macrium reflect format repartition

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  1. Posts : 45
    windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit
       #1

    macrium reflect format repartition


    Macrium reflect has no "format and repartition" option like windows 7 system image recovery.
    Does that mean that when I perform an error with a partition manager I have to repartition and format my drive before I can do a restore of an image (total image of all the partitions) with reflect?
    With an error I mean for example that a move of a partition freeze.
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  2. Posts : 12,012
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
       #2

    You should not have to format a drive before you restore an image with Macrium. That will be done automatically.
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  3. Posts : 45
    windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit
    Thread Starter
       #3

    reflect format


    Hi,
    Thanks for your reply.
    Does it also reformat when the drive was already formatted and there happened then something with the partitions?
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  4. Posts : 12,012
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
       #4

    It will reformat the partition that you have chosen as the target of the restoration.

    I suppose that the drive could be physically damaged in such a way that the format will fail and therefore the restoration will fail.

    I'm not sure what your drive looks like or what your problems are. If you have partition problems of some type, maybe the drive is damaged. It's hard to say without more detail or seeing a picture of Windows Disk Management.

    If you have an image file, you could try to restore it and see if it completes and your PC is then bootable from that restored partition.

    What does your image file represent?? What partitions are supposedly contained in the image file?
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  5. Posts : 45
    windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit
    Thread Starter
       #5

    image restore


    I ask the question in advance of the following:
    I have a laptop with 4 partitions and at the end 100 Gbyte unallocated space.
    My second partition is my C: drive which I want to extend with the unallocated space but therefor I first have to move 2 partitions to the end so the unallocated space commes at the right of the C: drive
    Then I can resize the c: drive
    This are all critical actions therefor I would first take a total image
    I asked myself I there goes something wrong with the critical actions what must I do to restore.
    It seems:just following the reflect restore procedure (I must not reformat or repartition)
    If reflect does not succeed to restore that does mean a format will also fail
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  6. Posts : 12,012
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
       #6

    You don't need to move partitions to expand C if, I say IF, you use Partition Wizard bootable disk to do the work.

    You can't do it with Windows Disk Management because those other partitions are in the way.

    It's certainly wise to make a Macrium image of the C partition and any other partition that may contain boot files regardless, before expanding a partition.

    But you don't have to move partitions to expand.

    The best thing you can do is post a screen shot of Windows Disk Management.

    What partition is shown as "system" when you look at Windows Disk Management?? The C partition? Or some other partition?
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  7. Posts : 45
    windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit
    Thread Starter
       #7

    reflect restore


    I've added a printscreen of my diskmanagement (it,s a dutch version)
    My system partition is the first partition
    On the internet they say extending partitions works also with non-bootable partition wizard
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  8. Posts : 45
    windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit
    Thread Starter
       #8

    reflect restore


    I forgot to add my printscreen
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails macrium reflect format repartition-diskmngmnt.png  
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  9. mjf
    Posts : 5,969
    Windows 7x64 Home Premium SP1
       #9

    Be careful how you proceed here. HP is a "gem" in the way it partitions its drives. You want to add the substantial unallocated back to C: . Make it a new allocated partition will cause your HDD to become dynamic - a bad result. I would use Partition Wizard but make images of every (not unallocated) partition before using Macrium Reflect.

    Once you have images of every partition you could consider this
    Clean Reinstall - Factory OEM Windows 7
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  10. Posts : 12,012
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
       #10

    I'd agree with MJF.

    You need to make an image of both "System" and "C" partitions in order to restore Windows.

    But you may as well make images of all partitions. It can't hurt. All the images need to be stored on some other drive, which you may not have?

    Yes, I think you can use the non-bootable version of Partition Wizard.

    BEWARE of dynamic disks. They are bad news. Say no to them. DON'T attempt to simply format that unallocated space. You need to instead add that space to C.

    HP unfortunately puts 4 partitions on machines at the factory. If you did a clean install, you'd have either 1 or 2 partitions and would not have the " HP Tools" or "Recovery" partitions.
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