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Does a cloned drive have the same drive letter as the original?

I have a 250GB SSD boot drive and a 1TB SSD, both of which are NVME. I'm buying another 2TB NVME and I don't know how clone drives so I'm planning to ask the store to clone the contents of the 1TB drive to the 2TB drive, then the 250GB drive to the 1TB SSD and use it as the new boot drive. I'll use the 250GB SSD as an external drive. Since I'm replacing the drives, I'm not sure if cloning the drives will also clone the drive letters. If it doesn't, do I need to bring my PC to the store to change them, or can I just remove the drives and bring them to the store? Once the cloning process is done, can I take them home and expect them to work without further configuration?"

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  • No, it shouldn't have the same the drive letter. It's sort of similar to how your computer assigns a new drive letter to each USB drive you plug in. Drive letters aren't permanent and are based on the order they're plugged in (except C, which is usually your operating system).

    Cloning is extremely easy to do on your own by the way. You can use something like Macrium Reflect Free Edition. Then you just open the program, click on the drive you want to copy, then click on the drive where you want the data to go. Just like if you were uploading files to google drive or something. Cloning just copies all of the files, drivers, operating system, other data, etc. It doesn't literally "clone" the drive (like the drive letter). Let me know if you have any questions, I'd be happy to help :)

  • If you clone a drive, remove the old one and attach the new one, yes it will have the same drive letter and Windows shouldn't notice the difference.

    Really best do it yourself. In fact, most drive manufacturers have tools just for that, if you don't feel like searching for 3rd party tools.

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