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Is Restore of a "clone"/Disk Image Destructive to my original data-hard drive ?

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Hello,

I want to copy my existing hard-drive onto a new(larger) hard drive
My M/B hardware and O/S (Win XP) will stay the same

Q: If I use ATIH2012 Plus Pack to restore an "image" of my hard-drive (onto new larger hard-drive") would that be destructive to my original hardware drive ?

My concern is if the Restore of an "image" is unsuccessful....will my original smaller hard drive still work OK ? (as if nothing happened) ?

If the "image" is still a copy of the original C:/ drive...then I hope I can retry the upgrade to larger hard-drive....if it doesn't work the 1st time.
(erase larger H/D, boot system from ATIH-PP rescue media, and try restore a 2nd time)

Thanks for the clarification,

SpeedRacer21

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A couple of points:
- backing up a disk represents no risk for the disk/partition that is backed up, whether through Windows or through the recovery CD. Windows is more convenient,
- the statement above is true for a disk and partition backup or any other kind of backup. A disk and partition backup (aka an image) achieves the same results as a cloning process.
- restoring should always be done from the recovery CD. Recovering a partition/disk means that the target partition/disk (not necessarily the one that was backed up) will be entirely replaced by the data in the backup. No previous data on the data/risk will be available on the destination disk after the restore,
- cloning does present some risk both for the destination disk and the source disk: from user error, hardware issues or power issues, etc. We have seem many user lose all data because of a cloning process gone bad.
- YES, you can use your backup to restore to a bigger drive. Always restore from the recovery CD. Do that particular restore partition by partition, since this approach will let you resize the target partition as you want (otherwise, if you restore the entire disk on a bigger disk, ATI will scale each partition proportionally. THis is not what you want, in particular if you have any hidden partition like recovery, system reserved, OEM, diagnostics, etc.)