How  do I change the Win7 boot disk under BootCamp?

I have been getting warnings that my Window7Pro64 hard disk may crash.  I bought a new disk.  Installed it in my Mac Pro. Set up the partitions and cloned my boot disk to the new disk.  At the end of the process of creating the clone, the software will shut the computer down.  I am instructed to enter the Bios in order to assign the Clone disk as the new 'boot' disk.
Since I am running under Boot Camp I am wondering if I need to follow another procedure?  I am inquiring before the cloning process has completed, so I haven't tried rebooting into Bios...
Thanks for any insight...!
Jim

So, Mr. Hatter...
You have raised some additional questions:
1.  Will Boot Camp now support Windows 8?
2.  On the Windows side of Boot Camp I have installed Acronis software to clone my old boot disk (500GB) to a new clone disk (1TB).  That cloning process worked.  I rebooted to the Mac side.  I chose Boot Camp and chose to reboot into Windows 7 using the new clone disk.  Windows booted up.  It appears to me that I now have two Windows bootable disks.  Is this correct?  Does this create any potential problems?
3. On the Mac side of Boot Camp, I have installed Carbon Copy to clone my old boot disk (500GB) to a new Clone disk (1TB).  That cloning also appears to have worked.  It appears I now have two bootable disks on the Mac side, too.  Any problems with that?
4. Inside my MacPro my 4 drive bays are currently assigned disks in the following order (reading from the left side of the compartment): Drive Bay 1: MacBoot (500GB); Drive Bay 2: WinClone (1TB); Drive Bay 3: MacClone (1TB); Drive Bay 4: WinBoot (500GB).  The reason I ask is because when I go into Acronis / Carbon Copy they report the disks as Primary Master / Primary Slave; and Secondary Master / Secondary Slave without regard to their physical locations.  This is suggesting the master / slave relationship may need to be maintained physically - in which case my allocation of disks to bays would be incorrect.  Any insight on this topic may reduce my anxiety that I could be causing a disk failure (I had a new 1TB disk indicate a mechanical failure and replaced it with the current, new MacClone (1TB) disk.  It is in the same bay relationship.  This got me thinking... is it possible to have a Mac disk as Primary Master and a Win disk as its Primary Slave?  If so, what damage might result).
In any case, at the moment, everything seems to be functional on both sides (Mac & Win).  However, I rarely come out of these exercises with a complete sense of security that I have done everthing correctly...
5.  Should I still run CHKDSK?  How do I invoke it?
6.  What is NVRAM and how do I invoke it?  Does it apply to both Win & Mac?
7.  Still boot from Win7 DVD and run system repairs?
Sorry to burn your ears, but its on my mind and since you guys have sooo... many 'help' points I figured I tapped into serious capabilities I should not pass up!
Thanks, again
Jim

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