On your 2nd scenario, I would install the drivers, first, so when you get
everything transfered Windows will see your card.

On Nov 1, 2010 8:47 AM, "Glen Johnson" <[email protected]> wrote:

 This is for our church so budget is really tight right now.

We have a 2003 sbs system, running exchange, quickbooks and a power church
app.

Drive d holds the exchange database, all the user file shares and is almost
full.

Currently the server has one 80gig drive partitioned as C: 20 gig, D: the
rest.

Here is my plan to upgrade it.  Do you think it will work or are there
better/simpler options.

I have a cheapio  IDE raid card and 2 larger drives.

I plan to shutdown the system, install the card and drives, boot and run the
bios on the card to set up the two new drive as raid 1.

Then boot into windows so that the OS can find the new card and install the
drivers.

I’ll then set all the exchange services to manual or disabled, disable
starting of the qb and power church software.

Shut down the system and then boot with my copy of UBCD, use one of the
tools to copy the existing D partition to the new raid 1 array I’ve just
created, resizing in the process.

When that is done, reboot the machine into windows, use disk manager to swap
the existing D drive to the new larger one, make sure the shares are correct
and then restart exchange, QB and power church.

This would leave C on the original drive, and d on the new larger array.
Not my first choice, but the two drives are free, they  but aren’t large
enough to hold C and D and still have much room to grow.



Or second scenario.

Same server, but I also have cheapio sata card and 2 even larger hard
drives.

I’d like to clone the entire server to these two larger hard drives,
expanding the c and d partitions and only end up with two drives in the
system.

I know I can use the UBCD to clone and resize the drives, but I’m doubting
windows would boot from the new controller and drives.

Any ideas or tried and true solutions would be appreciated.

Glen.

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