New
#1
Can "system image" be written to and restored from USB drive?
Having had my life saved several times now by the availability of a reasonably or completely current "system image" on a local non-boot second drive, I'm trying to come up with a suitable emergency recovery plan for my brother-in-law's new single drive Win7 machine.
I've already partitioned the single 300GB drive (for OS and data), and had previously copied all the contents of the previous two-drive (three partition) WinXP machine to a 2TB USB drive for copying back to the new Win7 machine of what is worth saving on the new local hard drives.
So I have this external 2TB USB drive that I've told him could be used as a very convenient primary backup storage device... for the NovaBackup program I've installed for him in Win7. These disk-resident compressed backup datasets can be very easily produced, and then recovered from if necessary.
He also has an external USB HP DDS5 tape drive which was used for years in the WinXP system (using Sonic's Backup MyPC v6.0, which does not run on Win7) as the primary backup device, but now can clearly be the "backup" secondary backup device.
I would like to also write the emergency "system image" backup to the 2TB USB drive as well (since he only has one internal hard drive on the machine).
But all of this plan this depends on whether that 2TB USB drive can be used by Win7's emergency repair process as a discovered source for "system image" datasets.
So, my question is simple: is an external USB drive usable by Win7 to write a "system image" to? If so, I would expect that Microsoft also produced the "restore system image" process to read an external USB drive.
Am I right? Can it be used as I want?
Thanks.