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What is the correct way for me to backup my SSD drive?

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I backed up my Win7 partition recently on an OCZ SSD and then tried to restore. After the restore, the system wouldn't boot (MBR) so I repaired the MBR. But then I checked and it was out of alignment also. So, I don't think I did very well. It may have been complicated by the fact that I had 2 partitions, I don't know.

Is there a correct way to assure I get a good backup with an SSD?

Thanks. I'm a new customer and so far I like the product except the part about not being able to restore my computer. :-)

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Hello Alex,

I understand your question and will do my best to give you clear explanation.

Acronis products support Solid State Drives (SSDs). Using Acronis products you can perform the same operations with SSDs as with regular hard disk drives.

There are a lot of threads on the Acronis Forum Archive that discuss this issue. Basically, here is what happens. If you restore a single partition or partitions, then TI writes a new entry in the partition table for each restored partition, and it does this according to the older, established partitioning rules. In other words, the partitions will be aligned on cylinder boundaries and will have an offset of 63 sectors. This is not the best alignment for an SSD.

However, if your image is of the entire disk, and you restore the entire disk at once by putting a checkmark next to the disk number, then TI will use the partition table from the saved image. So if you have an SSD set up with the desired alignment and then you create a full-disk image, that full-disk image can then be restored and the existing alignments will be preserved.

We are all hoping that the next version of TI will allow user-selectable partition alignment; not only for SSDs but also for Vista and Windows 7 systems that use the newer partitioning standard of 2048-sector offset.

Let me know if you need further assistance.

Thank you.

How about some plain English here for novis users.
I'm really bummed out that ssd drives are not supported. I have a Raid 0 and just added a ssd raid drive. Yep you cannot use backup files from Acronus without getting a MBR 1 failure. I have no idea how to correct this. Now I find out that there are other conflicts that reduce performance by 50% if you can even get the @$%## Acronis image to work. I see there are fixes (sort of) but I don't have the vaguest idea of what they are talking about. Acronis has been my mainstay in refreshing my drive. I think it is time for the Acronis boys to do their homework as SSD drives have been around for some time. I need some help here as my computer is down and I need the graphics capability to do my work ASAP.
PS does anyone know if Norton Ghost supports SSD's or if a beta fix available?

The type backup that offers the most options when recovering is the "disk" option backup. This includes the disk signature as well as all data and ALL PARTITIONS. TrueImage basically captures your system and then restores "as is" or "with changes" depending upon what method the user uses for recovery. The recovery portion is partially discussed by MVP Mudcrab's posting below

MudCrab SSD alignment
http://forum.acronis.com/forum/3823#comment-4877

Further discussion of ssd alignment.
http://forum.acronis.com/forum/4140

I do not have Windows 7 or an SSD so unable to comment further.

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