Accessing files on a hard drive without booting












2














I have a Windows 10 HP laptop. I want to access the files on the hard drive without actually booting the OS. Now the most common answer to this I have seen is booting from a Live CD or USB.



However, my problem with using a Live CD is, in order to configure my computer BIOS to boot from external media, I actually have to boot into the pre-installed OS in the first place! Which is exactly what I am trying to avoid at this point.



Someone suggested pulling out the hard drive and connecting it to another computer via a USB to SATA adapter, but another person told me that wouldn't work because by connecting the hard disk to another laptop, I was essentially booting up the hard disk. Is this true though?
I definitely don't want to boot up any of my OS components in any way, so I need to understand if running a Live CD and connecting the disk to another machine actually serves the same purpose.



Will appreciate if someone explained this a little in detail.










share|improve this question













migrated from security.stackexchange.com Dec 19 '18 at 14:22


This question came from our site for information security professionals.











  • 1




    "Another person told me that wouldn't work because by connecting the hard disk to another laptop, I was essentially booting up the hard disk. Is this true though?" => NO., your HDD will be considered as a removable media.
    – Soufiane Tahiri
    Dec 19 '18 at 13:43






  • 1




    I have never had to boot to the OS to gain access to the BIOS. You also need to verify this claim.
    – schroeder
    Dec 19 '18 at 13:48










  • Hello @schroeder I actually tried to access the BIOS settings on my computer during startup before when I was still okay with booting it. Followed internet instructions specific to Windows 10, pressed F1, F2 etc keys but it would always still load up. The only way I could do it was after the computer had started, I could press restart holding shift key and then next time it booted I would get advanced options from where I could change settings. I think my computer uses newer UEFI firmware that's why maybe? In that case, is it still possible to access the UEFI settings without booting to OS?
    – Sabi
    Dec 19 '18 at 14:01










  • Thank you for your response @Soufiane Tahiri That makes it easier for me.
    – Sabi
    Dec 19 '18 at 14:03






  • 1




    My Internet says to use F10 for HP laptops ... Anyway, what you can do is to simply pull the drive, then you can try out different options without the OS being booted up.
    – schroeder
    Dec 19 '18 at 14:22
















2














I have a Windows 10 HP laptop. I want to access the files on the hard drive without actually booting the OS. Now the most common answer to this I have seen is booting from a Live CD or USB.



However, my problem with using a Live CD is, in order to configure my computer BIOS to boot from external media, I actually have to boot into the pre-installed OS in the first place! Which is exactly what I am trying to avoid at this point.



Someone suggested pulling out the hard drive and connecting it to another computer via a USB to SATA adapter, but another person told me that wouldn't work because by connecting the hard disk to another laptop, I was essentially booting up the hard disk. Is this true though?
I definitely don't want to boot up any of my OS components in any way, so I need to understand if running a Live CD and connecting the disk to another machine actually serves the same purpose.



Will appreciate if someone explained this a little in detail.










share|improve this question













migrated from security.stackexchange.com Dec 19 '18 at 14:22


This question came from our site for information security professionals.











  • 1




    "Another person told me that wouldn't work because by connecting the hard disk to another laptop, I was essentially booting up the hard disk. Is this true though?" => NO., your HDD will be considered as a removable media.
    – Soufiane Tahiri
    Dec 19 '18 at 13:43






  • 1




    I have never had to boot to the OS to gain access to the BIOS. You also need to verify this claim.
    – schroeder
    Dec 19 '18 at 13:48










  • Hello @schroeder I actually tried to access the BIOS settings on my computer during startup before when I was still okay with booting it. Followed internet instructions specific to Windows 10, pressed F1, F2 etc keys but it would always still load up. The only way I could do it was after the computer had started, I could press restart holding shift key and then next time it booted I would get advanced options from where I could change settings. I think my computer uses newer UEFI firmware that's why maybe? In that case, is it still possible to access the UEFI settings without booting to OS?
    – Sabi
    Dec 19 '18 at 14:01










  • Thank you for your response @Soufiane Tahiri That makes it easier for me.
    – Sabi
    Dec 19 '18 at 14:03






  • 1




    My Internet says to use F10 for HP laptops ... Anyway, what you can do is to simply pull the drive, then you can try out different options without the OS being booted up.
    – schroeder
    Dec 19 '18 at 14:22














2












2








2







I have a Windows 10 HP laptop. I want to access the files on the hard drive without actually booting the OS. Now the most common answer to this I have seen is booting from a Live CD or USB.



However, my problem with using a Live CD is, in order to configure my computer BIOS to boot from external media, I actually have to boot into the pre-installed OS in the first place! Which is exactly what I am trying to avoid at this point.



Someone suggested pulling out the hard drive and connecting it to another computer via a USB to SATA adapter, but another person told me that wouldn't work because by connecting the hard disk to another laptop, I was essentially booting up the hard disk. Is this true though?
I definitely don't want to boot up any of my OS components in any way, so I need to understand if running a Live CD and connecting the disk to another machine actually serves the same purpose.



Will appreciate if someone explained this a little in detail.










share|improve this question













I have a Windows 10 HP laptop. I want to access the files on the hard drive without actually booting the OS. Now the most common answer to this I have seen is booting from a Live CD or USB.



However, my problem with using a Live CD is, in order to configure my computer BIOS to boot from external media, I actually have to boot into the pre-installed OS in the first place! Which is exactly what I am trying to avoid at this point.



Someone suggested pulling out the hard drive and connecting it to another computer via a USB to SATA adapter, but another person told me that wouldn't work because by connecting the hard disk to another laptop, I was essentially booting up the hard disk. Is this true though?
I definitely don't want to boot up any of my OS components in any way, so I need to understand if running a Live CD and connecting the disk to another machine actually serves the same purpose.



Will appreciate if someone explained this a little in detail.







operating-systems windows-10 data-recovery boot sata






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Dec 19 '18 at 13:40







Sabi











migrated from security.stackexchange.com Dec 19 '18 at 14:22


This question came from our site for information security professionals.






migrated from security.stackexchange.com Dec 19 '18 at 14:22


This question came from our site for information security professionals.










  • 1




    "Another person told me that wouldn't work because by connecting the hard disk to another laptop, I was essentially booting up the hard disk. Is this true though?" => NO., your HDD will be considered as a removable media.
    – Soufiane Tahiri
    Dec 19 '18 at 13:43






  • 1




    I have never had to boot to the OS to gain access to the BIOS. You also need to verify this claim.
    – schroeder
    Dec 19 '18 at 13:48










  • Hello @schroeder I actually tried to access the BIOS settings on my computer during startup before when I was still okay with booting it. Followed internet instructions specific to Windows 10, pressed F1, F2 etc keys but it would always still load up. The only way I could do it was after the computer had started, I could press restart holding shift key and then next time it booted I would get advanced options from where I could change settings. I think my computer uses newer UEFI firmware that's why maybe? In that case, is it still possible to access the UEFI settings without booting to OS?
    – Sabi
    Dec 19 '18 at 14:01










  • Thank you for your response @Soufiane Tahiri That makes it easier for me.
    – Sabi
    Dec 19 '18 at 14:03






  • 1




    My Internet says to use F10 for HP laptops ... Anyway, what you can do is to simply pull the drive, then you can try out different options without the OS being booted up.
    – schroeder
    Dec 19 '18 at 14:22














  • 1




    "Another person told me that wouldn't work because by connecting the hard disk to another laptop, I was essentially booting up the hard disk. Is this true though?" => NO., your HDD will be considered as a removable media.
    – Soufiane Tahiri
    Dec 19 '18 at 13:43






  • 1




    I have never had to boot to the OS to gain access to the BIOS. You also need to verify this claim.
    – schroeder
    Dec 19 '18 at 13:48










  • Hello @schroeder I actually tried to access the BIOS settings on my computer during startup before when I was still okay with booting it. Followed internet instructions specific to Windows 10, pressed F1, F2 etc keys but it would always still load up. The only way I could do it was after the computer had started, I could press restart holding shift key and then next time it booted I would get advanced options from where I could change settings. I think my computer uses newer UEFI firmware that's why maybe? In that case, is it still possible to access the UEFI settings without booting to OS?
    – Sabi
    Dec 19 '18 at 14:01










  • Thank you for your response @Soufiane Tahiri That makes it easier for me.
    – Sabi
    Dec 19 '18 at 14:03






  • 1




    My Internet says to use F10 for HP laptops ... Anyway, what you can do is to simply pull the drive, then you can try out different options without the OS being booted up.
    – schroeder
    Dec 19 '18 at 14:22








1




1




"Another person told me that wouldn't work because by connecting the hard disk to another laptop, I was essentially booting up the hard disk. Is this true though?" => NO., your HDD will be considered as a removable media.
– Soufiane Tahiri
Dec 19 '18 at 13:43




"Another person told me that wouldn't work because by connecting the hard disk to another laptop, I was essentially booting up the hard disk. Is this true though?" => NO., your HDD will be considered as a removable media.
– Soufiane Tahiri
Dec 19 '18 at 13:43




1




1




I have never had to boot to the OS to gain access to the BIOS. You also need to verify this claim.
– schroeder
Dec 19 '18 at 13:48




I have never had to boot to the OS to gain access to the BIOS. You also need to verify this claim.
– schroeder
Dec 19 '18 at 13:48












Hello @schroeder I actually tried to access the BIOS settings on my computer during startup before when I was still okay with booting it. Followed internet instructions specific to Windows 10, pressed F1, F2 etc keys but it would always still load up. The only way I could do it was after the computer had started, I could press restart holding shift key and then next time it booted I would get advanced options from where I could change settings. I think my computer uses newer UEFI firmware that's why maybe? In that case, is it still possible to access the UEFI settings without booting to OS?
– Sabi
Dec 19 '18 at 14:01




Hello @schroeder I actually tried to access the BIOS settings on my computer during startup before when I was still okay with booting it. Followed internet instructions specific to Windows 10, pressed F1, F2 etc keys but it would always still load up. The only way I could do it was after the computer had started, I could press restart holding shift key and then next time it booted I would get advanced options from where I could change settings. I think my computer uses newer UEFI firmware that's why maybe? In that case, is it still possible to access the UEFI settings without booting to OS?
– Sabi
Dec 19 '18 at 14:01












Thank you for your response @Soufiane Tahiri That makes it easier for me.
– Sabi
Dec 19 '18 at 14:03




Thank you for your response @Soufiane Tahiri That makes it easier for me.
– Sabi
Dec 19 '18 at 14:03




1




1




My Internet says to use F10 for HP laptops ... Anyway, what you can do is to simply pull the drive, then you can try out different options without the OS being booted up.
– schroeder
Dec 19 '18 at 14:22




My Internet says to use F10 for HP laptops ... Anyway, what you can do is to simply pull the drive, then you can try out different options without the OS being booted up.
– schroeder
Dec 19 '18 at 14:22










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















2














If you take a hard drive (let's call it 1) out of its current computer and connect it to an other computer (that has already booted its own operation system from its own hard drive) via a USB to SATA adapter, then the other computer will not boot form the hard drive (1) under normal conditions.



The new computer will try to mount the external hard drive (1). And it might however trigger something on (1), like an autostart-feature, previews, automated virus scans etc.



If you restart (or crash) the other computer while the external drive (1) is connected, it might try to boot the external drive (depending on the other computers bios settings).



So if you want to be super sure that nothing get's touched on (1), you need to do some preparations on the other computer (disable auto-start features, maybe even disable automatic mounting of new devices). Depending on what you try to archive or stop from happening, these preparations might get quite serious (and beyond the scope of this answer). There are special systems for forensic tasks where you need to make absolutely sure that nothing gets altered.



If you just want to scan your drive for regular detectable viruses, basic preparations like having a an up-to-date virus scanner on the other system running and and disable auto-start should be sufficient.






share|improve this answer





















  • oh, and in your special case, you could take the hard drive out of the computer, boot that computer from a Live-CD or thumb drive (I guess your bios will let you do this, when the original HD is gone). Then you can connect the hard drive via the USB to SATA cable.
    – Vincent
    Dec 19 '18 at 15:44





















1














Super simple: Boot your laptop to it's core OS, then plug in the second hard drive via USB (toaster or simple SATA -> USB cable).



Your OS will mount the drive and wont' boot to it since an OS is already loaded and past the boot cycle. Voila! You can access the drive.






share|improve this answer























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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    2














    If you take a hard drive (let's call it 1) out of its current computer and connect it to an other computer (that has already booted its own operation system from its own hard drive) via a USB to SATA adapter, then the other computer will not boot form the hard drive (1) under normal conditions.



    The new computer will try to mount the external hard drive (1). And it might however trigger something on (1), like an autostart-feature, previews, automated virus scans etc.



    If you restart (or crash) the other computer while the external drive (1) is connected, it might try to boot the external drive (depending on the other computers bios settings).



    So if you want to be super sure that nothing get's touched on (1), you need to do some preparations on the other computer (disable auto-start features, maybe even disable automatic mounting of new devices). Depending on what you try to archive or stop from happening, these preparations might get quite serious (and beyond the scope of this answer). There are special systems for forensic tasks where you need to make absolutely sure that nothing gets altered.



    If you just want to scan your drive for regular detectable viruses, basic preparations like having a an up-to-date virus scanner on the other system running and and disable auto-start should be sufficient.






    share|improve this answer





















    • oh, and in your special case, you could take the hard drive out of the computer, boot that computer from a Live-CD or thumb drive (I guess your bios will let you do this, when the original HD is gone). Then you can connect the hard drive via the USB to SATA cable.
      – Vincent
      Dec 19 '18 at 15:44


















    2














    If you take a hard drive (let's call it 1) out of its current computer and connect it to an other computer (that has already booted its own operation system from its own hard drive) via a USB to SATA adapter, then the other computer will not boot form the hard drive (1) under normal conditions.



    The new computer will try to mount the external hard drive (1). And it might however trigger something on (1), like an autostart-feature, previews, automated virus scans etc.



    If you restart (or crash) the other computer while the external drive (1) is connected, it might try to boot the external drive (depending on the other computers bios settings).



    So if you want to be super sure that nothing get's touched on (1), you need to do some preparations on the other computer (disable auto-start features, maybe even disable automatic mounting of new devices). Depending on what you try to archive or stop from happening, these preparations might get quite serious (and beyond the scope of this answer). There are special systems for forensic tasks where you need to make absolutely sure that nothing gets altered.



    If you just want to scan your drive for regular detectable viruses, basic preparations like having a an up-to-date virus scanner on the other system running and and disable auto-start should be sufficient.






    share|improve this answer





















    • oh, and in your special case, you could take the hard drive out of the computer, boot that computer from a Live-CD or thumb drive (I guess your bios will let you do this, when the original HD is gone). Then you can connect the hard drive via the USB to SATA cable.
      – Vincent
      Dec 19 '18 at 15:44
















    2












    2








    2






    If you take a hard drive (let's call it 1) out of its current computer and connect it to an other computer (that has already booted its own operation system from its own hard drive) via a USB to SATA adapter, then the other computer will not boot form the hard drive (1) under normal conditions.



    The new computer will try to mount the external hard drive (1). And it might however trigger something on (1), like an autostart-feature, previews, automated virus scans etc.



    If you restart (or crash) the other computer while the external drive (1) is connected, it might try to boot the external drive (depending on the other computers bios settings).



    So if you want to be super sure that nothing get's touched on (1), you need to do some preparations on the other computer (disable auto-start features, maybe even disable automatic mounting of new devices). Depending on what you try to archive or stop from happening, these preparations might get quite serious (and beyond the scope of this answer). There are special systems for forensic tasks where you need to make absolutely sure that nothing gets altered.



    If you just want to scan your drive for regular detectable viruses, basic preparations like having a an up-to-date virus scanner on the other system running and and disable auto-start should be sufficient.






    share|improve this answer












    If you take a hard drive (let's call it 1) out of its current computer and connect it to an other computer (that has already booted its own operation system from its own hard drive) via a USB to SATA adapter, then the other computer will not boot form the hard drive (1) under normal conditions.



    The new computer will try to mount the external hard drive (1). And it might however trigger something on (1), like an autostart-feature, previews, automated virus scans etc.



    If you restart (or crash) the other computer while the external drive (1) is connected, it might try to boot the external drive (depending on the other computers bios settings).



    So if you want to be super sure that nothing get's touched on (1), you need to do some preparations on the other computer (disable auto-start features, maybe even disable automatic mounting of new devices). Depending on what you try to archive or stop from happening, these preparations might get quite serious (and beyond the scope of this answer). There are special systems for forensic tasks where you need to make absolutely sure that nothing gets altered.



    If you just want to scan your drive for regular detectable viruses, basic preparations like having a an up-to-date virus scanner on the other system running and and disable auto-start should be sufficient.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Dec 19 '18 at 15:39









    Vincent

    1815




    1815












    • oh, and in your special case, you could take the hard drive out of the computer, boot that computer from a Live-CD or thumb drive (I guess your bios will let you do this, when the original HD is gone). Then you can connect the hard drive via the USB to SATA cable.
      – Vincent
      Dec 19 '18 at 15:44




















    • oh, and in your special case, you could take the hard drive out of the computer, boot that computer from a Live-CD or thumb drive (I guess your bios will let you do this, when the original HD is gone). Then you can connect the hard drive via the USB to SATA cable.
      – Vincent
      Dec 19 '18 at 15:44


















    oh, and in your special case, you could take the hard drive out of the computer, boot that computer from a Live-CD or thumb drive (I guess your bios will let you do this, when the original HD is gone). Then you can connect the hard drive via the USB to SATA cable.
    – Vincent
    Dec 19 '18 at 15:44






    oh, and in your special case, you could take the hard drive out of the computer, boot that computer from a Live-CD or thumb drive (I guess your bios will let you do this, when the original HD is gone). Then you can connect the hard drive via the USB to SATA cable.
    – Vincent
    Dec 19 '18 at 15:44















    1














    Super simple: Boot your laptop to it's core OS, then plug in the second hard drive via USB (toaster or simple SATA -> USB cable).



    Your OS will mount the drive and wont' boot to it since an OS is already loaded and past the boot cycle. Voila! You can access the drive.






    share|improve this answer




























      1














      Super simple: Boot your laptop to it's core OS, then plug in the second hard drive via USB (toaster or simple SATA -> USB cable).



      Your OS will mount the drive and wont' boot to it since an OS is already loaded and past the boot cycle. Voila! You can access the drive.






      share|improve this answer


























        1












        1








        1






        Super simple: Boot your laptop to it's core OS, then plug in the second hard drive via USB (toaster or simple SATA -> USB cable).



        Your OS will mount the drive and wont' boot to it since an OS is already loaded and past the boot cycle. Voila! You can access the drive.






        share|improve this answer














        Super simple: Boot your laptop to it's core OS, then plug in the second hard drive via USB (toaster or simple SATA -> USB cable).



        Your OS will mount the drive and wont' boot to it since an OS is already loaded and past the boot cycle. Voila! You can access the drive.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Dec 19 '18 at 15:57

























        answered Dec 19 '18 at 15:44









        thepip3r

        26115




        26115






























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