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ATI is not recognizing the origin-disc in the disk-clone operation

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Hi all.

I am needingo to clone disk.

I recorded a bootable DVD (with downloaded iso file) and starting with Acronis True Image from it.

Initially all went well.

Regarding the CLONE operation I chose the Automatic mode, and when I went to set the source disk, I found the following table and could not go ahead.

Drive............................................................Capacity.........Model....................................................................Interface
Disk 2...........................................................8 Gb...............iswstripe...............................................................RAID
Disk3 - Unsuported.......................................931.5 Gb.......iswstripe................................................................RAID
Disk4.............................................................698.6 Gb.......ST9750422AS........................................................USB
Disk5.............................................................1.819 Tb........Seagate FA GoFlexDesk........................................USB

My goal is to clone the hard disk 3 to 4, and when I select disk 3 as source, the software (ATI) tells me that it can not copy a blank disc!

Why ATI is indicating disk 3 as unsupported?

Why ATI is considering disk 3 as empty?

Is there some setting that I have to do into notebook bios setup that modifies this scenario?

TIA

Marcos Nobre

0 Users found this helpful

is it possible that disk 3 is not the disk you want to clone? The ATI2013 bootable Rescue Media's Linux environment enumerates disks differently than Windows. You should assign each disk a unique name, so you can identify them.

Cloning laptop drives is tricky, due to many laptop's special disk setups. Many MVPs recommend a "reverse clone" (you can search forum for it), in which you place the target disk into the laptop and move the original disk to an external drive.

My best advice: Do not Clone! Instead, do one extra step and create a full disk Backup to an external drive. If ever you need to return to that image state, you would do a full disk Restore/Recovery.

There is rarely a need to Clone. Really, Backup is safer and more flexible. Many users encounter problems Cloning which they would not have if they had instead used Backup.

1. Don't use Clone. Do a full disk mode Backup, selecting the entire disk, and a Restore. The end result will be the same as Clone, but with many advantages.

2. Check out the many user guides and tutorials in the left margin of this forum, particularly Getting Started and Grover's True Image Guides which are illustrated with step-by-step screenshots.

A full disk backup, selecting the disk checkbox rather than individual partitions, includes everything. It includes everything that a clone would include.

The difference is that while a clone immediately writes that information a single time to another drive, a backup is saved as a compressed .tib archive. As such, multiple .tib archives may be saved to a single backup drive, allowing for greater redundancy, security and flexibility.

Once a full disk image .tib archive is restored to a drive, the result is the same as if that drive had been the target of a clone done on the date and time that the backup archive was created.

Clone is riskier because we've seen situations where users mistakenly choose the wrong drive to clone from and to, thus wiping out their system drive.