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[solved by fixing MBR from Windows 7 DVD] WinXP won't boot after recovery of valid backup (True Image 2014 Premium)

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Hi,
my recovered OS (WinXP Pro) does not boot, even I have created full disk backup before and the recovered C partition is active.

I wanted to upgrade my Lenovo Laptop from HDD to SSD. Except VPN there is nothing installed on that one, I just use that machine for remote desktop. But faster boots would be nice.

I have installed Acronis True Image Premium 2014 installed on my Workstation @Win7 Pro 64-bit.
To perform the upgrade tasks I use an USB to SATA adapter, attached to my workstation.

Plan:
- attach old HDD to my workstation and create full image (incl. MBR / disk signature) of it
- switch to SSD and recoer image to new SSD (inkl. MBR / disk signature)
But the SSD does not boot.

01.jpg shows original disk layout - i created a full backup from this one
02.jpg shows empty new SSD
03.jpg recovery settings (I choosed also disk layout, not just single partition C)
04.jpg succesfull recovered OS - asks me for interaction, I just pressed enter since the question is not visible on my 27" screen, it seems that Acronis window is made for much higher resolutions ;)
05.jpg disk layout of recovered OS (C is active)

What did I do wrong? Why does the SSD not boot? The correct boot order in Laptop BIOS is set!Thanks :)

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When laptop boots, there is just a black screen and blinking cursor. The correct boot device, the SSD, is set in BIOS (see bios.jpg).
I figured out there was no drive letter assigned. So I assigned C to the OS partition using Acronis Disk director (layout.jpg and c added.jpg)
Still no boot possible. If I switch back to former HDD ist works. What can it be?

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Is it possible for you to install the SSD along side the old HDD and boot into XP from the old HHD? That will give XP a chance to install the drivers for the SSD. Then you can boot the computer from Rescue Media and perform a clone operation.
Should be all good, I have done this on a few XP machines to date, of course that was before April of this year :)

Posters, make sure that the only drive attached to the machine is the intended boot drive. You need to disconnect the source disk from the machine prior to attempting boot of a newly created boot drive. This is the most common mistake users make that results in the postings in this thread.

Dear Daniel, you gave me a good hint (rescue media) ...
I could fix the cloned Windows Installation by using the Windows7 boot media by repairing the MBR:
-> rescue -> command prompt -> bootrec -fixboot and bootrec -fixmbr
Then the machine started, obviously Acronis is playing around with the MBR. Not nice. With Acronis Home 2010 it worked without manual steps afterwards). Thanks, nofear2k

Glad to help Andre, thanks for posting the solution you found.
Question for you, when you used Acronis Home 2010 in the past to do this was that on a Windows 7 machine?