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Cloning drive under win 10

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My old laptop died. I moved to a newer laptop which is running win 10 Pro. I'm trying to clone the C: drive (232GB) and move it to a new (1TB) SSD drive. I'm using an upgraded 2013 Acronis. I select the source drive (232GB) and manually select the SSD drive as a destination. It claims it should expand the destination to the new larger size. I select proceed but no files ever move and there are no error messages. What am i doing wrong? Do I need to upgrade again to Acronis 2016 to do this under win 10 pro?

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First - don't start the clone in Windows - EVER.  There's a risk of the Windows bootloader being modified and if Acronis fails to boot, it won't automatically correct that and you can end up with a non-bootable system.  Use your recovery disk to be on the safe side as this can't/won't happen this way.

2013 wont' install on Win 10 Pro (or if it does, it's not supported, so I wouldnt' recommend it).  https://kb.acronis.com/content/34116

Cloning has some limitations when disks of different sector sizes come into play and can fail.  https://kb.acronis.com/content/56634

If you're using the 2013 reocovery media, I would think it would still work though (assuming no sector size issues as pointed out in the link above), but there may be limitations with UEFI support as UEFI was just coming to Acronis around that time.  If you have a UEFI install, then that may be an issue with the 2013 media and CLONING.

So....

1) Perhaps, don't expand the extra space during the clone attempt.  YOu should be able to do that directly in Windows if/when the clone is complete using computer management/disk management.  Try without the expansion in Acronis first and see how it goes.  

2) If cloning, just isnt' working, i'm 99.9% sure that if you take a full disk image and restore that image to the new drive, you'll get the same result with less trouble and you'll have a nice backup to faill back onto as well (just in case).  Even the cloining directions recommend a full backup to be on the safe side so you have a safety net. 

Final notes:

A) If your current OS is installed on a GPT formatted disk in UEFI mode, double check the new disk to make sure it is already formatted GPT and not MBR too - won't hurt to take care of this ahead of time and will reduce inconsitencies in the clone process.

B) See if you can boot your recovery media in both legacy and/or UEFI mode using your onetime boot menu in your bios.  If your boot media is only legacy capable, but your OS is currently installed in UEFI mode, this can be a problem.  Generally speaking you want to boot your recovery media in the same way that the OS was originally installed.  The reason being, that the restores may attempt to format the drives in the same manner as the recovery media was launched.. this is the same limitation as even a Windows installer has.  For instance, if you have an MBR disk and boot Windows 10 installer in UEFI mode, it will say there are no disks that can be used for the install.  You would have to either format the disk in GPT and start the installer in UEFI mode again, or go back and format the disk as MBR first and then boot the Windows installer in Legacy/MBR after that. 

Clear as mud, right?  Basically it boils down to many new options and differences due to motherboards and their firmware versions now supporting both legacy/MBR/bios and UEFI in many cases and the user must configure these and/or boot their recovery media accordingly as a result.  I'm not sure if 2013 recovery had a UEFI boot option though.

Some more help with screenshots is available in this thread:  https://forum.acronis.com/forum/122101#comment-374851