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Vista - reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???

Reply
 
Old 03-26-2008   #1 (permalink)
pedmag2


 
 

reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???

I have Vista Ultima but my Motherboard was burn from electric problem I
going to install a new Motherboard, my hard drive and the other cards are OK
they was check and tested , Is any way that I can do this and don't have to
reformat the Hard Drive ?????? The new Motherboard is diferent then the old
one, because I can no found the same MotherBoard, The CPU is OK and I can use
for the new Motherboard

Please any Help Thanks


My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 03-26-2008   #2 (permalink)
Rick Rogers


 
 

Re: reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???

Hi,

Provided you have sufficient free space remaining on the drive, you don't
have to format. Setup will just move the old installation to a windows.old
folder where you can later retrieve your data. Programs will still need to
be reinstalled.

You may find that if the hardware is closely related, that you will not need
any reinstall. I would just try it first, before bothering to reinstall.

--
Best of Luck,

Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com

"pedmag2" <pedmag2@xxxxxx> wrote in message
news:30A7B13F-BE06-4D9B-85D0-E16E18D68192@xxxxxx
Quote:

>I have Vista Ultima but my Motherboard was burn from electric problem I
> going to install a new Motherboard, my hard drive and the other cards are
> OK
> they was check and tested , Is any way that I can do this and don't have
> to
> reformat the Hard Drive ?????? The new Motherboard is diferent then the
> old
> one, because I can no found the same MotherBoard, The CPU is OK and I can
> use
> for the new Motherboard
>
> Please any Help Thanks
>
My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 03-26-2008   #3 (permalink)
Noel


 
 

RE: reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???

You need to see if the chipsets are the same. If they are not then you are
better off with a clean install. Then load the new chipset drivers.
--
Quad Core


"pedmag2" wrote:
Quote:

> I have Vista Ultima but my Motherboard was burn from electric problem I
> going to install a new Motherboard, my hard drive and the other cards are OK
> they was check and tested , Is any way that I can do this and don't have to
> reformat the Hard Drive ?????? The new Motherboard is diferent then the old
> one, because I can no found the same MotherBoard, The CPU is OK and I can use
> for the new Motherboard
>
> Please any Help Thanks
>
My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 04-20-2008   #4 (permalink)
Grey


 
 

Re: reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???

It would be nice if that were true. I just went through a dying motherboard
replacement on my own machine and tried to put the same Vista Ultimate 64
installation with the new motherboard/CPU which were the only things
changed. It wont do it. You cannot repair install, so far as I can find,
since SP1 came out.

Please prove me wrong. I really would prefer to be wrong in this case!

----- Original Message -----
From: "Rick Rogers" <rick@xxxxxx>
Newsgroups: microsoft.public.windows.vista.installation_setup
Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2008 11:12 AM
Subject: Re: reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???

Quote:

> Hi,
>
> Provided you have sufficient free space remaining on the drive, you don't
> have to format. Setup will just move the old installation to a windows.old
> folder where you can later retrieve your data. Programs will still need to
> be reinstalled.
>
> You may find that if the hardware is closely related, that you will not
> need any reinstall. I would just try it first, before bothering to
> reinstall.
>
> --
> Best of Luck,
>
> Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
> http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
> Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
> My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
>
> "pedmag2" <pedmag2@xxxxxx> wrote in message
> news:30A7B13F-BE06-4D9B-85D0-E16E18D68192@xxxxxx
Quote:

>>I have Vista Ultima but my Motherboard was burn from electric problem I
>> going to install a new Motherboard, my hard drive and the other cards are
>> OK
>> they was check and tested , Is any way that I can do this and don't have
>> to
>> reformat the Hard Drive ?????? The new Motherboard is diferent then the
>> old
>> one, because I can no found the same MotherBoard, The CPU is OK and I can
>> use
>> for the new Motherboard
>>
>> Please any Help Thanks
>>
>
My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 04-20-2008   #5 (permalink)
Rick Rogers


 
 

Re: reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???

Hi Grey,

There is no "repair installation" option in Vista like with XP and previous
versions. It has naught to do with SP1. If the replacement motherboard and
processor are of similar build to the original, then there is a chance that
the original installation will boot on it. Otherwise, you are left with
creating a new installation. There is no requirement to format as part of
this process unless you are low on disk space (you'll need 15-20GB
available), so if you are stuck with that option then simply don't and
retrieve data from the original installation afterwards.

--
Best of Luck,

Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com

"Grey" <grey@xxxxxx> wrote in message
news:OyzvATsoIHA.1240@xxxxxx
Quote:

> It would be nice if that were true. I just went through a dying
> motherboard replacement on my own machine and tried to put the same Vista
> Ultimate 64 installation with the new motherboard/CPU which were the only
> things changed. It wont do it. You cannot repair install, so far as I can
> find, since SP1 came out.
>
> Please prove me wrong. I really would prefer to be wrong in this case!
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Rick Rogers" <rick@xxxxxx>
> Newsgroups: microsoft.public.windows.vista.installation_setup
> Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2008 11:12 AM
> Subject: Re: reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???
>
>
Quote:

>> Hi,
>>
>> Provided you have sufficient free space remaining on the drive, you don't
>> have to format. Setup will just move the old installation to a
>> windows.old folder where you can later retrieve your data. Programs will
>> still need to be reinstalled.
>>
>> You may find that if the hardware is closely related, that you will not
>> need any reinstall. I would just try it first, before bothering to
>> reinstall.
>>
>> --
>> Best of Luck,
>>
>> Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
>> http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
>> Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
>> My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
>>
>> "pedmag2" <pedmag2@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>> news:30A7B13F-BE06-4D9B-85D0-E16E18D68192@xxxxxx
Quote:

>>>I have Vista Ultima but my Motherboard was burn from electric problem I
>>> going to install a new Motherboard, my hard drive and the other cards
>>> are OK
>>> they was check and tested , Is any way that I can do this and don't have
>>> to
>>> reformat the Hard Drive ?????? The new Motherboard is diferent then the
>>> old
>>> one, because I can no found the same MotherBoard, The CPU is OK and I
>>> can use
>>> for the new Motherboard
>>>
>>> Please any Help Thanks
>>>
>>
>
My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 04-20-2008   #6 (permalink)
JW


 
 

Re: reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???

Here is one link that has several possible solutions:

http://www.windowvistarepair.com/

Also AFAIK if you run a Repair Installation from your Vista installation
disk it will rewrite the boot sector if required and make some other checks
but as Rick pointed out it is not the same type of repair installation that
you could do with XP.
I have read some links that stated that running the Vista System File
checker (SFC.EXE) will perform some of the same types of checks that the XP
installation repair does.

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/929833

"Rick Rogers" <rick@xxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%23ZmAOvuoIHA.4112@xxxxxx
Quote:

> Hi Grey,
>
> There is no "repair installation" option in Vista like with XP and
> previous versions. It has naught to do with SP1. If the replacement
> motherboard and processor are of similar build to the original, then there
> is a chance that the original installation will boot on it. Otherwise, you
> are left with creating a new installation. There is no requirement to
> format as part of this process unless you are low on disk space (you'll
> need 15-20GB available), so if you are stuck with that option then simply
> don't and retrieve data from the original installation afterwards.
>
> --
> Best of Luck,
>
> Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
> http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
> Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
> My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
>
> "Grey" <grey@xxxxxx> wrote in message
> news:OyzvATsoIHA.1240@xxxxxx
Quote:

>> It would be nice if that were true. I just went through a dying
>> motherboard replacement on my own machine and tried to put the same Vista
>> Ultimate 64 installation with the new motherboard/CPU which were the only
>> things changed. It wont do it. You cannot repair install, so far as I can
>> find, since SP1 came out.
>>
>> Please prove me wrong. I really would prefer to be wrong in this case!
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Rick Rogers" <rick@xxxxxx>
>> Newsgroups: microsoft.public.windows.vista.installation_setup
>> Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2008 11:12 AM
>> Subject: Re: reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???
>>
>>
Quote:

>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> Provided you have sufficient free space remaining on the drive, you
>>> don't have to format. Setup will just move the old installation to a
>>> windows.old folder where you can later retrieve your data. Programs will
>>> still need to be reinstalled.
>>>
>>> You may find that if the hardware is closely related, that you will not
>>> need any reinstall. I would just try it first, before bothering to
>>> reinstall.
>>>
>>> --
>>> Best of Luck,
>>>
>>> Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
>>> http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
>>> Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
>>> My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
>>>
>>> "pedmag2" <pedmag2@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>>> news:30A7B13F-BE06-4D9B-85D0-E16E18D68192@xxxxxx
>>>>I have Vista Ultima but my Motherboard was burn from electric problem I
>>>> going to install a new Motherboard, my hard drive and the other cards
>>>> are OK
>>>> they was check and tested , Is any way that I can do this and don't
>>>> have to
>>>> reformat the Hard Drive ?????? The new Motherboard is diferent then the
>>>> old
>>>> one, because I can no found the same MotherBoard, The CPU is OK and I
>>>> can use
>>>> for the new Motherboard
>>>>
>>>> Please any Help Thanks
>>>>
>>>
>>
>
My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 04-20-2008   #7 (permalink)
Grey


 
 

Re: reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???

Yeah I thought that WOULD be the case but how stupid is that?

Imagine you are the I.T. worker in a company where 20 new machines have been
delivered and you have to put the image done on Friday night for each
machine on that machine and have them ready to use by Monday so are working
over the weekend. You cant. You have to install Vista fresh then every
single program and all the other stuff each machine needs. Instead of taking
maybe an hour per machine, it is at least 2 with no real guarantee that you
haven't missed something as opposed to restoring an image to the new machine
which DOES guarantee you don't miss anything.

To put it another way, Vista makes any company's imaging software -
including the backup program from MS - useless excepting in the case that
the machinery is exactly the same.

MS must be trying to drive people away from Windows. No sane I.T. Manager
would put up with that rubbish!

"Rick Rogers" <rick@xxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%23ZmAOvuoIHA.4112@xxxxxx
Quote:

> Hi Grey,
>
> There is no "repair installation" option in Vista like with XP and
> previous versions. It has naught to do with SP1. If the replacement
> motherboard and processor are of similar build to the original, then there
> is a chance that the original installation will boot on it. Otherwise, you
> are left with creating a new installation. There is no requirement to
> format as part of this process unless you are low on disk space (you'll
> need 15-20GB available), so if you are stuck with that option then simply
> don't and retrieve data from the original installation afterwards.
>
> --
> Best of Luck,
>
> Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
> http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
> Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
> My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
>
> "Grey" <grey@xxxxxx> wrote in message
> news:OyzvATsoIHA.1240@xxxxxx
Quote:

>> It would be nice if that were true. I just went through a dying
>> motherboard replacement on my own machine and tried to put the same Vista
>> Ultimate 64 installation with the new motherboard/CPU which were the only
>> things changed. It wont do it. You cannot repair install, so far as I can
>> find, since SP1 came out.
>>
>> Please prove me wrong. I really would prefer to be wrong in this case!
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Rick Rogers" <rick@xxxxxx>
>> Newsgroups: microsoft.public.windows.vista.installation_setup
>> Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2008 11:12 AM
>> Subject: Re: reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???
>>
>>
Quote:

>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> Provided you have sufficient free space remaining on the drive, you
>>> don't have to format. Setup will just move the old installation to a
>>> windows.old folder where you can later retrieve your data. Programs will
>>> still need to be reinstalled.
>>>
>>> You may find that if the hardware is closely related, that you will not
>>> need any reinstall. I would just try it first, before bothering to
>>> reinstall.
>>>
>>> --
>>> Best of Luck,
>>>
>>> Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
>>> http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
>>> Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
>>> My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
>>>
>>> "pedmag2" <pedmag2@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>>> news:30A7B13F-BE06-4D9B-85D0-E16E18D68192@xxxxxx
>>>>I have Vista Ultima but my Motherboard was burn from electric problem I
>>>> going to install a new Motherboard, my hard drive and the other cards
>>>> are OK
>>>> they was check and tested , Is any way that I can do this and don't
>>>> have to
>>>> reformat the Hard Drive ?????? The new Motherboard is diferent then the
>>>> old
>>>> one, because I can no found the same MotherBoard, The CPU is OK and I
>>>> can use
>>>> for the new Motherboard
>>>>
>>>> Please any Help Thanks
>>>>
>>>
>>
>
My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 04-20-2008   #8 (permalink)
Grey


 
 

Re: reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???

Thanks for the links but nothing there changes the fact.

You can NOT move a Vista installation that was working with no problems from
one machine where, say, the motherboard died, to another machine with
different motherboard, CPU and ram. The only way you CAN possibly move that
installation is from the now dead machine to a machine with EXACTLY the same
hardware.

There is NO way you can survive with your current vista installation if the
hardware fails. The data may be intact but Vista wont operate with that
install on different hardware and there is no way around it.

"JW" <JW@xxxxxx> wrote in message
news:4C783C66-1FEC-4625-B69B-3EA63AEE6B00@xxxxxx
Quote:

> Here is one link that has several possible solutions:
>
> http://www.windowvistarepair.com/
>
> Also AFAIK if you run a Repair Installation from your Vista installation
> disk it will rewrite the boot sector if required and make some other
> checks but as Rick pointed out it is not the same type of repair
> installation that you could do with XP.
> I have read some links that stated that running the Vista System File
> checker (SFC.EXE) will perform some of the same types of checks that the
> XP installation repair does.
>
> http://support.microsoft.com/kb/929833
>
> "Rick Rogers" <rick@xxxxxx> wrote in message
> news:%23ZmAOvuoIHA.4112@xxxxxx
Quote:

>> Hi Grey,
>>
>> There is no "repair installation" option in Vista like with XP and
>> previous versions. It has naught to do with SP1. If the replacement
>> motherboard and processor are of similar build to the original, then
>> there is a chance that the original installation will boot on it.
>> Otherwise, you are left with creating a new installation. There is no
>> requirement to format as part of this process unless you are low on disk
>> space (you'll need 15-20GB available), so if you are stuck with that
>> option then simply don't and retrieve data from the original installation
>> afterwards.
>>
>> --
>> Best of Luck,
>>
>> Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
>> http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
>> Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
>> My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
>>
>> "Grey" <grey@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>> news:OyzvATsoIHA.1240@xxxxxx
Quote:

>>> It would be nice if that were true. I just went through a dying
>>> motherboard replacement on my own machine and tried to put the same
>>> Vista Ultimate 64 installation with the new motherboard/CPU which were
>>> the only things changed. It wont do it. You cannot repair install, so
>>> far as I can find, since SP1 came out.
>>>
>>> Please prove me wrong. I really would prefer to be wrong in this case!
>>>
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>> From: "Rick Rogers" <rick@xxxxxx>
>>> Newsgroups: microsoft.public.windows.vista.installation_setup
>>> Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2008 11:12 AM
>>> Subject: Re: reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???
>>>
>>>
>>>> Hi,
>>>>
>>>> Provided you have sufficient free space remaining on the drive, you
>>>> don't have to format. Setup will just move the old installation to a
>>>> windows.old folder where you can later retrieve your data. Programs
>>>> will still need to be reinstalled.
>>>>
>>>> You may find that if the hardware is closely related, that you will not
>>>> need any reinstall. I would just try it first, before bothering to
>>>> reinstall.
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Best of Luck,
>>>>
>>>> Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
>>>> http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
>>>> Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
>>>> My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
>>>>
>>>> "pedmag2" <pedmag2@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>>>> news:30A7B13F-BE06-4D9B-85D0-E16E18D68192@xxxxxx
>>>>>I have Vista Ultima but my Motherboard was burn from electric problem
>>>>>I
>>>>> going to install a new Motherboard, my hard drive and the other cards
>>>>> are OK
>>>>> they was check and tested , Is any way that I can do this and don't
>>>>> have to
>>>>> reformat the Hard Drive ?????? The new Motherboard is diferent then
>>>>> the old
>>>>> one, because I can no found the same MotherBoard, The CPU is OK and I
>>>>> can use
>>>>> for the new Motherboard
>>>>>
>>>>> Please any Help Thanks
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>
>
My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 04-20-2008   #9 (permalink)
JW


 
 

Re: reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???

It worked for me without any problem.
The MOBO on my Vista SP1 system failed and I replaced the MOBO and the CPU
with completely different models from a different manufacturer and it booted
up the first time without having done anything else to the original HDD
installation. It even automatically activated over the internet without
having to do phone activation.

"Grey" <grey@xxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%237x28jyoIHA.420@xxxxxx
Quote:

> Thanks for the links but nothing there changes the fact.
>
> You can NOT move a Vista installation that was working with no problems
> from one machine where, say, the motherboard died, to another machine with
> different motherboard, CPU and ram. The only way you CAN possibly move
> that installation is from the now dead machine to a machine with EXACTLY
> the same hardware.
>
> There is NO way you can survive with your current vista installation if
> the hardware fails. The data may be intact but Vista wont operate with
> that install on different hardware and there is no way around it.
>
> "JW" <JW@xxxxxx> wrote in message
> news:4C783C66-1FEC-4625-B69B-3EA63AEE6B00@xxxxxx
Quote:

>> Here is one link that has several possible solutions:
>>
>> http://www.windowvistarepair.com/
>>
>> Also AFAIK if you run a Repair Installation from your Vista installation
>> disk it will rewrite the boot sector if required and make some other
>> checks but as Rick pointed out it is not the same type of repair
>> installation that you could do with XP.
>> I have read some links that stated that running the Vista System File
>> checker (SFC.EXE) will perform some of the same types of checks that the
>> XP installation repair does.
>>
>> http://support.microsoft.com/kb/929833
>>
>> "Rick Rogers" <rick@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>> news:%23ZmAOvuoIHA.4112@xxxxxx
Quote:

>>> Hi Grey,
>>>
>>> There is no "repair installation" option in Vista like with XP and
>>> previous versions. It has naught to do with SP1. If the replacement
>>> motherboard and processor are of similar build to the original, then
>>> there is a chance that the original installation will boot on it.
>>> Otherwise, you are left with creating a new installation. There is no
>>> requirement to format as part of this process unless you are low on disk
>>> space (you'll need 15-20GB available), so if you are stuck with that
>>> option then simply don't and retrieve data from the original
>>> installation afterwards.
>>>
>>> --
>>> Best of Luck,
>>>
>>> Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
>>> http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
>>> Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
>>> My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
>>>
>>> "Grey" <grey@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>>> news:OyzvATsoIHA.1240@xxxxxx
>>>> It would be nice if that were true. I just went through a dying
>>>> motherboard replacement on my own machine and tried to put the same
>>>> Vista Ultimate 64 installation with the new motherboard/CPU which were
>>>> the only things changed. It wont do it. You cannot repair install, so
>>>> far as I can find, since SP1 came out.
>>>>
>>>> Please prove me wrong. I really would prefer to be wrong in this case!
>>>>
>>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>>> From: "Rick Rogers" <rick@xxxxxx>
>>>> Newsgroups: microsoft.public.windows.vista.installation_setup
>>>> Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2008 11:12 AM
>>>> Subject: Re: reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>
>>>>> Provided you have sufficient free space remaining on the drive, you
>>>>> don't have to format. Setup will just move the old installation to a
>>>>> windows.old folder where you can later retrieve your data. Programs
>>>>> will still need to be reinstalled.
>>>>>
>>>>> You may find that if the hardware is closely related, that you will
>>>>> not need any reinstall. I would just try it first, before bothering to
>>>>> reinstall.
>>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> Best of Luck,
>>>>>
>>>>> Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
>>>>> http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
>>>>> Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
>>>>> My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
>>>>>
>>>>> "pedmag2" <pedmag2@xxxxxx> wrote in message
>>>>> news:30A7B13F-BE06-4D9B-85D0-E16E18D68192@xxxxxx
>>>>>>I have Vista Ultima but my Motherboard was burn from electric problem
>>>>>>I
>>>>>> going to install a new Motherboard, my hard drive and the other cards
>>>>>> are OK
>>>>>> they was check and tested , Is any way that I can do this and don't
>>>>>> have to
>>>>>> reformat the Hard Drive ?????? The new Motherboard is diferent then
>>>>>> the old
>>>>>> one, because I can no found the same MotherBoard, The CPU is OK and I
>>>>>> can use
>>>>>> for the new Motherboard
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Please any Help Thanks
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>
>
My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 04-20-2008   #10 (permalink)
Donald L McDaniel


 
 

Re: reinstall Vista on a new Motherboard ???

On Sun, 20 Apr 2008 08:37:13 -0700, "JW" <JW@xxxxxx> wrote:
Quote:

>Here is one link that has several possible solutions:
>
>http://www.windowvistarepair.com/
>
>Also AFAIK if you run a Repair Installation from your Vista installation
>disk it will rewrite the boot sector if required and make some other checks
>but as Rick pointed out it is not the same type of repair installation that
>you could do with XP.
>I have read some links that stated that running the Vista System File
>checker (SFC.EXE) will perform some of the same types of checks that the XP
>installation repair does.
Great!!! NOW all the OP needs is a way to BOOT his machine to be able
to use the System File Checker.

IF he is not able to boot the machine with his new Motherboard/CPU, he
will need to do a CLEAN INSTALLATION.

XP allowed one to just do an inplace upgrade (i.e., "repair
installation"). This is not possible with Vista, sadly.

Hopefully, he will have already backed up his data on an external
drive.


Donald L McDaniel
Please reply to the correct thread and article.
================================================
My System SpecsSystem Spec
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