Nettet14. aug. 2012 · The safest approach to move your raid-array would be: 1) Connect one of the disks as a regular disk (no raid or anything) to the new system. In most cases, the disk should be readable. 2) Copy the data from this disk to a backup disk. 3) Install both raid-disks in the new system and create a new raid array. 4) Format the volume from the … Nettet15. jan. 2024 · If you are moving your RAID array along with the controller to another machine, most probably, everything will be fine. Make sure to number the drives and …
[SOLVED] Migrate Intel Rapid Storage RAID 1 to New Computer
Nettet24. jan. 2024 · If you want to reuse old RAID1 drives in new pc, then. copy data over network from old pc to new 2TB drive, remove raid drives from old pc and connect to new pc, set up raid 1 on old drives in new pc, copy data from 2TB drive to RAID1. OK, that's probably the most straight-forward way I suppose. Nettet7. jan. 2010 · 01-08-2010 11:51 AM. Yes, in the situation you described in the original post, moving the drives to another machine should work just fine. 3/Di to 3/Di should not be a problem - migrating to a different controller altogether - 3/Di to 3/DC or 3/Di to 4/Di, etc. will not work, as they are different manufacturers (for example, you could not ... clutches ibiza style
Moving NVMe RAID to new motherboard - Level1Techs Forums
Nettet12. jan. 2024 · If mobo raid, the bios would detect it on boot. If SW (windows) raid it would be detected after bios. Well ok, this is a SW raid, so it's possible to transfer to new machine. I suggest you keep the boot disk intact (no fresh install), if you wanna fresh install, do it with a different drive, just to make sure. Nettet3. jan. 2024 · I currently have a Gigabyte Designare X399 motherboard, and use 2 of the onboard M.2 slots for a NVMe RAID setup. The RAID was created in the BIOS using … Nettet15. jan. 2024 · 12-31-2024 07:40 PM. Go into BIOS on new board and enable RAID. Save config and power off. Connect drives, preferably to same SATA ports as on old board. Power on. Array (s) should be immediately supported; verify by doing CTRL-I during this power on and looking at drive status. caccf fees