Installing Windows 7 64 Bit Upgrade on a Multi-disk Mac Pro

A lot of the information I found to help me with this issue scattered all around so I thought I'd consolidate it in one place.
The situation: I wanted to install Windows 7 Home Premium 64 Bit on my boot camp partition. Windows Vista Ultimate 32 bit was already installed.
My System:
Mac Pro (early 2008)
2x Quad Core 3.0GHZ Zeon Processors
12GB Ram
3x 500GB Hard Drives
OS X 10.6.2
Boot Camp Assistant: 3.0.1
The Issues:
1.You cannot directly update a previous 32 bit installation with a 64 bit installation. You have to do a clean install.
2.If you do a clean install with an upgrade disk it will most likely not activate.
3.Windows 7 does not like more than 4 partitions. More than 4 it will fail to install.
4.Windows 7 does not like GPT (GUID Partition Table) disks and will fail to install if it detects one.
What worked for me after a fair number of false starts:
1.Put the Windows 7 Installation disk in your DVD drive.
2.Start Boot Camp Assistant and create a Boot Camp partition. I deleted my old Boot Camp partition prior to beginning. *DO NOT* start the install from the Boot Camp assistant. Once you create the Boot Camp Partition close the assistant.
3.Power down your computer. (Remember the Windows DVD is in the drive, leave it there.)
4.Remove any extraneous drives that are GPT or cause you to have more than 4 partitions. I installed on my second hard drive and removed the 1st and 3rd.
5.Restart your Mac holding down the “c” key to make it boot from the Windows install disk that is in the DVD drive.
6.Once the Windows Installer is active do a “Custom” installation.
7.Use the Installer utilities to format the Boot Camp partition as NTFS.
8.Install Windows 7 on that partition, but do not try to activate it at this time.
9.When Windows restarts you may have to hold down the “Option” key (Alt if you are using a PC Keyboard) and select the Windows restart disk.
10.Once you boot into Windows do all of the updates.
11.Once the updates are done, make sure you are booted into Windows and call Microsoft support and explain the issue (doing a clean installation with an upgrade disk.) The issue is very common and not specific to Mac users so they will pass you to Tech support and help you activate your copy of Windows.
12.Download (from Windows) the Boot Camp update and install it.
13.You should be fine at this point, at least I sincerely hope so
14. I also had a sound issue but that was resolved by downloading the latest Realtek HD Audtio Manager and wiggling the sound jack where my stereo system was plugged in, the RCA jack in the back of the system.
(Note: I haven't been able to locate my Boot Camp program or tray like I had on my Vista installation. I' haven't really looked. It isn't that big a hassle to hold down the “Option” key when I restart and just pick the OS I want to boot into.)
I hope this helps anyone that is having issues similar to what I experienced.
Message was edited by: gary_s

11.Once the updates are done, make sure you are booted into Windows and call Microsoft support and explain the issue (doing a clean installation with an upgrade disk.) The issue is very common and not specific to Mac users so they will pass you to Tech support and help you activate your copy of Windows.
Not always. I tried. Easier to reinstall Windows 7 over itself, activated fine. Or just do the legal thing and buy full copy. Mac Pro owners that want dual processor support need Pro or Ultimate (Enterprise also) rather than Home Premium.
I would NOT use Boot Camp 3.1, it causes problems for number of Mac Pro owners, though maybe not all so unclear what/why) but just stay with Boot Camp 3.0x from the Snow Leopard DVD (which can have trouble with AppleHFS)

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