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Recovery from a bootable USB on DELL XPS 13 9310 failed to recognize C: drive from the DELL laptop

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I have booted from the USB drive I use all the time to recover a backup image on a brand new DELL XPS 13 9310 and first the high resolution of my screen 3840 x 2400 messes up the Acronis windows on the recovery screen, BUT my laptop do not start Acronis from the C: drive and instead start from a X: drive

In the dos windows I see the following execution

X:\windows\system32>wpeinit

X:\windows\system32>"X:\Program Files\Acronis\TrueImageHome\trueimage_starter.exe"

After that I am stuck and fail to recover as in the following Acronis windows, my C:drive is not the DELL SSD OS drive, but instead it is the Backup hard drive on which I have created my images

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Paul, welcome to these public User Forums.

When you boot from any USB boot media such as the Acronis Rescue Media, all drive letters can be changed from what you would see normally within Windows - this is expected & normal!

Windows PE also normally runs from the X: virtual drive, so the paths you quote in your post above are correct and as expected.

If you do not see your correct Windows boot / OS drive when booted from the USB media, then there are several possible reasons! 

The missing drive is not initialised and needs to be prepared in order to be seen - this is done using the Tools > Add new disk option in the Acronis rescue media panel.
Note: it is important that the correct partition scheme is selected when initialising a new drive - this needs to match the BIOS boot mode being used on the PC, so if the Dell XPS 13 is using UEFI (with / without Secure boot) as would be expected for a new PC, then the drive should be prepared / initialised as GPT.

The rescue media may not have the required device drivers for the missing drive - therefore does not recognise the hardware as being present.  Ideally the rescue media should be created on the same system with ATI 2020 installed using files from the Windows Recovery Environment that include device drivers for the hardware present.

One other reason is that you are not recognising the correct drive because it is not using the expected drive letter - this is where setting clear descriptive labels / names for drives & partitions can make identification much easier.  Alternatively, you need to look at the type, size and make of the drives that are present, and/or look at the content of each drive to see if it contains the expected Windows, Program Files, User folders etc.