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Im trying to make some sense for this post. First of all i succeeded in taking an clone from my whole SSD disk (Total size 465GB) (used 127gb) to other mechanical drive (Seagate, 2 T). Problem is that all the files disappeared from mechanical drive (Seagate). There were lots of data in Seagate mechanical drive. Games, Photographs, text and so on. Is there any possibility to recover all that stuff using  Acronis program, some function of it?

 Also there appeared  new drive with the name: acculumator reservation which appeared after i made back up. This may sound weird but english is not my native tong.

So my guestion is, is there any possibility to recover all that stuff that was in Seagates mechanical drive? And how can i get rid of that acculumator reservation disk (or partition).

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Kier, welcome to these user forums.

Unfortunately, when you use Cloning to copy a drive, this will wipe out the content of the target drive in order to make an identical copy of your source drive, so the Seagate drive will now look identical to your SSD disk.

Your only hope is if you can find a disk recovery tool that might be able to recover some of your original Seagate drive data or else you may need to pay a professional data recovery company to try to do this for you.

Try doing a Google Search for "best data recovery software" and see what hits you get for this.

See my search results for best data recovery software

Webster's dictionary:  clone

:  one that appears to be a copy of an original form :  duplicate a clone of a personal computer

Kier,

Unfortunately, you've just cloned (duplicated) the entire content of drive 1 to drive 2, wiping out whatever was on drive 2 in the process since you made a clone of drive 1 on drive 2.  I think you meant to to "sync" or replicate data from drive 1 to drive 2.  Measure twice, cut once - it is better to check before, if you're not sure, but it doesn't matter now.  Did you have a backup, you can restore thigns from that.  However, if not, unfortunately, I'm afraid your data is now lost.  

Even with awesome software recovery, i fear that you won't have luck since you've already overwritten large chunks of data with new data.  You might be able to salvage some with a good recovery software (not a free one), but it will be very slim since data has already been written over content instead of trying to recover deleted files that have not actually been overwritten yet. 

I worry that you won't be successful even with fantastic software recovery because you've already replaced significant amounts of data with fresh data.Instead of attempting to recover deleted files that have not yet been overwritten, you might be able to rescue some with decent recovery software (not a free one), but the chances are very poor because data has already been written over content.

 

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