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Question about cloning

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Hi,

I just have a couple questions about Acronis TI 2013....

1 - Can I create a clone of my C:/ drive on an external HD so I can just plug that external HD in to my laptop and use it seamlessly when I need to.

2 - Can I continue to update that clone on my external HD incrementally?

3 - Can that external HD be a 'USB Flash Drive'?

Thanks!

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In Acronios language, a clone is a disk copy direct to another disk.

1. Acronis clone is at disk level-not partition level. A clone will include the entire disk.
the clone disk will need to be internal to be bootable--not mounted in usb encloseru
2. Any clone at a later date would be aclone of the entire disk.
3. A clone to a flas drive is not possible.

Option 2:
Acronis has a backup and restore feature which can accomplish 2 and 3. In #1, this is a windows limitation.

Check out the link #2 below. This shows how to create the necessary backups.
2. The backup scheme can be custom/incremental and after the first full backup, any changes can be inlcuded in smaller sizse backups with just the changes.
3. The backup file can be stored on a usb disk or flash drive--if the size is sufficient. A minimum size would be 64 GB to hold 1 full and maybe a few incrmental backups. A flash disk is really to small and the money could be better spent on a 1 or 2 or 3 TB external disk.

Comments from MVP Tuttle on why clone should not be used.
http://forum.acronis.com/forum/40869#comment-128042

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 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.

Also, no, you would not be able to use a clone on an external USB HD to boot from. Windows doesn't allow boot from a Windows OS on an external USB HD (at least not without some clever adjustments). That's a Windows issue, not an Acronis issue.