Help! Trying to Migrate Windows 7 64bit on a 500GB SATA to 80GB SSD Drive
Understanding that all of the data on this disk takes up at least 300GB, Clone disk is not an option.
I bought Migrate Easy 7 in hopes that it would allow me to do a selective clone - or did I just buy the wrong product?
My hope is that I can migrate, or clone just the C:\Windows directory and any boot information, and leave all of the other stuff (User directories, Program Files, etc) on the C:\ drive, and either create shortcuts on the SSD, or whatever needs to be done.
Any help - advice - concerns - suggestions?


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So if I get what you're saying, I would want to clone a disk in TIH2011, and empty out all the program files and user directories to a temp drive,
and somehow get the C:\ drive under 80GB.
Then clone the C:\ ==> the SSD. Will I have to shrink my partitions on C:\ to 80 GB?
Also - my system is an HP desktop, and it also has a D:\ called boot and it has some boot files there. do I want to merge that onto the SSD when ready?
Thanks
Mark
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Mark,
Not a clone. A clone is a bit-to-bit copy of a disk, and cloning involves some risk, including to the origin disk. The risks are lower for a regular backup (the creation of a TIB file that contains all the data from the sectors where data is on the disk).
Yes, keep all the partitions as they are when you do the backup
If you have an external USB drive, here is what the procedure would look like:
- create a disk image backup of your entire drive, excluding the contents of each folder under the C:\users\UserX\ (eg> Videos, Documents), except the hidden AppData folder that should stay. That backup will be the size of the programs, programs (x86), windows, programsdata (hidden) compressed (so probably 30% smaller than the original)
- plug your SSD drive in your system and unplug your current OLD disk.
- using the bootable recovery CD from Acronis, boot the computer on the recovery CD, and restore the backup you just did to the SSD.
- start you computer and verify that Windows boot normally, make sure you have or make a Windows recovery CD. Shutdown.
- plug your OLD disk back in
- reboot *on the windows recovery CD*, and use DISKPART to make the partitions on C:\ (new letter probably) partition inactives
- restart the computer.
- Now you have your system on you SSD running, and you delete the programs and windows folders on your OLD C:\partition, move the content folders to the root or wherever you want, etc. If you want to resize the partitions and delete duplicate partitions on the OLD drive, copy your content to your USB disk for backup purposes.
- You just have to redirect the folders under c:\users\UserX\ to the folders on your OLD disk.
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