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Cloning Large HDD to small SSD

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Hello to all.

I use ATI 2012 2.1 build 7133.

I would like to perform a disk cloning from a large HDD to a small SSD and don't find how to proceed. I need or:
- to clone only partition C
- to clone the full disk, with selection of files in partition in order to reduce the size of D during cloning.

Currently , using manual cloning, the small SSD is not showed at all in the list of "targets" disks. I suspect that's because the size of data in the source is bigger than the size of the target.

Any help will be appreciated.
thanks

How to modify my nick name on the forum? If a moderator could modify it to Philippe G, I will appreciate.

Philippe

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Hi there,

Here are the steps you should follow:

- Use Windows disk management to verify that the active partition is on the system disk (right click on the computer icon on your desktop, choose manage, storage, disk management)

- Print a screen shot of the disk management console for future reference

- Uninstall any program from your current disk that you don't want on the SSD (eg: games, ). You may have to move content out the disk so that the size of the data remaining on the big disk is much lower than the capacity of your SSD.

- Do a full backup of your current disk. Include all partitions, even the hidden ones (no need to use the sector by sector setting)

- Put your SSD at the same spot at your current disk. Remove your current disk from the computer for the time being.

- Boot your computer on the Acronis recovery CD

- Restore each partition at a time in the same order they were laid out (use your screen shot). This will allow to control resizing and offset to align the disk

- Leave a 1MB space before the first partition (maybe system reserved?)

- Mark the correct partition active (maybe system reserved?)

- Leave the drive letter change option alone

- Do not resize any partition except the C:\system partition or any partition you created and want on the SSD

- Make sure that each partition has a size that is a whole number of MB (doesn't matter for the last partition)

- Optionnally, leave some space after the last partition. Unallocated space (up to 10%) will help with performance management if you use your SSD intensively.

- No need to reboot inbetween partition restores

- After the last partition, restore the MBR+track0 and the disk signature

That's it.

Reboot on your new SSD. Then, if you want to use your old disk, put it back in the computer, reboot. Delete whatever you want, etc.
You have some tweaks to optimize your SSD:
- disable automatic defragmentation of that disk
- optionally, disable indexing on the disk (not a big deal)
- disable the superfetch service, and prefetch (if XP)
- leave the page file on the SSD
- verify that TRIM is activated http://www.ghacks.net/2010/09/14/verify-that-trim-is-enabled-in-windows…
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