Aller au contenu principal

Getting it right: replacing a failing HDD

Thread needs solution

Hi - I apologise for basic question, but I need to get this right first time! I'd appreciate a recommended outline strategy... I can read the manual for specifics.

The HDD on my laptop has developed bad sectors, and will be replaced ASAP. I can, however (just about) run the Dell laptop and probably do one last action with my Acronis copy. The HDD will have Windows and Office reinstalled for me.

So, given that I have one last chance to get data off the drive, what's the best way to proceed? A full disk image, or backup? Recover from Acronis, or a the bootable CD? Can I backup/recover so I recover my settings and important files for Outlook (e.g., PST)? I don't mind reinstalling some software but would obviously like to keep that to a minimum.

Thanks for your help... these are anxious times!

0 Users found this helpful

First, do not run that HD until you need to.

Do you have a full disk backup, made by ATI prior to your HD failing? That would be my preference, to use that known good backup to restore to a replacement HD. If you image the current drive, you risk that its failing state has already damaged key system files or valuable data files.

If you do have a known good backup, then you could also do a file/folder backup from the failing drive using ATI or some other tool. After restoring the good backup to a fresh drive, you could take your time to examine the new file/folder backup to see if files are safe to copy to the new drive to replace the slightly older user data files that were part of the full disk backup.

.

Hi tuttle, and thanks for the reply. I'm away from my regular ATI backup disk at the moment, but will review this when I can. I take your point about perpetuating errors from this faulty drive: it definitely has bad sectors in critical system files. With the benefit of hindsight this drive failure may have started a little while ago, so I'll be guessing a good restore point. My hope is that the fresh Windows copy will be a good base upon which to restore, but it also looks as if the restore will be a lengthy process!
I did buy ATI Plus Pack so I can image the new drive after the transfer of data, programme installations, etc. are complete. It's probably not entirely necessary, but that's the fun/anxiety of a HDD crash! I think my next lappie will have a SDD.