Possible to move a Win 11 boot disk to another PC?
Background: When I built my newest PC, I made a clone of the Win10 boot disk from my previous PC. I went from Intel and Nvidia to all AMD. The boot drive worked. Windows saw new hardware and downloaded new drivers and everything worked well. All my games and programs ran fine. I was impressed. Then I did make a fresh install of Win10 onto a blank drive.

I am trying the same experiment with Win11. I installed Win11 to a blank drive. It is a WD drive so I used the WD Acronis to clone that drive to another one. I selected clone for use in another PC. But when I try to boot from that disk (on another PC or on this PC) I get a message to attach a USB drive with a Bitlocker key. Must be something with the secure boot that Win11 has.

Is it possible to move a Win11 boot drive to a new PC at all?

The instructions I see about making a USB Bitlocker key look like they will encrypt my drive first. I don't want that. Can I make the USB Bitlocker key the boot is asking for?

I did not try cloning the drive with the option to use on this PC yet. I am not sure that will work with Win11 but I will try later.

Anyone know WTF I am talking about? :)
最后由 Out Of Bubblegum 编辑于; 11 月 14 日 上午 8:04
引用自 smallcat:
to do what you intend , first must disable Bitlocker and then clone the SSD
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smallcat 11 月 14 日 上午 8:16 
to do what you intend , first must disable Bitlocker and then clone the SSD
引用自 smallcat
to do what you intend , first must disable Bitlocker and then clone the SSD

Ah. That makes sense. I will try that. Thanks :)

Is there a way to say to not use Bitlocker when installing Win11?
smallcat 11 月 14 日 上午 8:25 
in your case ,you must disable it in the Win 11 options
HeyYou 11 月 14 日 上午 9:49 
Yep, win 11 pro comes with bitlocker on by default. Home theoretically doesn't have bitlocker.... but, I have seen some encrypted drives with 11 home.... Turn if it, and when the drive is finished decrypting, all the bitlocker options disappear..... That was kinda strange...
Out Of Bubblegum 11 月 14 日 上午 10:33 
YES! That worked. But my log-in pin is now invalid on that other PC. I have to go through some steps to set up a new pin.

The big win is that it does boot onto an old PC that is not Win11 compliant. Which is what I want. I hope it will fully boot and be usable.
Mabi 11 月 17 日 上午 3:50 
Hem... Is a big, NO

I found even worse, don't use w11
最后由 Mabi 编辑于; 11 月 17 日 上午 3:52
Mabi 11 月 21 日 上午 11:22 
There are other things that block or make things interesting.

Win 11 is basically "a virus," so to stay safe, some people are experimenting with antivirus software to improve its security. By default, the system struggles to update itself, but throw an antivirus into the mix and things get complicated.

There's a strange idea about Win 11. Using it for gaming,

Ommamma!

So, anti-cheats are implemented at the request of (?) (I haven't seen any surveys of players making an explicit request.). These anti-cheats permanently affect and modify the Win 11 kernel. From there on, the security level is lost, and unpleasantly worse things can happen.


Transferring a virus from one PC to another is not the best thing to attempt in any case.
最后由 Mabi 编辑于; 11 月 21 日 上午 11:23
Mabi 11 月 21 日 上午 11:39 
Why expose yourself to threats using Windows 10?

You want to play games that can't run on Linux, blocked by developers or for kernel security reasons.

Win 10 no longer undergoes heavy updates, in theory. So, ironically, it becomes more stable and more likely to boot.

You've probably installed Windows with just games, and your important data is on a main Linux operating system.
you might need to disable bitlocker if that is active. the biggest issue is your product key. when you move it over, windows reverts to trial mode. then you have to reactivate it. another issue is that windows needs to install all chipset drivers. that is only time consuming however.
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