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#41
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I ask because I have a PC cloned to an ext. HD.
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#42
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#43
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Simply put in a new HD, then copy the cloned onto it, then you have what you had before the crash.
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#44
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Bryant, you need to clone it before you have a crash. If you clone it afterwards then you will have the same bad file that caused the crash.
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Dale Douglass 2nd Generation Karaoke I am not a member of the MTU Staff.
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#45
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Am I all set then? ![]()
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#46
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I was asking because someone was saying that an ext. usb HD couldn't be used to start up a machine. ![]()
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#47
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![]() If you wish to clone..then by all means clone. I will tell you that updating an image is about the easiest thing in the world to do. Restoring a new hard drive from that image is also easy. I do not get all the debate. In my mind imaging is the only way to go for a laptop and Cloning will work well for a desktop with a second internal hard drive installed. Have fun you all. |
#48
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I have an ext. HD. I have cloned my PC (with only one internal HD) to this ext. USB HD. The 66,000 dollar question? Anyone jump in, please. AM I PROTECTED IN CASE OF A HD FAILURE IN MY PC? YES or NO ALL MY SPECS INCLUDING THE HARD DRIVES ARE LISTED BELOW IN MY SIGNATURE!
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#49
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#50
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If I have a bootable disc already made (which I have), will the cloned disc work with the bootable disc (as you say the image does). I ask this because these things are already in place.
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#51
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#52
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Last edited by billyo; January 11th, 2008 at 04:38 PM. |
#53
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#54
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MikeP Test Computer 1. Medion PC Win 10 Home Name: MedionWin8-PC Processor AMD A8-5500 APU with Radeon HD Graphics 3.20 Ghz 8Gb Ram 64bit OS 2. MEDION P7612 Windows 10 Home Name Mike_P7612_17in Processor Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU T6500 @ 2.10GHz, 2100 Mhz, 2 Core(s), 2 Logical Processor(s) (RAM)4.00 GB http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/michael.pyne1 |
#55
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I am still asking the question? Will my cloned HD to a usb 1.0 ext. HD be sufficient protection? yes or NO
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#56
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Just got through digging into my Norton Ghost manual, and Norton Ghost does support USB imaging and cloning. It will create a disaster boot disk which can be used for either mode. Never bothered before as I don't use a USB drive. To top it off, I'm using a five year old version(2003)
Guess "this other guy" wasn't familiar with Norton Ghost.(no insult intended, heck I've been using Norton for five years and never knew it was USB compatable ![]() So, Bryant, I'd say Yes to your question if you used Norton Ghost and created a disaster recovery disc. For any other program, read your manual. Last edited by George; January 12th, 2008 at 10:12 AM. |
#57
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Only way your going to find out is try it. Obviously no one has actually used one like that, but theoretically it should work.
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Dale Douglass 2nd Generation Karaoke I am not a member of the MTU Staff.
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#58
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I might add since this all started, other than here on this forum, I have seen no disctincion made between desktops or laptops when it comes to cloning or imaging other than the obvious physical limitations of the laptops which make outboard drive a necessity for the application to be used. When you really think about it, unless dual boot is employed, laptops and desktops are both faced with the same problem. Without a boot recovery disc(which I have), my D: inboard backup drive is for all practical purposes as useless as a USB drive in the event of a drive crash. Dale, correct me if I'm wrong, but with imaging I've come to the conclusion from all that's been said on the forums that one has to use the boot disc every time one wants to open the image file. If that's so, that seems like a big disadvantage where imaging is concerned. Since a cloned drive is fully operational, I can clone between drives without using my boot disc. That's for disasters only, not day to day backing up. Only disadvantage I see with cloning is space, but as big as drives are getting, I don't think that's the problem it was back in the days of 40mg.drives. Last edited by George; January 12th, 2008 at 02:39 PM. |
#59
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You may have answered a question you had a while back. If you didn't make a typo and are still using USB 1.0, that probably accounts for your exceptionally slow transfer speed you experienced when cloning. You should consider an upgrade to USB 2.
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#60
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MikeP Test Computer 1. Medion PC Win 10 Home Name: MedionWin8-PC Processor AMD A8-5500 APU with Radeon HD Graphics 3.20 Ghz 8Gb Ram 64bit OS 2. MEDION P7612 Windows 10 Home Name Mike_P7612_17in Processor Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU T6500 @ 2.10GHz, 2100 Mhz, 2 Core(s), 2 Logical Processor(s) (RAM)4.00 GB http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/michael.pyne1 |
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