Hint: when ask for Userid/Password, (sometimes) it wants Userid to be in the formof: "CompurerName\Userid" (depending? ). GeneralNetworkAssessability must be in StdWin/SMB systax: "\\ComputerName\ShareName". Most (secure) attached network devices won't allow one to access them without Authentication(AnotherCanaWorms). *** Also, MBR/Bios and GPT/uEFI is another total CanaWorms.Īnother sortta buggieboo is exactly how the get the ImageRestore to work after the recovery/repair media boots up and starts the ImageRestorUtility successfully. *** Note: remember "Revcovery Drive"! Don't click any other than " Recovery Drive" as there are many other pathe to go by - and can be MisLeading! - KISS! works. It's not necessary if one only needs to Restore a SysImage, unchecking allows one to make a very small bootable UsbStick on a smallstick that will have the SysImageRestore on it - that Works! Note the highlighted checkbox, Backup Sys Files opt. Yep, it's All There(no additional software needed) and a Total Solution.Īnd Recovery Drive and Recovery options will popup!Ĭlick Recovery Drive!- And There it is! This Will will make a bootable USD Drive that Works!. ![]() It works Great - and has saved ma bacon a few times. Now with the recovery/repair disk(cd/usbstick) in hand, one just boots the backed up box with the repair media and runs the imagerecovery utilities to restore the backed up image - even to a new/larger/ replacement disk on the original computer.Īnd the real nice thing, when the original computer Created the repair disk it put all the drivers on the repair disk that it knew it would need to recover itself!Īll Windows since Win7 know how to restore their whole system drive image! In this case the computer name of my Win7 computer is RplWin702.Īnd above is the way the backup set is stored, the backup image, catalog, metadata & media id - all Nice a Neat. It will also make a directory with the same name as the machine name that's being backed up. Also the partition layout on the Hard Drive is different, but I don't think that was ever a problem Hard Drive to Hard Drive cloning.The Backup always goes in the WindowsImageBackup directory in the attached backup media ( and if the dir isn't there WinBackup will make one). I copied the SSD's System Partition as well as the C drive, so that may be part of the problem. It should be possible to backup the SSD onto the Hard Drive and boot. ![]() I've done a lot of reading on this and can't quite figure out how to fix this, or what is bothering windows. When I try to boot (fyi, I disconnect the SSD during this test) I get the dreaded " Autochk program not found" after the Windows logo appears, and then a blue screen c000021a error. This time, cloning the SSD back to the Hard Drive is giving me problems. I've cloned Hard Drive to Hard Drive before with no problems booting the clone. If something happens to the SSD, I could easily boot up the hard drive and work. Those partitions would have no drive letter assigned so would be hidden to the op sys during normal usage. What I wanted to do was CLONE (using Macrium free, the same software I used to create the working SSD) boot and data partitions back to the hard drive for backup. I also am still using one partition of the original Hard Drive for data. I recently installed an SSD and after a few hassles was able to clone the my existing Windows 7 install and get the new SSD drive running perfectly.
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