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Restoring a system image from the ATI Home 2012 boot disc

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I have been using ATI Home 2012 (build 5545) to backup my disc images for some time now. It works fine and also successfully restores a previously saved image (choosing to restore the whole image) as long as I do it from the ATI application within Windows.
However, if I try to restore an image using the ATI boot disc when starting up my computer, it does seem unduly difficult to know what to do. Here's what happens:
1. When TrueImage loads from the boot disc, and I choose to restore a system image, the following screen comes up:
"What to recover"
NTFS(OS) (C:)
NTFS(HP_RECOVERY) (D:)
MBR and Track 0
NTFS(SYSTEM)
I tried ticking all 4 options (but not sure whether I need to tick the MBR option), as I want the whole image (all partitions and anything else it needs) to be restored.
2. Next, the following screen comes up:
"Settings of partition 1-1"
Partition location (required)
Not selected New location
3.Clicking "New location" brings up:
"New partition location"
Disk1
NTFS(External Hard Drive) (K:)
----------------------------------------
Disk2
NTFS(SYSTEM) (C:)
NTFS(OS) (D:)
NTFS(Unlabeled) (E:)

So, what is "partition 1-1", which of these do I tick and why are the drive letters different to the ones shown in step 1 above?

Once past this step, there seem to be similar steps for "settings of partition C" and "settings of partition D".

Why oh why can't there be a simple and straightforward option at the start to simply restore the whole disk image (as there is if I restore from ATI in Windows)? It seems you have to be an IT technical expert to understand all this.

If anyone can help me unravel all this and explain what I have to select in all these partition settings, I would be most grateful. I must say that the Acronis Help options are distinctly unhelpful (unless of course you happens to be an IT expert who feels confident with all this).

Many thanks.

P.S. My computer is a HP h8-1070uk with 8GB RAM, a 2TB hard disc, running Windows 7 (64-bit). As well as the normal C: partition, the disc has a partition called HP-RECOVERY (drive letter D:) which stores the original factory setup.

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G Budd wrote:
Why oh why can't there be a simple and straightforward option at the start to simply restore the whole disk image (as there is if I restore from ATI in Windows)? It seems you have to be an IT technical expert to understand all this.

Yes, Acronis could make it a lot easier by changing their default selection of what is to be backed up, from partition type to disk type or disk mode. Fortunately, this is something you can do very easily once you know what to look for but it will require you to create a new backup task and cease to use the old task.

Begin the creation of a new task (and to a new sub-folder location) and in the very first step, click the "switch to disk mode" button in upper right corner of your configuration window. This is illustrated in the very first steps of my guide listed in link #2 below. Any backup created from that point forward will provide you the opportunity to bypass (if preferred) the restoring of the disk at disk level without going through configuration each individual partition during the restore. The disk restore becomes much easier and much more reliaable and greatly reduces the chances of user selecting the wrong partition as the target to receive the restore. Stop for a minute and the see if you have names assigned to your partitions or external disks. For example, my drivie C has "Win7-64_C" assigned. My external drive has a name such as "1TB_X" because I have specifically assigned letter X to the external and my backup tasks point to the letter X with the different sub-folders for storage.

As you progress through the creation of the new task, look also at illustrations 11-Full; or 11-Dif; or 11-Inc. All 3 are examples of how to set the task for automatic cleanup so backup file deletion is automatically done via the program rather than the individual.

Look also at link #3 below. Item 3 inside that link shows how to restore Drive C only.
Item 2 inside that link also shows the easy way to perform a disk option restore (via the CD) whereby the user just checks the box beside the disk and all boxes become checked. This selection of the disk bypasses the need to restore and configure the individual partitions as the disk is simply totally restored to what it was at time of backup.

Hi GroverH.
Thank you very much for your reply - your explanation of the disk mode backup task is very easy to understand. (Perhaps you should write Acronis's help files for them!).
One question - why do you say to use a new sub-folder location for disk-mode backups? I have all my previous partition-mode backups stored in the default "My backups" folder. Are you saying that I should save disk-mode backups in a different folder? I wouldn't have thought it mattered which folder the .tib backup files were saved in, or whether there were other types of backup .tib files in the same folder - or does the folder itself have some significance when restoring images from .tib files? (Sorry if I'm being a bit thick or if I've misunderstood the point).
Many thanks again.

G Budd,
What I am trying to say (my preference) is that each backup task should have its own individual backup folder as a means of simplicity or reduced confusion.
For example the main backup storage folder could be "mybackups"
task 1 would be x:\mybackups\sub-folder1\partition1.tib
task 2 would be x:\mybackups\sub-folder2\files1.tib
task 3 would be x:\mybackups\sub-folder3\disk1.tib

You can assign whatever name you want to the main or sub-folder but I believe it best to keep the backup files separated by task as it is much less confusing and easier to visually maintain. The folder names can be pre-created or TI provides the ability for the user to create folder names as the task is being created.

http://forum.acronis.com/system/files/forum/2009/11/5940/example-folder…
http://forum.acronis.com/system/files/forum/2009/11/5940/example-dif-1…
http://forum.acronis.com/system/files/forum/2009/11/5940/example-inc-1…

http://forum.acronis.com/system/files/forum/2009/11/5940/example-full-1…

Oh I understand now - thanks.
Have just taken a backup using disk mode as you suggested, and then started the process of restoring it from the recovery boot disc. It is very much easier as I'm not asked for separate partition information now, so that's solved my problem.
Thanks again.

G Budd wrote:
It is very much easier as I'm not asked for separate partition information now,

Yea! You got the message. We have been trying for years to get Acronis to understand and preach the same message. Hopefully, the next build or version will start the program with the disk mode being the default value.

For the skilled and informed user, whether disk mode or partition mode is first does not matter as they know how or can determine how to achieve the type of backup they want, for the not-so-skilled or not-so-informed, having the "disk mode" be first for selection can be very very important. The disk mode backup assures the user that everything is included which includes all hidden partitions, etc; whereas the selection of the "partition mode" backup by the new user often times (unintentionally) overlooks or omits other very important partitions, plus the parturition mode backup forces a restore to be by individual partitions rather than at disk level. For most users, the "disk mode" backup is the safer choice (it includes everything) and is usually much easier to restore without losing any features or benefits.