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Backup/clone of harddisk, but not the disk where Acronis lives

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Hi all, I had a 2012 version of True Image Home laying around and decided this would be a good time to use it. Here's my dilemma.........

I have a PC at work (let's call it machine 1) that is working fine, but running some custom software. I would like to make a backup/clone of that harddisk, but the version of XP running on it will not allow Acronis to be installed. Long story short, I don't want to modify this disk in any way for fear of losing everything (whole machine is beyond legacy).

So, I've installed Acronis on another desktop (call it machine 2) and would like to pull the disk from machine 1 and make it a slave on machine 2. Can I then backup the machine 1 disk using Acronis with no apparent issues? If I then hooked a 3rd disk to machine 2, could I clone the disk from machine 1 to the 3rd disk? Advantages/disadvantages?

To throw a wrinkle into this, the disk from machine 1 is 12GB (old). If the 3rd disk (receiving the cloned image) is much larger, what special cautions/settings must I be aware of if any?

Thanks!

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Are you aware that TrueImage does not need to be installed in order to make backup, restores or cloning.

If you do have it installed on some machine, that installation offers the 'create bootable media" option.

If not installed, you can visit your Acronis webpage (where made it a point to register your license), there you can download the bootable media ISO file (signature link 9 below) and burn that iso file onto a new CD and it will have the same functions as the CD if created on a installed machine.

Once you have the TI Recovery CD, attempt to boot you machine to see if the old machine will boot from the CD. If yes, create the backup by putting a check mark inside the disk checkbox as to what is to be included in the backup.

You can look at your old machine Windows Disk Management option to see if the disk has any special partitions--maybe not lettered. Probably not, due to machine age so a larger replacment disk should not cause an issue--assuming that it was not too large as the older machine may have some controller size limits.