Macrium Reflect failure


  1. Posts : 607
    7 x64 Ultimate
       #1

    Macrium Reflect failure


    One of my drives (non-OS) has developed some bad sectors. Acting from an abundance of caution I picked up a new HDD to replace it and d/l'd the latest Macrium Reflect to clone the 'bad' disk.

    Macrium stalls at 25% with a Broken pipeline 13 error. I did a chkdsk /f and fixed the errors on the old drive, but Macrium still generates the same error. Any ideas? First time with this program but it seems pretty self-explanatory.
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  2. mjf
    Posts : 5,969
    Windows 7x64 Home Premium SP1
       #2

    To get an image copy of your faulty HDD using Macrium that could be useful for data recovery
    v5: Imaging disks with bad sectors (Bad Sectors)
    I don't know if this applies to V6 of Macrium Reflect.
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  3. Posts : 12,012
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
       #3

    What's on the bad disk?

    Installed programs that you didn't want to put on C?

    Personal data only?
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  4. Posts : 9,600
    Win 7 Ultimate 64 bit
       #4

    If you are trying to recover just data on the disk, you might try just copying and pasting it in small blocks to another disk. If you also have system files (OS and programs) to recover, it may be necessary to do a clean install on a new disk (not the one you copied your data two).

    Btw, it's a good idea to segregate your data from your system files to simplify backing up and recovery. You can either put the system on its own drive (a SSD is excellent for this) and the data on a regular HDD or, if limited to a single drive, use separate partitions.
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  5. Posts : 607
    7 x64 Ultimate
    Thread Starter
       #5

    ignatzatsonic said:
    What's on the bad disk?

    Installed programs that you didn't want to put on C?

    Personal data only?
    The disk I am replacing is partitioned into Data and Programs. Windows boots from an SSD. There are those who advocate against this, to which I respond; if I kept windows on this drive my computer wouldn't even be booting now.

    I have copied the important items to another computer, so I'm not too concerned about data loss at this point. It's the inconvenience of reinstalling all the programs that I am avoiding, by wanting to clone the whole shebang to a new disk. Currently the old disk is operating normally, but when a new disk is only $50 or so, why wait for it to come to a grinding halt?
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  6. mjf
    Posts : 5,969
    Windows 7x64 Home Premium SP1
       #6

    RogerR said:
    It's the inconvenience of reinstalling all the programs that I am avoiding, by wanting to clone the whole shebang to a new disk.
    Unless you have a good system image before your drive developed problems I'd just accept the effort of a clean install. For licensed/paid software deactivate first.
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  7. Posts : 607
    7 x64 Ultimate
    Thread Starter
       #7

    mjf said:
    RogerR said:
    It's the inconvenience of reinstalling all the programs that I am avoiding, by wanting to clone the whole shebang to a new disk.
    Unless you have a good system image before your drive developed problems I'd just accept the effort of a clean install. For licensed/paid software deactivate first.
    I always assume advice suggesting clean install comes from people who either have very little on their computers, or way too much time on their hands. I have 100+ programs installed - doing that over is no minor task.

    I used the disk copy utility in Minitool Partition Wizard to copy all the data to the new disk, then simply changed the drive letters. Everything seems to be working fine - all my librarys and shortcuts appear intact and functional.
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  8. mjf
    Posts : 5,969
    Windows 7x64 Home Premium SP1
       #8

    Roger,
    I have a lot of installed software and many licensed. I'd prefer to spend my spare time NOT doing a clean instal but then sometimes you have to unless you have previous reliable system images.
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  9. Posts : 9,600
    Win 7 Ultimate 64 bit
       #9

    RogerR said:
    mjf said:
    RogerR said:
    It's the inconvenience of reinstalling all the programs that I am avoiding, by wanting to clone the whole shebang to a new disk.
    Unless you have a good system image before your drive developed problems I'd just accept the effort of a clean install. For licensed/paid software deactivate first.
    I always assume advice suggesting clean install comes from people who either have very little on their computers, or way too much time on their hands. I have 100+ programs installed - doing that over is no minor task...
    I agree I that doing everything over is no minor task. That is why I make frequent images of my OS and programs to make sure I rarely, if ever, have to do that.
      My Computer


 

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