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Backup to external hard drive via permanenly asigned drive path

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Recently windows messed up my drive letter assignments again and Acronis failed to backup because the backup path was incorrect due to the drive letter having been changed. I manually changed the drive letter for the external drive back to the letter designation that it had been, but Acronis still could not find the back up location and failed. I have become tired of the periodic failures of programs who have or save data to external drive locations because of these random drive letter changes , so I decided to assign the external drives additional drive paths from a folder in the C Drive. I changed the backup location for my C Drive Image backup to the same location on the external drive where it always had been but via the additional drive path. Acronis gave me a warning that you should not back up a drive to a location on the same drive, (which I am not) but it accepted the new location and is backing up now. My question is what will happen if I have a catastrophic failure of Drive C? If I am restoring to a new hard drive using the Acronis emergency disk, will Acronis still be able to find my backup files on the external disk and restore since the path to the backup will no longer exist?

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I didn't understand all of that.

When using an external drive for backups, it's best to permanently assign a drive letter. I choose a letter high in the alphabet, so it won't get assigned accidentally to removeable media such as flash drives. I assign T, W, X, etc. to my external drives, using Windows Disk Management.

Those fixed drive letters will be seen in Windows and in the Linux-based Acronis True Image bootable Recovery media. As such, they can be addressed in backup tasks and during recovery.