How to clone a Win7 boot partition onto the SAME hard drive?











up vote
8
down vote

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I want to have two or even three clones of my operating system partition on the same hard drive. No I don't want the clones on different hard drives. I want three partitions on one hard drive, two of which are the clones of my current system partition.



I want to power up my computer, and see 3 "Win 7" operating systems to select to boot from.



No I don't want to install windows 7 three times and reinstall all my programs/settings for each install. I want to specifically clone my current partition, because I have already programs/configs over the past year.



I have "easy to do backup" (free software), but it seems it only allows me to restore my OS partition ("boot partition") onto another physical hard disk. There is no option to do what I want.



I have searched all over the internet, and nobody wants to do what I want. They only refer to cloning a OS/boot partition onto another physical hardisk.



Anyone have a solution?










share|improve this question




























    up vote
    8
    down vote

    favorite
    6












    I want to have two or even three clones of my operating system partition on the same hard drive. No I don't want the clones on different hard drives. I want three partitions on one hard drive, two of which are the clones of my current system partition.



    I want to power up my computer, and see 3 "Win 7" operating systems to select to boot from.



    No I don't want to install windows 7 three times and reinstall all my programs/settings for each install. I want to specifically clone my current partition, because I have already programs/configs over the past year.



    I have "easy to do backup" (free software), but it seems it only allows me to restore my OS partition ("boot partition") onto another physical hard disk. There is no option to do what I want.



    I have searched all over the internet, and nobody wants to do what I want. They only refer to cloning a OS/boot partition onto another physical hardisk.



    Anyone have a solution?










    share|improve this question


























      up vote
      8
      down vote

      favorite
      6









      up vote
      8
      down vote

      favorite
      6






      6





      I want to have two or even three clones of my operating system partition on the same hard drive. No I don't want the clones on different hard drives. I want three partitions on one hard drive, two of which are the clones of my current system partition.



      I want to power up my computer, and see 3 "Win 7" operating systems to select to boot from.



      No I don't want to install windows 7 three times and reinstall all my programs/settings for each install. I want to specifically clone my current partition, because I have already programs/configs over the past year.



      I have "easy to do backup" (free software), but it seems it only allows me to restore my OS partition ("boot partition") onto another physical hard disk. There is no option to do what I want.



      I have searched all over the internet, and nobody wants to do what I want. They only refer to cloning a OS/boot partition onto another physical hardisk.



      Anyone have a solution?










      share|improve this question















      I want to have two or even three clones of my operating system partition on the same hard drive. No I don't want the clones on different hard drives. I want three partitions on one hard drive, two of which are the clones of my current system partition.



      I want to power up my computer, and see 3 "Win 7" operating systems to select to boot from.



      No I don't want to install windows 7 three times and reinstall all my programs/settings for each install. I want to specifically clone my current partition, because I have already programs/configs over the past year.



      I have "easy to do backup" (free software), but it seems it only allows me to restore my OS partition ("boot partition") onto another physical hard disk. There is no option to do what I want.



      I have searched all over the internet, and nobody wants to do what I want. They only refer to cloning a OS/boot partition onto another physical hardisk.



      Anyone have a solution?







      windows boot backup partitioning restore






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Dec 16 '12 at 11:46

























      asked Dec 16 '12 at 11:21









      ms. mann

      1541314




      1541314






















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes

















          up vote
          4
          down vote













          As you said, this isn't a common request so I haven't tested the following method and it may or may not work:




          1. Install EaseUS Partition Master Home Edition


          2. Resize your Windows partition so you have 2x the unallocated space available (i.e. if the Windows partition is 60 GB, make sure you have 120 GB unallocated space)



          3. Copy the Windows partition twice, selecting it as the source and unallocated space as the destination:



            1
            2




          4. [This step may not be required] Boot from the Windows DVD and perform a Startup Repair on both cloned partitions (they should show up along with the main Windows partition in the OS selection screen):



            3
            4



          5. Install EasyBCD



          6. Add new boot menu entries for both cloned partitions:



            5



          7. Cross your fingers and toes, reboot, check the boot menu and try and boot each cloned partition



          Note 1: Partition Master cannot yet deal with cloning Windows installed on a GPT disk, so you will need to use something else to copy the partitions. It also requires unallocated space to copy to, so if you have existing partitions that you don't want to delete, search for alternatives. dd from a Linux LiveCD/USB might do the trick.



          Note 2: As mentioned above, I'm not entirely sure step #4 is required. You should try without it first; maybe cloning the partitions and adding new BCD entries will be enough.



          Note 3: Since I've only ever copied the system partition to a new disk to replace the old one (or back onto the old disk after a wipe), I'm not sure how cloned partitions on the same disk with different drive letters will behave.






          share|improve this answer

















          • 1




            Hey I want to thank you for your answer. I got it to work and it was extremely simple. The key step that I did not know about was how to add a boot entry. But your software easy BCD solve the problem. I'm currently typing this from my clone operating system.
            – ms. mann
            Dec 16 '12 at 20:50










          • All I had to do was cloned the partition onto some on allocated space, but I did it with the cloning software that I already had instead of the one you recommended., Which I'm sure would have worked as well. I did not need to use the windows repair, but instead just proceeded to add the operating system boot entry using the neo smart software that you recommended. I would upvote you but I don't have the reputation yet.
            – ms. mann
            Dec 16 '12 at 20:50












          • That's great, glad you got it to work. :) Just for the record, what did you use to clone the partition? If by "easy to do backup" you actually meant EaseUS Todo Backup, then I believe that has the exact same copy functionality as EaseUS Partition Master.
            – Karan
            Dec 16 '12 at 23:26












          • EaseUS Todo Backup is what I used
            – ms. mann
            Dec 17 '12 at 1:10






          • 3




            Ok this actually has many problems that I didn't notice at first so please don't do this guys. All programs are still directing to the original drive and it shows the C drive as still being active, even though I booted into the new cloned drive. In other words if I deleted my original drive, the new clone would stop working.
            – ms. mann
            Jan 9 '13 at 4:12




















          up vote
          4
          down vote













          Did the same: Clone OS to a unallocated partition on the same drive. With Minitool partition Wizard bootable CD -> Copy partition.
          But to avoid that the clone has the same disk mapping (C: stays C:) I deleted in the registry HKLMSYSTEMMountedDevices all Entries except (Default) before cloning. (It may also be done at the first start up of the clone if you cloned before deleting these entries, restart then immediately).
          This forces the operating system, when fired the first time after the deletion, to remap the drives where C: will be the current OS.



          Result on OS1 C: wil be the original C: en D: will be the new OS drive.
          On OS2 C: will be the cloned OS partition en D: will be the original OS. If D: is not mounted, you can do so in This Computer->Manage->Disk Management yourself.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 2




            that's brilliant! Wish i could upvote your answer a hundred times :)
            – benka
            Jan 29 '16 at 23:15


















          up vote
          0
          down vote













          @ms mann -- i really believe i've answered your question with my findings,

          if i've understood your quest correctly.



          because, i ran into the same problems as you wrote about in your final post --
          you found that even though you were BOOTING from the desired partition,
          it was actually your ORIGINAL install that was being booted --
          due to the identical nature of the various internal identifiers, reg. settings, etc.



          In any case, have a look at my solution post to my quest, here:



          How to run a 2nd boot instance of Windows 7 on another partition?



          Best!






          share|improve this answer























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            3 Answers
            3






            active

            oldest

            votes








            3 Answers
            3






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes








            up vote
            4
            down vote













            As you said, this isn't a common request so I haven't tested the following method and it may or may not work:




            1. Install EaseUS Partition Master Home Edition


            2. Resize your Windows partition so you have 2x the unallocated space available (i.e. if the Windows partition is 60 GB, make sure you have 120 GB unallocated space)



            3. Copy the Windows partition twice, selecting it as the source and unallocated space as the destination:



              1
              2




            4. [This step may not be required] Boot from the Windows DVD and perform a Startup Repair on both cloned partitions (they should show up along with the main Windows partition in the OS selection screen):



              3
              4



            5. Install EasyBCD



            6. Add new boot menu entries for both cloned partitions:



              5



            7. Cross your fingers and toes, reboot, check the boot menu and try and boot each cloned partition



            Note 1: Partition Master cannot yet deal with cloning Windows installed on a GPT disk, so you will need to use something else to copy the partitions. It also requires unallocated space to copy to, so if you have existing partitions that you don't want to delete, search for alternatives. dd from a Linux LiveCD/USB might do the trick.



            Note 2: As mentioned above, I'm not entirely sure step #4 is required. You should try without it first; maybe cloning the partitions and adding new BCD entries will be enough.



            Note 3: Since I've only ever copied the system partition to a new disk to replace the old one (or back onto the old disk after a wipe), I'm not sure how cloned partitions on the same disk with different drive letters will behave.






            share|improve this answer

















            • 1




              Hey I want to thank you for your answer. I got it to work and it was extremely simple. The key step that I did not know about was how to add a boot entry. But your software easy BCD solve the problem. I'm currently typing this from my clone operating system.
              – ms. mann
              Dec 16 '12 at 20:50










            • All I had to do was cloned the partition onto some on allocated space, but I did it with the cloning software that I already had instead of the one you recommended., Which I'm sure would have worked as well. I did not need to use the windows repair, but instead just proceeded to add the operating system boot entry using the neo smart software that you recommended. I would upvote you but I don't have the reputation yet.
              – ms. mann
              Dec 16 '12 at 20:50












            • That's great, glad you got it to work. :) Just for the record, what did you use to clone the partition? If by "easy to do backup" you actually meant EaseUS Todo Backup, then I believe that has the exact same copy functionality as EaseUS Partition Master.
              – Karan
              Dec 16 '12 at 23:26












            • EaseUS Todo Backup is what I used
              – ms. mann
              Dec 17 '12 at 1:10






            • 3




              Ok this actually has many problems that I didn't notice at first so please don't do this guys. All programs are still directing to the original drive and it shows the C drive as still being active, even though I booted into the new cloned drive. In other words if I deleted my original drive, the new clone would stop working.
              – ms. mann
              Jan 9 '13 at 4:12

















            up vote
            4
            down vote













            As you said, this isn't a common request so I haven't tested the following method and it may or may not work:




            1. Install EaseUS Partition Master Home Edition


            2. Resize your Windows partition so you have 2x the unallocated space available (i.e. if the Windows partition is 60 GB, make sure you have 120 GB unallocated space)



            3. Copy the Windows partition twice, selecting it as the source and unallocated space as the destination:



              1
              2




            4. [This step may not be required] Boot from the Windows DVD and perform a Startup Repair on both cloned partitions (they should show up along with the main Windows partition in the OS selection screen):



              3
              4



            5. Install EasyBCD



            6. Add new boot menu entries for both cloned partitions:



              5



            7. Cross your fingers and toes, reboot, check the boot menu and try and boot each cloned partition



            Note 1: Partition Master cannot yet deal with cloning Windows installed on a GPT disk, so you will need to use something else to copy the partitions. It also requires unallocated space to copy to, so if you have existing partitions that you don't want to delete, search for alternatives. dd from a Linux LiveCD/USB might do the trick.



            Note 2: As mentioned above, I'm not entirely sure step #4 is required. You should try without it first; maybe cloning the partitions and adding new BCD entries will be enough.



            Note 3: Since I've only ever copied the system partition to a new disk to replace the old one (or back onto the old disk after a wipe), I'm not sure how cloned partitions on the same disk with different drive letters will behave.






            share|improve this answer

















            • 1




              Hey I want to thank you for your answer. I got it to work and it was extremely simple. The key step that I did not know about was how to add a boot entry. But your software easy BCD solve the problem. I'm currently typing this from my clone operating system.
              – ms. mann
              Dec 16 '12 at 20:50










            • All I had to do was cloned the partition onto some on allocated space, but I did it with the cloning software that I already had instead of the one you recommended., Which I'm sure would have worked as well. I did not need to use the windows repair, but instead just proceeded to add the operating system boot entry using the neo smart software that you recommended. I would upvote you but I don't have the reputation yet.
              – ms. mann
              Dec 16 '12 at 20:50












            • That's great, glad you got it to work. :) Just for the record, what did you use to clone the partition? If by "easy to do backup" you actually meant EaseUS Todo Backup, then I believe that has the exact same copy functionality as EaseUS Partition Master.
              – Karan
              Dec 16 '12 at 23:26












            • EaseUS Todo Backup is what I used
              – ms. mann
              Dec 17 '12 at 1:10






            • 3




              Ok this actually has many problems that I didn't notice at first so please don't do this guys. All programs are still directing to the original drive and it shows the C drive as still being active, even though I booted into the new cloned drive. In other words if I deleted my original drive, the new clone would stop working.
              – ms. mann
              Jan 9 '13 at 4:12















            up vote
            4
            down vote










            up vote
            4
            down vote









            As you said, this isn't a common request so I haven't tested the following method and it may or may not work:




            1. Install EaseUS Partition Master Home Edition


            2. Resize your Windows partition so you have 2x the unallocated space available (i.e. if the Windows partition is 60 GB, make sure you have 120 GB unallocated space)



            3. Copy the Windows partition twice, selecting it as the source and unallocated space as the destination:



              1
              2




            4. [This step may not be required] Boot from the Windows DVD and perform a Startup Repair on both cloned partitions (they should show up along with the main Windows partition in the OS selection screen):



              3
              4



            5. Install EasyBCD



            6. Add new boot menu entries for both cloned partitions:



              5



            7. Cross your fingers and toes, reboot, check the boot menu and try and boot each cloned partition



            Note 1: Partition Master cannot yet deal with cloning Windows installed on a GPT disk, so you will need to use something else to copy the partitions. It also requires unallocated space to copy to, so if you have existing partitions that you don't want to delete, search for alternatives. dd from a Linux LiveCD/USB might do the trick.



            Note 2: As mentioned above, I'm not entirely sure step #4 is required. You should try without it first; maybe cloning the partitions and adding new BCD entries will be enough.



            Note 3: Since I've only ever copied the system partition to a new disk to replace the old one (or back onto the old disk after a wipe), I'm not sure how cloned partitions on the same disk with different drive letters will behave.






            share|improve this answer












            As you said, this isn't a common request so I haven't tested the following method and it may or may not work:




            1. Install EaseUS Partition Master Home Edition


            2. Resize your Windows partition so you have 2x the unallocated space available (i.e. if the Windows partition is 60 GB, make sure you have 120 GB unallocated space)



            3. Copy the Windows partition twice, selecting it as the source and unallocated space as the destination:



              1
              2




            4. [This step may not be required] Boot from the Windows DVD and perform a Startup Repair on both cloned partitions (they should show up along with the main Windows partition in the OS selection screen):



              3
              4



            5. Install EasyBCD



            6. Add new boot menu entries for both cloned partitions:



              5



            7. Cross your fingers and toes, reboot, check the boot menu and try and boot each cloned partition



            Note 1: Partition Master cannot yet deal with cloning Windows installed on a GPT disk, so you will need to use something else to copy the partitions. It also requires unallocated space to copy to, so if you have existing partitions that you don't want to delete, search for alternatives. dd from a Linux LiveCD/USB might do the trick.



            Note 2: As mentioned above, I'm not entirely sure step #4 is required. You should try without it first; maybe cloning the partitions and adding new BCD entries will be enough.



            Note 3: Since I've only ever copied the system partition to a new disk to replace the old one (or back onto the old disk after a wipe), I'm not sure how cloned partitions on the same disk with different drive letters will behave.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Dec 16 '12 at 15:38









            Karan

            48.8k1486157




            48.8k1486157








            • 1




              Hey I want to thank you for your answer. I got it to work and it was extremely simple. The key step that I did not know about was how to add a boot entry. But your software easy BCD solve the problem. I'm currently typing this from my clone operating system.
              – ms. mann
              Dec 16 '12 at 20:50










            • All I had to do was cloned the partition onto some on allocated space, but I did it with the cloning software that I already had instead of the one you recommended., Which I'm sure would have worked as well. I did not need to use the windows repair, but instead just proceeded to add the operating system boot entry using the neo smart software that you recommended. I would upvote you but I don't have the reputation yet.
              – ms. mann
              Dec 16 '12 at 20:50












            • That's great, glad you got it to work. :) Just for the record, what did you use to clone the partition? If by "easy to do backup" you actually meant EaseUS Todo Backup, then I believe that has the exact same copy functionality as EaseUS Partition Master.
              – Karan
              Dec 16 '12 at 23:26












            • EaseUS Todo Backup is what I used
              – ms. mann
              Dec 17 '12 at 1:10






            • 3




              Ok this actually has many problems that I didn't notice at first so please don't do this guys. All programs are still directing to the original drive and it shows the C drive as still being active, even though I booted into the new cloned drive. In other words if I deleted my original drive, the new clone would stop working.
              – ms. mann
              Jan 9 '13 at 4:12
















            • 1




              Hey I want to thank you for your answer. I got it to work and it was extremely simple. The key step that I did not know about was how to add a boot entry. But your software easy BCD solve the problem. I'm currently typing this from my clone operating system.
              – ms. mann
              Dec 16 '12 at 20:50










            • All I had to do was cloned the partition onto some on allocated space, but I did it with the cloning software that I already had instead of the one you recommended., Which I'm sure would have worked as well. I did not need to use the windows repair, but instead just proceeded to add the operating system boot entry using the neo smart software that you recommended. I would upvote you but I don't have the reputation yet.
              – ms. mann
              Dec 16 '12 at 20:50












            • That's great, glad you got it to work. :) Just for the record, what did you use to clone the partition? If by "easy to do backup" you actually meant EaseUS Todo Backup, then I believe that has the exact same copy functionality as EaseUS Partition Master.
              – Karan
              Dec 16 '12 at 23:26












            • EaseUS Todo Backup is what I used
              – ms. mann
              Dec 17 '12 at 1:10






            • 3




              Ok this actually has many problems that I didn't notice at first so please don't do this guys. All programs are still directing to the original drive and it shows the C drive as still being active, even though I booted into the new cloned drive. In other words if I deleted my original drive, the new clone would stop working.
              – ms. mann
              Jan 9 '13 at 4:12










            1




            1




            Hey I want to thank you for your answer. I got it to work and it was extremely simple. The key step that I did not know about was how to add a boot entry. But your software easy BCD solve the problem. I'm currently typing this from my clone operating system.
            – ms. mann
            Dec 16 '12 at 20:50




            Hey I want to thank you for your answer. I got it to work and it was extremely simple. The key step that I did not know about was how to add a boot entry. But your software easy BCD solve the problem. I'm currently typing this from my clone operating system.
            – ms. mann
            Dec 16 '12 at 20:50












            All I had to do was cloned the partition onto some on allocated space, but I did it with the cloning software that I already had instead of the one you recommended., Which I'm sure would have worked as well. I did not need to use the windows repair, but instead just proceeded to add the operating system boot entry using the neo smart software that you recommended. I would upvote you but I don't have the reputation yet.
            – ms. mann
            Dec 16 '12 at 20:50






            All I had to do was cloned the partition onto some on allocated space, but I did it with the cloning software that I already had instead of the one you recommended., Which I'm sure would have worked as well. I did not need to use the windows repair, but instead just proceeded to add the operating system boot entry using the neo smart software that you recommended. I would upvote you but I don't have the reputation yet.
            – ms. mann
            Dec 16 '12 at 20:50














            That's great, glad you got it to work. :) Just for the record, what did you use to clone the partition? If by "easy to do backup" you actually meant EaseUS Todo Backup, then I believe that has the exact same copy functionality as EaseUS Partition Master.
            – Karan
            Dec 16 '12 at 23:26






            That's great, glad you got it to work. :) Just for the record, what did you use to clone the partition? If by "easy to do backup" you actually meant EaseUS Todo Backup, then I believe that has the exact same copy functionality as EaseUS Partition Master.
            – Karan
            Dec 16 '12 at 23:26














            EaseUS Todo Backup is what I used
            – ms. mann
            Dec 17 '12 at 1:10




            EaseUS Todo Backup is what I used
            – ms. mann
            Dec 17 '12 at 1:10




            3




            3




            Ok this actually has many problems that I didn't notice at first so please don't do this guys. All programs are still directing to the original drive and it shows the C drive as still being active, even though I booted into the new cloned drive. In other words if I deleted my original drive, the new clone would stop working.
            – ms. mann
            Jan 9 '13 at 4:12






            Ok this actually has many problems that I didn't notice at first so please don't do this guys. All programs are still directing to the original drive and it shows the C drive as still being active, even though I booted into the new cloned drive. In other words if I deleted my original drive, the new clone would stop working.
            – ms. mann
            Jan 9 '13 at 4:12














            up vote
            4
            down vote













            Did the same: Clone OS to a unallocated partition on the same drive. With Minitool partition Wizard bootable CD -> Copy partition.
            But to avoid that the clone has the same disk mapping (C: stays C:) I deleted in the registry HKLMSYSTEMMountedDevices all Entries except (Default) before cloning. (It may also be done at the first start up of the clone if you cloned before deleting these entries, restart then immediately).
            This forces the operating system, when fired the first time after the deletion, to remap the drives where C: will be the current OS.



            Result on OS1 C: wil be the original C: en D: will be the new OS drive.
            On OS2 C: will be the cloned OS partition en D: will be the original OS. If D: is not mounted, you can do so in This Computer->Manage->Disk Management yourself.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 2




              that's brilliant! Wish i could upvote your answer a hundred times :)
              – benka
              Jan 29 '16 at 23:15















            up vote
            4
            down vote













            Did the same: Clone OS to a unallocated partition on the same drive. With Minitool partition Wizard bootable CD -> Copy partition.
            But to avoid that the clone has the same disk mapping (C: stays C:) I deleted in the registry HKLMSYSTEMMountedDevices all Entries except (Default) before cloning. (It may also be done at the first start up of the clone if you cloned before deleting these entries, restart then immediately).
            This forces the operating system, when fired the first time after the deletion, to remap the drives where C: will be the current OS.



            Result on OS1 C: wil be the original C: en D: will be the new OS drive.
            On OS2 C: will be the cloned OS partition en D: will be the original OS. If D: is not mounted, you can do so in This Computer->Manage->Disk Management yourself.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 2




              that's brilliant! Wish i could upvote your answer a hundred times :)
              – benka
              Jan 29 '16 at 23:15













            up vote
            4
            down vote










            up vote
            4
            down vote









            Did the same: Clone OS to a unallocated partition on the same drive. With Minitool partition Wizard bootable CD -> Copy partition.
            But to avoid that the clone has the same disk mapping (C: stays C:) I deleted in the registry HKLMSYSTEMMountedDevices all Entries except (Default) before cloning. (It may also be done at the first start up of the clone if you cloned before deleting these entries, restart then immediately).
            This forces the operating system, when fired the first time after the deletion, to remap the drives where C: will be the current OS.



            Result on OS1 C: wil be the original C: en D: will be the new OS drive.
            On OS2 C: will be the cloned OS partition en D: will be the original OS. If D: is not mounted, you can do so in This Computer->Manage->Disk Management yourself.






            share|improve this answer














            Did the same: Clone OS to a unallocated partition on the same drive. With Minitool partition Wizard bootable CD -> Copy partition.
            But to avoid that the clone has the same disk mapping (C: stays C:) I deleted in the registry HKLMSYSTEMMountedDevices all Entries except (Default) before cloning. (It may also be done at the first start up of the clone if you cloned before deleting these entries, restart then immediately).
            This forces the operating system, when fired the first time after the deletion, to remap the drives where C: will be the current OS.



            Result on OS1 C: wil be the original C: en D: will be the new OS drive.
            On OS2 C: will be the cloned OS partition en D: will be the original OS. If D: is not mounted, you can do so in This Computer->Manage->Disk Management yourself.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Jan 17 '16 at 21:12

























            answered Jan 17 '16 at 17:33









            Rappeti2

            412




            412








            • 2




              that's brilliant! Wish i could upvote your answer a hundred times :)
              – benka
              Jan 29 '16 at 23:15














            • 2




              that's brilliant! Wish i could upvote your answer a hundred times :)
              – benka
              Jan 29 '16 at 23:15








            2




            2




            that's brilliant! Wish i could upvote your answer a hundred times :)
            – benka
            Jan 29 '16 at 23:15




            that's brilliant! Wish i could upvote your answer a hundred times :)
            – benka
            Jan 29 '16 at 23:15










            up vote
            0
            down vote













            @ms mann -- i really believe i've answered your question with my findings,

            if i've understood your quest correctly.



            because, i ran into the same problems as you wrote about in your final post --
            you found that even though you were BOOTING from the desired partition,
            it was actually your ORIGINAL install that was being booted --
            due to the identical nature of the various internal identifiers, reg. settings, etc.



            In any case, have a look at my solution post to my quest, here:



            How to run a 2nd boot instance of Windows 7 on another partition?



            Best!






            share|improve this answer



























              up vote
              0
              down vote













              @ms mann -- i really believe i've answered your question with my findings,

              if i've understood your quest correctly.



              because, i ran into the same problems as you wrote about in your final post --
              you found that even though you were BOOTING from the desired partition,
              it was actually your ORIGINAL install that was being booted --
              due to the identical nature of the various internal identifiers, reg. settings, etc.



              In any case, have a look at my solution post to my quest, here:



              How to run a 2nd boot instance of Windows 7 on another partition?



              Best!






              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                0
                down vote










                up vote
                0
                down vote









                @ms mann -- i really believe i've answered your question with my findings,

                if i've understood your quest correctly.



                because, i ran into the same problems as you wrote about in your final post --
                you found that even though you were BOOTING from the desired partition,
                it was actually your ORIGINAL install that was being booted --
                due to the identical nature of the various internal identifiers, reg. settings, etc.



                In any case, have a look at my solution post to my quest, here:



                How to run a 2nd boot instance of Windows 7 on another partition?



                Best!






                share|improve this answer














                @ms mann -- i really believe i've answered your question with my findings,

                if i've understood your quest correctly.



                because, i ran into the same problems as you wrote about in your final post --
                you found that even though you were BOOTING from the desired partition,
                it was actually your ORIGINAL install that was being booted --
                due to the identical nature of the various internal identifiers, reg. settings, etc.



                In any case, have a look at my solution post to my quest, here:



                How to run a 2nd boot instance of Windows 7 on another partition?



                Best!







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Mar 20 '17 at 10:17









                Community

                1




                1










                answered Jun 23 '15 at 16:51









                newsome

                65




                65






























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