

Q4: Is Disk Management the best tool to create a partition for this space? 4.

After cloning, roughly 700 GB unallocated space will remain. Create new partition on new drive's unallocated space. Q3: Is this the best way to test that the new drive boots, or should I uncheck old drive in UEFI? 3. Perform clone Q2: Should I leave the drive letter in the Layout section of the cloning tool as “Auto”? 2. Question 1: Should I clean new drive with diskpart before proceeding with clone or will erasing partition in the Reflect cloning tool achieve the same end? Clone Operation Steps 1. Consequently, I have a 16MB unformatted primary partition on my new drive (as seen in Reflect) which I assume should be removed. Drive Installation I may have started off on the wrong foot by initializing the new drive in Disk Management (as GPT) rather than letting Reflect do its magic. Old Drive: Repurpose as one data partition. Target “new” NVMe SSD: Samsung 980 1 TB UEFI: SATA mode is RAID Reflect 8 End State Goals New Drive: 250 GB for system drive C:, remainder as a data partition. The many threads here with the illustrious advice of have helped greatly however, I still have some rookie questions, and would appreciate any suggestions. I’m a cloning/disk management virgin preparing to clone SATA SSD to NVME.
