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SSD Laufwerk C: Boot sichern und im Notfall wieder herstellen

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Hallo Leute,

System: SSD Festplatte 512 GB C:Boot, 2. Festplatte intern 1TB D:Data, externe Festplatte 2TB F:, DVD-RW Laufwerk E:, Alternativ USB Stick 128 GB.

Software: Windows 10 Home, Acronis Disk Director 12.5, Acronis True Image 2019. Alles Lizenzen.

Nun mein Anliegen: angenommen die SSD gibt den Geist auf und Laptop bootet nicht mehr. Andere Hersteller wie z.B. "Medion" richten eine Partition X namens "Recover" auf der 2. internen Festplatte ein. Im Bedarfsfall (Defekt C)

wird beim booten über F11 z.B. "Power Recover" aufgerufen und der Laptop wird wieder hergestellt (Werkseinstellungen).

Wie kann ich das mit den mir zur Verfügung stehenden Mitteln machen? Backup der SSD, oder SSD clonen?

herzlichen Dank im Voraus

Roland

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Hi Guys,  

System: SSD hard drive 512 GB C: boot, 2nd hard drive internal 1TB D: Data, external hard drive 2TB F :, DVD-RW drive E :, alternatively USB stick 128 GB.  

Software: Windows 10 Home, Acronis Disk Director 12.5, Acronis True Image 2019. All licenses.   Now my concern: assuming the SSD gives up the ghost and laptop does not boot anymore. Other manufacturers such as e.g. 'Medion' set up a partition X called 'Recover' on the 2nd internal hard disk. If necessary (defect C)   is reset when booting via F11 e.g. 'Power Recover' is called and the laptop is restored (factory settings).   How can I do that with the means at my disposal? Backup the SSD, or SSD clone?   Thank you in advance

Roland, please see the following documents:

KB 61639: Acronis True Image 2019: How to create Acronis Survival Kit

KB 61738: Acronis True Image 2019: Survival Kit disk partition for backups is limited to 2TB on BIOS-booted systems

Article: The Acronis Survival Kit

KB 61632: Acronis True Image 2019: how to create bootable media

KB 61621: Acronis True Image 2019: How to restore your computer with WinPE-based or WinRE-based media

I would highly encourage you to take a full disk backup of the main hard drive (to include all partitions on that drive), before doing anything.  As long as you have a a current and working backup, recovery options are possible.

After that, I would build WinRE rescue media in Acronis and test that you can boot it and that it sees the internal hard drive and your backup image drive.  If you can boot and see both, you will have options to recover.  

Don't rest recovery on the main and working hard drive.  However, if you have a spare drive, or a different one you can swap into the system, then I would test the recovery on it to make sure it works as expected.  Once you do that, you know everything is working as expected.  You can then take out the test drive and put the original back in.  

Keep the recovered drive as a "hot spare" if you want.  Otherwise, test recoveries with that same test drive down the road to make sure things continue to work as expected, all the while, without risking the original hard drive in the process.