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Create an Image\Clone of a Hard Drive inside an enclosure connected via USB.

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Hi Everyone

Someone recomended ACRONIS to me.

I have a problem which is tearing my hair out, can anyone give me advice. I have a hard drive which can only be accessed via USB. I want to connect this hard drive to a PC/laptop and then create an image/clone of the hard drive which is connected via USB not the PC/laptop hard drive connected to the motherboard. Can this be done using ACRONIS. ?

Thanks in advance

Kingsley

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I'm interested in this, too.

I've been doing my (Windows XP) backups by cloning (with Ghost) the internal SATA drive to an identical external SATA drive that is connected to the system via a USB-to-IDE (PATA or SATA) adapter. (The external adapter allows me to rotate the destination drives without opening the system box.) The resultant disk is a bootable copy of the original. If the original fails, I just pop a backup disk into its place and boot. [I've been doing this for six years; it's great. It's how I've seen it done on some large, high-availability systems.]

The Ghost that I'm running is part of Symantec Systemworks 2005, for which Symantec just stopped support (for anti-virus updates), so I'm considering alternatives, such as something from Acronis.

I'm willing to run the cloning software from CD.

My experience with Acronis:

I bought some Western Digital drives a few years ago, which came with an Acronis CD to clone the original disk. The CD's didn't work; Acronis Support said to download a newer version from the web. I did. That software was unable to determine that the USB-connected IDE drive was Western Digital and refused to do the copy.

Kingsley,
TrueImage does not care which disk is being included in the backup. However, if you are expecting to boot the new disk, it won't boot in the enclosure and may not boot even if in the original normal boot position. The backup that is most usable is when the disk is in its normal boot position during the backup creation. The backup can be done using TrueImageHome from either the TI bootable CD or from within the Windows installed version.

Larry,
Without knowing the exact version and how installed, it would be difficult to guess what happened in your situation. The purchased copy does care about the name of the hard drive. The clone is most successful when booted from the TI bootable CD. Also, your best chance of success when cloning is when the target is inside the computer in its normal boot position. Depending upon hardware, sometimes cloning from computer to docking station, etc will also boot but the success varies.

Many of us avoid the clone procedure due to its risk factor and use the TrueImage backup and restore method to replicate a replacement disk.