I recommend disabling BitLocker before cloning the drive. Note: The instructions should also work for cloning to and from non-SSD drives. We’ll also handle cloning from a smaller to larger capacity drive and repairing the new drive so it can boot up successfully. (Live or “on the fly” disk cloning allows one to use Windows while it is being cloned.)īelow are instructions on how to clone from a SATA SSD to a NVMe SSD using Macrium Reflect Free. Thankfully, I found Macrium Reflect Free, which supported live disk cloning and also included a boot repair tool.
Previously, I would use the Clonezilla utility but this time, I decided not to use it because it was not user-friendly and did not take care of resulting boot issues (on the new drive). Rather than re-install Windows 10 from scratch, I decided to clone from the old drive to the new drive. So I decided to upgrade my Samsung 860 EVO 250GB 2.5 inch SATA SSD drive to a Crucial P2 500GB NVMe M.2 SSD drive. Supposedly NVMe drives, which look like small circuit boards, are even faster than SATA SSD drives. I discovered that my Dell Optiplex 3050 desktop’s motherboard supported a NVMe M.2 SSD drive.