Should Disk 1 and Disk 2 have the same flags as Disk 0 -- and not having them is related to them not working -- or are those flags not entirely necessary, and Disk 1 and Disk 2 have the appropriate flags / partitions needed to boot?

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The new drive (Disk 0) has the Active and System flags enabled, and its Boot is on the data partition, C:. Disk 1, where Windows is installed to on my old drives, has the Active flag on the data partition, and is missing all other flags Disk 0 has. Disk 2 has a System Reserved partition which has the active flag enabled, but is missing the system flag and its data partition doesn't have the boot / etc flags like Disk 0 does.

event: 4065 - a tape alert flag was reported by adrive

Now, about the "Active" flag: BIOS or UEFI look for boot files on the partition that is marked as active. Only one partition at a time can be marked as active. Hence, it only makes sense to mark your "System" partition as active.

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Layingflags

I am sure you have concluded by now, but I am going to say it anyway: "Boot" and "System" are not actual flags. They are just labels that only appear in Disk Management console. But "Active" is an actual flag; there is a certain area of disk for holding this flag as information. None of your partitions on Disk 2 have these labels because they are neither used to boot Windows nor contain the copy of Windows that is running. There maybe bootloader files in F: and a working Windows on G:, but Disk Management console does not check and does not care.

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driveinternal power-on self-tests failed. (t10 31)

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If you ever discovered why the hell Microsoft has assigned the wrong the definition to the wrong term, let me know too. Also see: System partition and boot partition on English Wikipedia

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