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I have a desktop PC with 128GB SSD drive, 4TB HDD and 256GB SSD drive.

Up until a few weeks ago, I had Windows 7 Home 64-bit installed on the 128GB drive. Then, I upgraded it to Win 10. Yesterday, I re-installed Windows 7 on the other SSD (the 256GB one).
Now, when I reboot the PC, it asks me to choose an OS to start the computer with. If it was giving me the option to choose between Windows 7 and Windows 10, that would have been very logical and even great for me, but the two options are the same ("Windows 7") and both lead to the same installed OS (Win 7 on the second SSD).

This means that now I cannot seem to get my PC to run with the Windows 10 installed on the first SSD (problem #1)

Even if I disregard this issue and want to continue just with the new Win 7, I don't need these options during booting and want it to start off immediately on the Windows 7 installed (problem #2).

BTW, If I disable the second SSD drive in the BIOS, I get an error message when booting saying there is no OS to run the computer on...

BTW #2, Even when I change the order of the booting device in the BIOS (and both drives are enabled, of course), it still loads the same two options as mentioned here, and still both of them lead to the same Win 7...

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  • Free upgrading to Windows 10 uses your already installed Windows licence key. Please remember you're trying to use same key simultaneously on different OS, which is not allowed.
    – Nikhil_CV
    Sep 23, 2015 at 10:22
  • This is why I cannot boot my PC with the Win 10 any more?? If so, How can I get rid of the two (same) options to boot from and have the new Win 7 come up immediately at startup?
    – TheCuBeMan
    Sep 23, 2015 at 10:28
  • Possibly not. But when the licence is checked against Microsoft servers, you may be asked to enter the product key in any one of the Windows version.
    – Nikhil_CV
    Sep 23, 2015 at 10:36
  • I don't think this has got anything to do with licensing and product keys. When I re-installed Win 7, I have activated it with my license key and everything went through just fine. I am having issues with booting the PC with the OS installed on it, as I described in the question itself...
    – TheCuBeMan
    Sep 26, 2015 at 5:50
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    Looks like the boot data is corrupted on your first SSD where Windows 10 was installed. Do you have Win10 iso or bootable media? Backup the boot configuration with bcdedit /export <filename> What is shown in your Windows 7's msconfig > Boot (tab) You may try removing the not current OS and not default OS entry, ie keep the entry which says its default OS, current OS. If the entry says its not current OS but default, reboot and select the Windows 7 that you didnt select last time and verify this again.
    – Nikhil_CV
    Sep 26, 2015 at 16:06

1 Answer 1

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Looks like the boot sector data is corrupted on your first SSD where Windows 10 was installed. Do you have Win10 iso or bootable media? You may need that to fix MBR/boot sector data..

Here is a solution for avoiding dual 'Windows entries':
Backup the boot configuration with bcdedit /export <filenamepath>

What is shown in your Windows 7's msconfig > Boot (tab) ?

You may try removing the not current OS and not default OS entry, ie keep the entry which says its default OS, current OS.
If the entry says its not current OS but default, reboot and select the Windows 7 that you didn't select last time and verify this again.

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