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True Image 2009- Incorrect Drive Letter Assignment on Disc Cloning

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I have been backing up my XP OS drive to an Acronis secure zone for quite some years. It appears I've been under a false sense of security, for when I eventually came to clone my system disc to another empty identically sized disc, an incorrect drive letter was assigned on both occasions that I have tried it.
The original 80Gb disc had a C: partition of approx 74Gb (NTFS) and an E: recovery partition of approx 6Gb (FAT32). The first cloning resulted in the C: partition being cloned as C: but the E: partition cloned as D: (which originally was the drive letter assigned to the slave disc containing the Acronis Secure Image zone - it was reassigned E:). Starting from scratch a second time resulted in the original C: partition being changed to F:, whilst the original E: partition held its ground as E:. As to be expected, neither operation produced a bootable hard drive disc, despite all attempts to do so by altering the pre-boot set up menus, I have not found a way of reassigning the partition drive letters prior to bootup.
P.S. The Secure zone partition drive letter assignments were correct in every detail prior to the commencement of cloning. Can anyone assist please? Many thanks - Bob Deb.

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I think I can help... ATI 2009... When selecting recovery, do checkmark the recovery files box and "restore MBR", do not check "restore original disk signature". Do check "set as active". Windows will now assign drive letters according to the order of the partitions.

History: I have made many recovery disks for different computers by using one, designated computer with ATI 2009 installed. You can see the inherent problem. All of the recoveries will be some drive letter other that "C" and a reboot of the recovered computer says "NTLDR missing". ATI 2009 insists on recovering as the original drive letter (in my case usually "E" just because I have a hard drive and a DVD R/W on the work computer.) and Windows won't boot on "E". (not easily, anyway) The recovery has to be simple enough for a average user to employ. Following the instructions above should fix your problem.

If Paul's suggestion does not work, then

Redo the clone.
Shutdown and disconnect all disks except for the new cloned disk. You do not want Windows to see two identical disks.

After first boot, then open Windows Disk management and correct any wrong drive letter assignments.

Reboot and after everything correct, then you can re-attach any drives that need to be connected.