I know this question is stupid/obvious/borderline moronic, but:
Okay, I've got two computers that are of the same make/model. If I took the hard-drive out of computer A and installed it into computer B, it should work just fine, right?
I say try it. You can switch out a hard drive in about five minutes, and I can't imagine any possible way that it could screw anything up. If it's the EXACT same make and model it theoretically should work, so I say go for it.
If it doesn't work, just put it back in the old computer. Nothing lost.
^ But it wouldn't mess anything up, right? If he put the hard drive in the second computer the worst thing that could happen is it would fail to boot. He could still put it back in the original machine and continue on as if nothing had happened.
Personally, I'm just curious to see if this would really work.
Depends on several factors.
First ... if computer A has a PATA interface and computer B SATA, then you won't be able to connect the HDD physically.
If both computers use the same interface and the HDD can be connected, then it basically depends on how different the hardware is.
Ar-Pharazon's case was unique because he used the motherboard from a same manufacturer that quite possibly shared chipset drivers (and everything else was unchanged).
But even if the OS doesn't decide to have fits with the new hardware, you will have to make sure to remove old drivers from the system because they could interfere with the OS function.
I'd sooner advocate for a clean install.
Switching the HDD into a new computer with different hardware can cause problems that are much easier to avoid doing a clean install.
If they are EXACTLY the same, then no problem.
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