How to restore to new PC?
I currently own Home 2011 latest build.
and have also owned 11,and 9
I also have recomended this product to all my clients, who have various servers as in 2003 r2, and 2008 std.
My question however is for my personal situation.
I do my backups using the 2011 product onto my exrternal Toshiba 1tb drive.
I keep having problems getting the backup(s) to remain healthy.
I suspect the toshiba is the problem.
For example right now I have a backup that i can drill down into and see al the files, but i cannot mount it or recover from it. The message says "Backup data corrupted."
If I repair it using drive properties, then sometimes I can mount it, but I cannot do a repair from the boot media. So i cannot recover using boot media from my external USB drive.
When i disconnect the external Toshiba, i DO use the "Safely remove hardware" feature.
I have tried re-formatting it using NTFS and various sector sizes but the behavior remains.
If i were to buy a new external drive, are there any suggestions of a drive that is hardy to USB disconnects, and Large files (180 GB)?
I have read about some issues with my particular Toshiba model.
My second question is perhaps more important.
What is the prescribed technique for backing up my wifes laptop and restoring onto a new laptop??
I had to do this over the last few days and was unsuccessful.
After wasting time backing up and restoreing to and from my external drive, I ended up using the clone disk feature in the acronis home 2011 package.
But this didnt work. It broke windows to the point that i could not repair it. She has windows 7 ultimate on the source Acer laptop. The target Laptop is a Toshiba.
I did expect that I would break the activation key, and I do have a new one, but i at least expected to be able to backup from one machine and restore to another.
Back in the Acronis 9 / XP days, i did this without any problems, in fact i imaged out my old HP laptop XP drive, Drive imaged it onto the new Toshiba Laptop. This broke the XP Activation, and it also only booted to safe mode, but at least i was then able to repair it using the XP install DVD. I then Upgraded to Win Vista and all was well. I had all my programs installed and licences intact. My registry was working and to this day it works flawlessly. I eventually upgraded to win 7 ultimate. Soon i may need to transfer to a new laptop. I prefere to image over rather than to re-install all my software. I dont have all my licence codes and installation media. And some of the tools on my machine are from companies that are no longer in buisiness, but the software that my clients have, uses some of these tools. So i need to image out and then onto a new Laptop
So today in the world of windows 7, how do I migrate to an new laptop?
Thanks
Jerry C
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Thank you Pat for responding.
I will investigate the plus pack option.
Any comments on the corrupted data issue? After my post, i noticed many external usb drive corrupt data posts.
Is there any product or technique that consistantly works?
Since i am a programmer, i like to throw all my cards on the table for analysys. I notice that in forums like this, that the representatives of the the company, Acronis, are carefully juggling PR and Truth. This is expected of course.
So my task is to ask the right questions to get some answers that work for me.
1. Is the corrupt external USB issue an issue that seems to be Large media biased?
2. Is the corrupt USB issue an issue of MFG an in brand name?
3. Is there a coorelation to USB 3.0 drives being used in USB 2.0 slots?
4. Is there a technique for recoverring corrupt files once Acronis determines that it is corrupt?
a. I have seen files become uncorrupted on the same drive and same acronis version and same win 7 OS but am not sure as to why.
b. I believe that execting repair after plugging in the USB does not work, but after you bypass that question, and then right click on the drive letter and then do a repair, that this works for as long as you dont unplug from the USB Port.
5. Does anyone out there have a large (>=1TB) External USB 2.0 drive that successfully and consistantly maintains valid backups?
a. and has been tested from both boot media mode, and while windows is up and running.
b. I have seen TIB files that can be mounted as drive letters and browsed, yet still won't validate.
Thanks
Jerry C
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1. I don't thing so, based on my experience with this forum
2, 3 No
4 Always make a validation when you have doubts. The basic troubleshooting is to copy the TIB file to some other place to see if that helps.
4a. In older builds of 2011, ATI's showing a corrupted backup was not necessarily true.
4b. Is the repair the chkdsk function?
5 I do
5b I you have recurring validation issues, it might be some hardware issue. The validation process stresses memory and I/O in particular ways compared with the average application.
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Hi Pat
with 4.
The thing is that the validation works and then fails and then works again but never seems to work during a boot media scenario.
I have tried this on two machines, One an Acer and one my Toshiba. The symptom of "it validates only after a repair" is consistant on both machines. A repair is to right click on the drive letter and select "tools" and "check now".
Both machines are running win7 ultimate and the toshiba external was used in both cases.
I will buy another external is i was convinced that that was the issue.
What external do you have that works for you?
Is it sensitive to being detached without clicking on "safe to remove"?
How does a hot swappable caddy defend against corruption if i pull it out in the middle of a write? How can i be sure windows is not writing to it? windows seems to write to drives whenever it feels like it.
I am considering a hot swappable external caddy because it claims to be hot swapable, but am i opening myself up to more corruption due to being able to pull a drive out prematurely? or am i protecting the drive by housing it in a hot swappable caddy?
Maybe i'll borrow an external drive from someone just to test its hardiness and maybe i'll discover that it was the drive all along.
Thanks
Jerry C
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I used a variety of big USB disks. Currently I have a 2TB Iomega.
Unplugging your disks without ejecting them can cause problems, in particular if the policy settings in the device manager is enabling write-caching. There is less risk with the optimize for quick removal.
I don't know about hot swapable external caddies.
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