The first is why I image - it is just so much easier, quicker and more reliable than any other method to recover particularly if like yourself and I you tend to tweak your system rather than leave it mostly 'as found'. And I also agree about testing your restore capabilities, using something that is reliable sometimes has to be a leap of faith initially - like deleting the inbuilt Factory Restore partition and relying on imaging - but for myself it is worthwhile having used a similar system with XP.

:huh:
Right. And some people see it as no big deal reinstalling Windows. Different strokes. I know some people who even seem to *like* reinstalling.
As to "leap of faith," not me. I always disconnect my install hard drive and test the restore function of new imaging software on a different hard drive. It's just once.
When it works - and it always has - I'm good to go with a normal process.
But I never had a factory restore partition, or that special Windows restore partition, because I didn't allow Windows to set that up.
So I think I understand what you're saying. And I understand that some people either might not have a spare hard drive, or think about repurposing a drive for that purpose.
But once your image restore works on that test drive, you're free to hack off whatever you wish on the original drive.
So I just have a minor quibble about "leap of faith."
Sounds too much like "Take the reins, Murphy!"