Can I boot from a separate partition on my SSD?
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I have a failing 3.5" drive, which I want to try to investiage with SpinRite. SpinRite wants to be installed on bootable media, but I don't have a memory stick to hand. I've noticed via Windows Computer Management however, that my SSD has a spare unallocated 450MB. I can obviously create a new parition here, and put SpinRite in it.... but is it possible to tell my PC to boot from that partition?
I know in a BIOS there's options to pick which drive to boot from, but I feel I've never seen any option to tell it which partition to boot from?
boot bootable-media
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
I have a failing 3.5" drive, which I want to try to investiage with SpinRite. SpinRite wants to be installed on bootable media, but I don't have a memory stick to hand. I've noticed via Windows Computer Management however, that my SSD has a spare unallocated 450MB. I can obviously create a new parition here, and put SpinRite in it.... but is it possible to tell my PC to boot from that partition?
I know in a BIOS there's options to pick which drive to boot from, but I feel I've never seen any option to tell it which partition to boot from?
boot bootable-media
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
I have a failing 3.5" drive, which I want to try to investiage with SpinRite. SpinRite wants to be installed on bootable media, but I don't have a memory stick to hand. I've noticed via Windows Computer Management however, that my SSD has a spare unallocated 450MB. I can obviously create a new parition here, and put SpinRite in it.... but is it possible to tell my PC to boot from that partition?
I know in a BIOS there's options to pick which drive to boot from, but I feel I've never seen any option to tell it which partition to boot from?
boot bootable-media
I have a failing 3.5" drive, which I want to try to investiage with SpinRite. SpinRite wants to be installed on bootable media, but I don't have a memory stick to hand. I've noticed via Windows Computer Management however, that my SSD has a spare unallocated 450MB. I can obviously create a new parition here, and put SpinRite in it.... but is it possible to tell my PC to boot from that partition?
I know in a BIOS there's options to pick which drive to boot from, but I feel I've never seen any option to tell it which partition to boot from?
boot bootable-media
boot bootable-media
asked 2 hours ago
Codemonkey
2801313
2801313
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1 Answer
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up vote
3
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Some modern UEFI BIOSes might have the option to boot from specific partitions apart from drives, look for it on the "boot" section, there is usually a section called "boot override" that allows you to select where to boot from. Check if there are more than one partition per drive showing (apart from two entries, one for UEFI and another for MBR style), If so, you can very likely partition the unasigned space and force the PC to boot from that partition using the BIOS menu.
In general, you can't do that. Once you use a drive for boot, your computer starts on that disk's MBR, and boots whatever partition is selected. To be able to select from multiple partitions, a program to do that must be installed in that section of the drive. That program is called a bootloader. GRUB is probably the most common one (and very likely the one that the BIOS uses if its able to boot from concrete partitions), and it is widely used for dual booting systems. HOWEVER, although you can tecnically do that (partition available space, install grub on the MBR, so you are able to select between windows and SpinRite) I would say it is not advisable, It will be time consuming, and definitely overkill. Just buy the cheapest 8GB USB drive you can find on a local store, you will save yourself lots of headaches.
Not to mention that installing the tool on the HDD may make it unavailable to SpinRite, since the HDD is busy. Not to mention that it sounds like a terrible idea...
– Ismael Miguel
58 mins ago
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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oldest
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
3
down vote
Some modern UEFI BIOSes might have the option to boot from specific partitions apart from drives, look for it on the "boot" section, there is usually a section called "boot override" that allows you to select where to boot from. Check if there are more than one partition per drive showing (apart from two entries, one for UEFI and another for MBR style), If so, you can very likely partition the unasigned space and force the PC to boot from that partition using the BIOS menu.
In general, you can't do that. Once you use a drive for boot, your computer starts on that disk's MBR, and boots whatever partition is selected. To be able to select from multiple partitions, a program to do that must be installed in that section of the drive. That program is called a bootloader. GRUB is probably the most common one (and very likely the one that the BIOS uses if its able to boot from concrete partitions), and it is widely used for dual booting systems. HOWEVER, although you can tecnically do that (partition available space, install grub on the MBR, so you are able to select between windows and SpinRite) I would say it is not advisable, It will be time consuming, and definitely overkill. Just buy the cheapest 8GB USB drive you can find on a local store, you will save yourself lots of headaches.
Not to mention that installing the tool on the HDD may make it unavailable to SpinRite, since the HDD is busy. Not to mention that it sounds like a terrible idea...
– Ismael Miguel
58 mins ago
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
Some modern UEFI BIOSes might have the option to boot from specific partitions apart from drives, look for it on the "boot" section, there is usually a section called "boot override" that allows you to select where to boot from. Check if there are more than one partition per drive showing (apart from two entries, one for UEFI and another for MBR style), If so, you can very likely partition the unasigned space and force the PC to boot from that partition using the BIOS menu.
In general, you can't do that. Once you use a drive for boot, your computer starts on that disk's MBR, and boots whatever partition is selected. To be able to select from multiple partitions, a program to do that must be installed in that section of the drive. That program is called a bootloader. GRUB is probably the most common one (and very likely the one that the BIOS uses if its able to boot from concrete partitions), and it is widely used for dual booting systems. HOWEVER, although you can tecnically do that (partition available space, install grub on the MBR, so you are able to select between windows and SpinRite) I would say it is not advisable, It will be time consuming, and definitely overkill. Just buy the cheapest 8GB USB drive you can find on a local store, you will save yourself lots of headaches.
Not to mention that installing the tool on the HDD may make it unavailable to SpinRite, since the HDD is busy. Not to mention that it sounds like a terrible idea...
– Ismael Miguel
58 mins ago
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
Some modern UEFI BIOSes might have the option to boot from specific partitions apart from drives, look for it on the "boot" section, there is usually a section called "boot override" that allows you to select where to boot from. Check if there are more than one partition per drive showing (apart from two entries, one for UEFI and another for MBR style), If so, you can very likely partition the unasigned space and force the PC to boot from that partition using the BIOS menu.
In general, you can't do that. Once you use a drive for boot, your computer starts on that disk's MBR, and boots whatever partition is selected. To be able to select from multiple partitions, a program to do that must be installed in that section of the drive. That program is called a bootloader. GRUB is probably the most common one (and very likely the one that the BIOS uses if its able to boot from concrete partitions), and it is widely used for dual booting systems. HOWEVER, although you can tecnically do that (partition available space, install grub on the MBR, so you are able to select between windows and SpinRite) I would say it is not advisable, It will be time consuming, and definitely overkill. Just buy the cheapest 8GB USB drive you can find on a local store, you will save yourself lots of headaches.
Some modern UEFI BIOSes might have the option to boot from specific partitions apart from drives, look for it on the "boot" section, there is usually a section called "boot override" that allows you to select where to boot from. Check if there are more than one partition per drive showing (apart from two entries, one for UEFI and another for MBR style), If so, you can very likely partition the unasigned space and force the PC to boot from that partition using the BIOS menu.
In general, you can't do that. Once you use a drive for boot, your computer starts on that disk's MBR, and boots whatever partition is selected. To be able to select from multiple partitions, a program to do that must be installed in that section of the drive. That program is called a bootloader. GRUB is probably the most common one (and very likely the one that the BIOS uses if its able to boot from concrete partitions), and it is widely used for dual booting systems. HOWEVER, although you can tecnically do that (partition available space, install grub on the MBR, so you are able to select between windows and SpinRite) I would say it is not advisable, It will be time consuming, and definitely overkill. Just buy the cheapest 8GB USB drive you can find on a local store, you will save yourself lots of headaches.
answered 2 hours ago
Igb
1615
1615
Not to mention that installing the tool on the HDD may make it unavailable to SpinRite, since the HDD is busy. Not to mention that it sounds like a terrible idea...
– Ismael Miguel
58 mins ago
add a comment |
Not to mention that installing the tool on the HDD may make it unavailable to SpinRite, since the HDD is busy. Not to mention that it sounds like a terrible idea...
– Ismael Miguel
58 mins ago
Not to mention that installing the tool on the HDD may make it unavailable to SpinRite, since the HDD is busy. Not to mention that it sounds like a terrible idea...
– Ismael Miguel
58 mins ago
Not to mention that installing the tool on the HDD may make it unavailable to SpinRite, since the HDD is busy. Not to mention that it sounds like a terrible idea...
– Ismael Miguel
58 mins ago
add a comment |
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