Drive Letter
Hi,
When this computer reboots it changes the drive letter on the USB from E: to F:.
When I set up the backup the drive letter was E:
So Acronis fails to find the drive and the backup fails until I change the drive letter. Not a big deal but it will keep happening.
Is there any way to have Acronis find the backup even if the drive letter changes?
Thanks in advance.

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The drive letter change to F was caused by a user insertion of a flash drive or printer or Camera or some device to cause Windows to prior assign E to something else. You can look in Windows explorer and see what device is assigned to E and disconnect that device and reboot with your external disk attached so that Windows will re-assign E to the external upon reboot.
2015 does not provide a move option so a re-assignment to another letter will not make 2015 successfully perform future backups
A better and more permanent solution would be to use Windows Disk Management and assign permanent letter (such as x or y or z) to the exteral. Then, create a new backup task pointing to the new higher letter. Stop using the non-working task and either remove it from the list or change it to a non-scheduled task.
Here are some example of suggested type of backup schemes for the new task which will autodelete the old backups based on user backupr retention settings (store X recent chains)
GH11. Create Custom Full Backup Scheme.Keep 4 versions (chains). The 4 is an example only with user choice for whatever number of chains to be retained best fits the individual needs..
GH12. Create Custom Incremental Backup Scheme. 6 Inc, Keep 4 chains. The 6-4 is an example only with user choice for whatever number of chains to be retained best fits the individual needs.
Note/example: If rule selected is "Delete older than 7 days" is selected, deletion will not begin until the first chain (7 files) is completed and entire chain is older than 7 days.
GH13. Create Custom Differential Backup Scheme. 2 Diff, Keep 2 chains. The 2-2 is an example only with user choice for whatever number of chains to be retained best fits the individual needs.
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Perhaps it is Windows' fault for using logical drive names for accessing files on local backing store. If only it used assigned names as it can do for network hosted file paths.
The assignment of a permanent letter sounds a promising approach, if a bit geeky for a "home" product. Acronis should be a bit smarter in its UI when handling mountable media. I've only done the experiment once but it seems that I don't need to create a new backup task and unschedule the existing one, instead I just needed to reconfigure the task to use a destination path with the new drive letter.
Maybe some one else will try this approach and confirm it works.
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