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Searching for days...a little help PLEASE

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I've been searching for days within this forum for a step by step (east to follow) way to restore to dissimilar hardware like a USB hard drive and then make that hard drive bootable. Can someone give me a link please to the post/discussion that has one? Need to make sure that my back ups are ok and can't do that without doing a test restore.

Thanks for your time

Lonnie

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See this section of Grover's Guides https://forum.acronis.com/forum/29618.

Lonnie,
What version of Windows? Which version of TrueImage?
More details neded on what you are trying to do.

dissimilar hardware is when the computer or motherboard or video card is differenht.
Restoring to dissimilar hardware is different than a restore to the same computer but just a different disk drive.

If you are just testing your restore or creating a new replacement disk, then a dissimilar hardware restore is not needed,
and a normal type restore will suffice. The 29618 link is for normal type restores.

Oh, should've put that in the original post. I'm just getting frustrated is all, sorry. Windows 8.1 and @ present TrueImage 2014 (updating @ a later date).

All I'm trying to do is test the backup to make absolutely sure that it is a good one so that in the event I do have more serious problems I'll be able to use one of my current backups to restore.

Also, I cannot for the life of me figure out the cloning aspect of this software either....I've never delved into any other aspect of the software other than the basic backup/restore functions. When I try to clone my internal, either within windows or booting with that stick drive you helped me with when I was trying to restore a while back. I can't get it to even list any other drives on my system but my MyBook Duo USB drive. The other drive is a USB one as well, but the software (TI) refuses to list it as a drive that I can use for the cloning.

Thanks Grover for your reply.

Lonnie

By the way, what exactly do I do to test the current backups if I don't restore?

The best recovery test is to get yourself another disk and replace the existing system disk and perform a restore of your backu to create another identical disk.

The Cloning procesws is the copying of one disk to another disk so that the target disk becomes totally overwritten by the old disk so you have basically two identicfal disks. All data on the target disk is overwritten by the data from the old disk. The clone program is found in the Tools section of TrueImage and cloning is best done when booted from the TI Recovey CD.

For testing, at the very least, boot from the TI Recovery CD and restore a couple files or folders from you backup into a test folder.
You need to establish that the Recovery CD can see and access both the folder containing the tib files and able to access the target location.

Thanks Grover, but I had already tried the cloning process and both of the external USB drives were accessible/viewable by the program until such time as I got to the destination part. That is when the cloning program greyed out one of the USB drives and I couldn't use it but still would allow me to use the My Book Duo 12GB. I can't find anywhere in the docs whether there are limitations of the cloning program, or whether it absolutely needs a specific type of format, no directions of any kind. I'm assuming that that is because it is just simply a straight forward cloning process that doesn't really need explanation. The only reason I even tried it was because I figured it would be much simpler to clone my original system drive to one of my USB external drives than to create each of the 6 partitions that are on my system drive. I guess I'll just stick with the "least" option you point out above in your last post.

Thank again Grover.

It sounds like your trying to clone to a dedicated external USB drive not one that is place into a USB caddy temporarily.
The Windows operating system cannot be booted from a USB hard drive. So even if you were able to successfully recover or clone to a dedicated USB HDD, it would be completely useless. USB HDDs should only be used to store disk images.

USB caddies can be used to temporarily hold a sata HDD for clone and recover operations as long as they don't change the sector size reported to the system. The HDD will only boot once removed from the caddy and connected to one of the PCs internal connections.

http://kb.macrium.com/KnowledgebaseArticle50193.aspx

Your external USB drives have a sector size that is incompatible with your source hard disk. This is why True Image will not allow you to select them as the target disk. The link above explains this in more detail.

I use VMware to test recovery and clone operations.