My cousin brought me her sickly PC. Socket FM2, a pair of conventional hard drives, 16 gigs of DDR3, a GTX 650 Ti. Painfully slo […]
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My cousin brought me her sickly PC. Socket FM2, a pair of conventional hard drives, 16 gigs of DDR3, a GTX 650 Ti. Painfully slow, and it would sometimes spontaneously reboot. I scrounged up a 240 gig SSD, unplugged the existing drives, removed the video card, and installed Win 10 to see how it did. With the A10 6800's graphics the computer was stable with a fresh install of 10. I began looking into upgrading it to Win 11, but there was a hitch. When installing 10 I used the optical drive, but it wouldn't boot to the optical drive when set to UEFI, but only when set to Legacy/UEFI; you cannot upgrade to Win 11 when set this way, the drive has to be formatted in GPT. So I had to reinstall Win 10, but it had to be from a USB drive since this motherboard wouldn't boot from an optical drive in UEFI mode.
I reinstalled Win 10, then upgraded to Win 11, and everything was working fine. I then plugged back in the two conventional drives. One had the old Win 10 installation on about a one terabyte partition, and the other drive was a one terabyte drive that wasn't accessible and needed to be formatted. I contacted my cousin and asked her if there had been any issues with this drive that she knew of, and it soon became clear that she had no idea her computer had two hard drives. She was only worried about files from her Desktop and My Documents on the main drive. I formatted the one terabyte drive, and it then seemed fine.
I ran CrystalDiskInfo and was surprised to see the the main drive that I had assumed was a one terabyte (since that's all that was visible in This PC) was actually a three terabyte drive! I was puzzled at why it had been set up this way, then I realized that they had used an optical drive to install Windows, it wouldn't boot from that drive in UEFI mode, and Legacy mode couldn't properly handle a drive this size. This also explained why she was complaining that the computer wouldn't boot if her two terabyte external drive was plugged in.
I saved all relevant files from this drive to the now formatted and healthy one terabyte drive, and finally had to use Rufus and put an ISO of Parted Magic on a USB drive and format the three terabyte drive to get all of the space. Both conventional drives were only mounted with screws on one side, so I fixed that as well.
When I finished everything was working well, and she now had almost four terabytes of internal storage. I had a PCIe HD7700 card so I put that in. It gave a significant performance boost over the CPU's graphics, and I gave it a test by installing Half-Life 2 and playing to about half way through Ravenholm. The only Windows 11 issue I encountered was that the PC shut itself down after being in sleep mode for a long time, so I changed it to Always On to avoid that. Barring some new Windows Update policy that won't allow updates on older machines I don't see any reason to not update older machines like this for people low on funds.