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Want to use backup tib to copy one hard drive to one partition on another drive

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I have 3 hard drives and boot options of windows 7 64bit or Vista 32bit.

Drive 1.
E: 74gb
Windows 7 64bit bootable.

Drive 2.
D: 186gb Only used for documents.

Drive 3.
232gb Partitioned into C: 64.45gb and K: 168.43gb
C: Vista 32 bit bootable.
K: is just for documents.

My backup tib of E: is on my K: partition.

I want to move my E: windows 7 to my C: partition and keep my K: partition intact.

The only option I have using F11 acronis is a clone disk which says it will erase all partition data on drive 3.
I assume this will wipe both partitions C: and K:?

If I disconnect drive 1 E:, will I be able to restore the tib just to the C: partition leaving the K: partition intact?

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Craig Hood wrote:
The only option I have using F11 acronis is a clone disk which says it will erase all partition data on drive 3.
I assume this will wipe both partitions C: and K:?

YES it will

Craig Hood wrote:

If I disconnect drive 1 E:, will I be able to restore the tib just to the C: partition leaving the K: partition intact

What is the goal here?  To kiil and remove the windows vista install?  Also, you don't want to keep the back up of your system partition on the same drive you are protecting. 

In general: 

You can restore individual partitons to disks containing other partitions as long as the partiton you are restoring to has enough free space. There are caveats however. Problems or issues may result if:

-The drive you are migrating from / restoring to has startup up recovery manager enabled

-The drive you are migrating from / restoring to has Acronis Secure Zone enabled

-The drive you are migrating from / restoring to is using a boot manager to select which OS to boot.

I assume you are using a boot manager? When you move a bootable partition to another drive the properties used to identify the correct partition to boot from change. It is possible to edit or update this information using BCD Edit or EasyBCD

I recommend that you make FULL Disk Image Back Ups of each disk before you proceed. This way you can revert to your existing configuration if things don't go as planned. You'll want to use Acronis Bootable Media for ALL of these operations. Please test the boot media first to ensure it sees your disks and supports your storage controll/configuration. Drive letter assignments in windows are not the same as what you see in the bootable linux environment. Giving your disks and partitions meaningful names as well as taking a screen capture of your current config in Disk Management is helpful. The complexity of this task depends on your current boot environment and the desired result.

Yes I want to wipe the Vista install and use C: for windows 7.
The main reason I am doing this is I have had lots of blue screen crashes only on the first cold start each day.
(It pretty much always works on the second restart).
I've tested my ram and looked at other possible causes, but I want to move the OS to rule out the E: drive as the fault.

I've attached my computer management/storage to show you how complicated it is.
My boot manager is on D:, but I don't mind using visual bcd or mbr/boot editing programs if i do manage to copy the E: drive over to C:.

Fichier attaché Taille
119561-105295.jpg 57.91 Ko

The E:\ drive can be tested without blowing the OS away. SMART test, etc. If you are looking to low level format, then yes the drive will be wiped.

Since you don't care about Vista and want to move your E:\ W7 (disk 1) install to Disk 3, I'd back up my K: partition, Make a disk image of my E:\ W7 and restore it to Disk 3.

Prior to imaging and move I would disable Start up and Recovery Manager and Acronis Secure Zone. These can be re-enabled and used later if you wish.

In all likelyhood, you will be able to use the Start Up and Recovery Repair option on your windows 7 DVD to repair your BCD once the 7 install is restored to disk 3.

You can even resize the partitions to your liking, just make sure you have back ups of the partitions and you won't lose anything.

It's sorted.

I saved an acronis backup of my E: drive to the K: partition.
Disconnected E: and D:
Restored the backup of E: to C:
(At this point I started up mini xp and used minitool to change the drive letters as the drive that was K: was now showing as C:, so I changed them back to what they were before. This might not have been necessary.)

Connected all the drives again rebooted into the E: windows 7.
And the best part... used visual bcd dual boot repair.
It's a great program that I've used before.
I just clicked on "automatic", it found both windows 7 installations and set up a dual boot option with the C: drive first.

I will keep both installations for now until I see if the C: drive is any better.

Thanks for the help.

Thanks for the follow up. I'll have to look at visual BCD, it sounds like a useful tool.

"Dual boot repair" is a separate program that is installed with "visual bcd".
It's brilliant, sorts dual boot problems with one click, saves a lot of hassle.