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True Image Home 2011 Newbie needs guidance!

Thread needs solution

Hi

I have just purchased True Image Home 2011 and I am a bit confused by all the options. I have tried some of these: full image back up, file back up, setting the latter to backup on a schedule. All work fine and I can access individual files OK. I also made a recovery disk.

Q1. I am not sure how to test the recovery disk

I want to back up all my files in case of loss or accidental deletion and also have complete image of my C drive so I can restore all my programs and files if a disaster strikes. It would be sufficient to take an initial image to keep permanently and then weekly images with the older ones being deleted as the external drive I am using gets full

Q2. Which backup scheme as ouitlined in the manual will be best for me?

Q3. I am a little confused about restoring from an image. I can see how to access and restore individual files but exactly how do I restore the whole C drive in a case of hardware failure or corruption. Does the recovery disk allow me to boot to Windows and then simply "restore" one of the images I have on the external drive?

Thank you for your patience

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Hi
I suggest that you work from the program and not the manual...learning by doing

1. Install TI, create the Rescur Media and Register your copy of the program
2. Open TI and click on Disk and Partition Backup
3. Backup and Validate your entire C drive (with OS on it). This will give you an image of everything, including the data on the C drive.
4. Store the image on another physical drive either internal or external
5 You can restore the C drive (with OS on it) by booting from the Rescue Media and click on Restore Disk, navigating to the backup and clicking on Proceed
6. If you are unsure, restore the C drive image to another empty disk and then try to boot from it. This will leave your original system disk in tact in case you make a mistake

If you haven't successfully restored with the TI rescue CD then I strongly suggest you do a test restore to a spare drive. One of the first things TI does before a partition restore is to delete the existing partition. If TI subsequently fails you are left with nothing but unallocated space instead of your partition. The TI rescue CD is Linux and sometimes the drivers have problems with certain hardware.

If you are unable to use a spare HD then I suggest you boot up the TI rescue CD and first validate the archive with it. If the validate is successful it indicates that it can properly read the archive and all its checksums. If you can do this then the probability is very good it will restore the archive but the absolute best way is to test it with a spare HD.