Aller au contenu principal

Using Acronis TI 2014 to migrate HDD to SSD

Thread needs solution

Hi, I have just installed trial version of Acronis True Image 2014 Build 6673. i am also downloading the bootable media.
I have a Dell Vostro with the system drive as per attached. This is a 500GB Hitachi. (you can ignore the 8GB unnamed partition, this is a Samsung 32GB mSATA cache, not the HDD).
The HDD (factory Dell) has an unnamed FAT 16 partition, a Recovery partition and the OS C: partition. You can confirm this by looking at the disk mode screen. Its the HGO2 465.8GB with the tick in the box.
Q1 The drive I want to migrate to is in a disk caddy on a USB 3 SATA bridge - it works in Windows and I can browse this external HDD as normal. Will the bootable media Acronis detect this external drive and work with it?
Q2 The drive I want to migrate to is a 1TB SSD and I want this to replace my 500GB Hitachi HDD. I therefore want the same partitions as you can see on these screens to be replicated from the HDD to the SSD (except the C: partition can expand to fill all the available space after the unnamed and Recovery). Which mode should I use?
Q3 I read in the web support somewhere that the Backup and Recovery method is best to migrate system from HDD to SSD - also that if I clone to an external caddy, this can not be made bootable. But I do not have a third drive to back up to. How can I clone the HDD to SSD so that the SSD becomes my new system drive. I guess I can remove the HDD, put it in the caddy, put the SSD in the laptop and boot from Acronis bootable media. Can this let me clone the old system disk in caddy to a new system disk in the laptop?

Thanks in advance

Fichier attaché Taille
acronis_hdd_partition_mode.png 56.52 Ko
acronis_hdd_disk_mode.png 72.1 Ko
0 Users found this helpful
Mikethebaffled wrote:
Hi, I have just installed trial version of Acronis True Image 2014 Build 6673. i am also downloading the bootable media.
I have a Dell Vostro with the system drive as per attached. This is a 500GB Hitachi. (you can ignore the 8GB unnamed partition, this is a Samsung 32GB mSATA cache, not the HDD).
The HDD (factory Dell) has an unnamed FAT 16 partition, a Recovery partition and the OS C: partition. You can confirm this by looking at the disk mode screen. Its the HGO2 465.8GB with the tick in the box.
Q1 The drive I want to migrate to is in a disk caddy on a USB 3 SATA bridge - it works in Windows and I can browse this external HDD as normal. Will the bootable media Acronis detect this external drive and work with it?

Most likely yes, but you have to try. There is always a risk that the bootable medium of Acronis doesn't detect certain disks because of Linux drivers.

Q2 The drive I want to migrate to is a 1TB SSD and I want this to replace my 500GB Hitachi HDD. I therefore want the same partitions as you can see on these screens to be replicated from the HDD to the SSD (except the C: partition can expand to fill all the available space after the unnamed and Recovery). Which mode should I use?

Choose the manual mode so that you can restore each partition in the same order, one after the other, leaving a 1MB offset for the first partition, without changing any size, except for the C:\ partition that you can make bigger, while keeping its size as a round number of MB.
See here: https://forum.acronis.com/forum/38522#comment-120956

Q3 I read in the web support somewhere that the Backup and Recovery method is best to migrate system from HDD to SSD - also that if I clone to an external caddy, this can not be made bootable. But I do not have a third drive to back up to. How can I clone the HDD to SSD so that the SSD becomes my new system drive. I guess I can remove the HDD, put it in the caddy, put the SSD in the laptop and boot from Acronis bootable media. Can this let me clone the old system disk in caddy to a new system disk in the laptop?

In most cases, a clone like you describe would automatically do the job I describe above. Try it, then before you reboot, remove the source drive, then after reboot verify that each partition is aligned on the SSD. Using msinfo32.exe, under components, hardware, disks, verify that the offset of each partition is divisible by 4096. Verify also that the cloning process didn't change the size of the recovery partition, or you might have trouble booting.

Before you do anything, disable SSD disk caching in the BIOS, reboot your computer and shut it down to do the clone.

What if I have only one partition, besides the rescue partition at the front? Can I just do a disk clone from the TI2014 boot disk and use that or do I need to do the separate partition restore method? I have used the disk clone with HDDs- is a HDD to SDD so different to not allow the disk clone to work?

Thanks
steve

In many cases, the clone procedure will just work fine. Sometimes, the clone procedure screw things up a bit. For example, I cloned 2 disks from the same type/model of laptop to an SSD. One was perfect: ATI scaled only partitions that needed, didn't change the hidden partitions and got the alignment just right. On the other disk, it changed size of partitions it shouldn't, and the partitios were not aligned. Go figure...

The separate partition approach is better because:
- it is not a clone: the source disk is not in the system at the time of creation, so there is no risk of mishap during the operation (true for any clone vs. backup/restore)
- you can control closely how the partitions are handled (the manual clone operation can do this almost as well).

OK- so in your instructions you have the following:

-Restore each partition at a time in the same order they were laid out (use your screen shot). This will allow to control resizing and offset to align the disk

- Leave a 1MB space before the first partition (maybe system reserved?)

- Mark the correct partition active (maybe system reserved?). If your disk was GPT, this doesn't apply.

- Leave the drive letter change option alone

- Do not resize any partition except the C:\system partition or any partition you created and want on the SSD

I assume that you have to hook your old boot disk using a USB connection so you can copy the partitions?

Thanks

The first step is to create a backup of the old disk. Then the old disk can be disconnected (and protected). If you cannot backup to a USB disk, then you have to clone. Put the target disk on the connector of the old disk, put the old disk on a USB dock/adapter.