UEFI mode).
Hi Admin, when I tried changing the Windows 7 partition from G to C the Disk Management basically said I couldn't do it because the G partition contained the system files.
I don't really know whether my SSD is MBR or not, how can I check that? All I know is that all 3 Windows versions boot fine from that ssd.
Comments
2) What PC brand, year, model #, desktop or laptop?
3) HDD, SSD 2.5", SSD M.2 SATA, SSD M.2 NVMe?
4) Hard Drive partition table MBR or GPT?
5) Aomei product tier Standard, Pro, Other? Version?
6) Windows version 10, 11, Home, Pro, Enterprise?
7) Please post a screenshot of your issue, and also of Diskpart > lis dis > sel dis # > lis par > lis vol > det dis
Thank you.
2)No brand
3)2 HDD, 1 SSD
4)MBR
5)Pro
6)Windows 7 Ultimate
7)
In addition, if the disk is MBR, how did you boot Win11? Generally, windows 11 needs to run based on GPTdisk (UEFI mode).
I don't really know whether my SSD is MBR or not, how can I check that? All I know is that all 3 Windows versions boot fine from that ssd.