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Drive Xpert

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I am using an ASUS 5PQ Deluxe Board and Win x64. My Main Drive C are two 2 TB Drives with Raid 0 Drive XPert on Board. Te partition is 1,97 TB.
It is not possible to start a Backup without errors, even normal SATA-Drives could not be backuped. I get some Read Errors (in German). After cklicking Cancel several times, the backup starts.
Afterwards it is not possible to shutdown the computer. At the closing screen reamins the message "Aktionen in Bearbeitung, ...." But you can wait several days, nothing happens. The only way to shut down the machine is to press the Power button until it ends.
Now there are Windows updates which are not properly installed (because of the hard stop I believe).
How can I make to run Acronis properly????

Anhang Größe
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fehler.zip 4.95 KB
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I did a search to look up Drive XPert and I can see how it is possible this type of software interferes with Backup software, but I have no specific knowledge or information that explicitly states that Acronis is more or less compatible with it.

Can you set up the raid0 some other way with the ICH10R/Intel Rapid Technology directly? I know that setup works well, since it is the one I have. You might have to change the ports of the disk (I am not sure): it looks like some ports are dedicated to the Drive XPert technology...

From the posts I read, it is unclear whether XPert is that much more convenient or high performance...

Regardless of Xpert, in the backup settings/options, go the advance tab and make sure that the default validation is not set up. The message "operations in progress" can show up when ATI finally gets a chance to run a delayed or overdue task: this task can be overdue. A task can be overdue when the user has set up the advanced options in the scheduler of that task to wait for the computer to be idle, to run on event like shutdown, or a combination of those...

Thank you Pat, I will try it. I configured a Raid 0, so I first have to backup the disks to switch to Intel Rapid Storage. But I do not trust a backup which is created by generating error messages. Perhaps I can test my backup running in a virtual machine.

You can test your backup in a virtual machine. Of course, it doesn't tell you how it would work on the actual physical hardware, but you will get a sense of how all this works.