One way to do it is to have your BIOS boot from the desired drive.
I haven't done it for a while but your operating system (Windows xxx) will generally not allow you to make more than one drive Bootable (Active). What you'd probably have to do initially is power up only one drive and install your operating system, programs, etc. Using the "Properties" capability in Windows EXplorer (or My Computer) name the C drive something unique like "Trading". Shutdown. Disconnect the drive you just set up and provide power to the other drive. Don't worry about the data cable, it can remain connected to both drives. Install the operating systems and minimal set of programs. Name the drive "Testing" or whatever.
If only one HD is powered up the BIOS will make it the Boot drive so you should not have to change the BIOS during the initial set up.
Shutdown. Connect power cable to the other drive. Both drives should now have power cables connected. Restore power to the computer. Go to setup (normally hit the "Delete" or F2 key during boot). The BIOS will let you select the disk from which you want to boot.
When you boot the operating system used will be on the C drive. The C drive is always the boot drive. The other drive will be the D drive. You will ignore the D drive. All programs will have been installed on the "current" C drive and that is where you will operate. The D will be there but you will not do anything with it.
When you want to use the "other" C drive, shutdown. Restart and tell the BIOS to select the other drive as the boot drive (normally the drives are called HD0 and HD1 by the BIOS). When the system boots the C and D drives have swapped. Once again, you ignore the D drive.
I haven't had to do this for a while since I've been making so much money trading I was able to buy a second machine for $800
. One caveat - your PC must have a fairly recent motherboard (about 2 years) as I think that is when they started allowing you to select the boot hard drive via BIOS. I'd check my BIOS before I tried any of this. Installing operating systems and programs is a chore and a bore.
I haven't done it for a while but your operating system (Windows xxx) will generally not allow you to make more than one drive Bootable (Active). What you'd probably have to do initially is power up only one drive and install your operating system, programs, etc. Using the "Properties" capability in Windows EXplorer (or My Computer) name the C drive something unique like "Trading". Shutdown. Disconnect the drive you just set up and provide power to the other drive. Don't worry about the data cable, it can remain connected to both drives. Install the operating systems and minimal set of programs. Name the drive "Testing" or whatever.
If only one HD is powered up the BIOS will make it the Boot drive so you should not have to change the BIOS during the initial set up.
Shutdown. Connect power cable to the other drive. Both drives should now have power cables connected. Restore power to the computer. Go to setup (normally hit the "Delete" or F2 key during boot). The BIOS will let you select the disk from which you want to boot.
When you boot the operating system used will be on the C drive. The C drive is always the boot drive. The other drive will be the D drive. You will ignore the D drive. All programs will have been installed on the "current" C drive and that is where you will operate. The D will be there but you will not do anything with it.
When you want to use the "other" C drive, shutdown. Restart and tell the BIOS to select the other drive as the boot drive (normally the drives are called HD0 and HD1 by the BIOS). When the system boots the C and D drives have swapped. Once again, you ignore the D drive.
I haven't had to do this for a while since I've been making so much money trading I was able to buy a second machine for $800
. One caveat - your PC must have a fairly recent motherboard (about 2 years) as I think that is when they started allowing you to select the boot hard drive via BIOS. I'd check my BIOS before I tried any of this. Installing operating systems and programs is a chore and a bore.