Restoring an image

sunbeamtalbot

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I have made an image using the windows 7 program to do this to an external hard drive on my new Acer ultraportable

What is the procedure to restore the image. Do I first use the windows system disc that I made or is the image bootable if I make the USB HDD the first bootable drive

Also can the image be made/copied to the notebook's harddrive, into a different partition, and restored from there. This is the method I use with Drive Image on my desktop machines as I very rarely use an external HDD device to restore - Drive Image installs Caldera DOS at boot up to manage the process.

Are there any simple imaging programs that would work like Drive Image whereby I can restore from the Acer's own HDD directly without going ton external HDD or USB stick

Thanks
 

My Computer

OS
windows 7
The image is not bootable; use the Repair disk you made if you can't boot into Windows.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom
OS
Windows 7 Professional x64
CPU
Intel i7 2600K OC'd @ 4620 MHz
Motherboard
Asus P8Z68-V Pro
Memory
16GB GSkill Sniper 2133 Mhz (4x4GB)
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA GeForce GTX 480 SuperClocked+
Sound Card
Realtek High Definition Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
2x Acer S273HLbmii 27"
Screen Resolution
2 x 1920x1080
Hard Drives
64GB Crucial M4 SSD

Storage: Hitachi 1TB 5400RPM, Samsung 1.5TB 5400RPM
PSU
Corsair HW Series 750w (modular)
Case
Cooler Master HAF 932 Advanced Blue Edition
Cooling
CM Hyper 212+ CPU cooler, 3x 230mm + 1x 140mm case fans
Keyboard
Logitech MK320 (wireless)
Mouse
Logitech MK320 (wireless)
Internet Speed
30 Mb/s : 2 Mb/s
I don't know the answer to the first part of your question but just wanted to point out that the problem with storing your back up image on a different partition of the same hard drive your system is on is that in the event that hard drive fails, you lose everything including your backup. So that is not a good practice, imo, unless you also have backup images on external media.

That said, I don't know about the other available programs but Acronis TIH can restore from anywhere the backup image (including images made with the Windows Backup & Restore utility) happens to be, either from within the app, at boot by pressing F11 if you have activated Acronis' "startup recovery manager," or by booting from a rescue CD (which one creates ahead of time from within the program).
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP DV8t quad
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64 (Retail)
CPU
i7-Q 720
Motherboard
Motherboard Chipset Intel Ibex Peak-M PM55, Intel Lynnfield
Memory
6 GB
Graphics Card(s)
nVidia GeForce GT 230M (1GB)
Sound Card
IDT High Definition Audio CODEC
Monitor(s) Displays
18.4 inch HP Infinity FHD (Samsung 184HT03-001)
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080
Hard Drives
Hitachi 500GB 7200 rpm (x2)
Seagate FreeAgent 1.5 TB External USB (x2)
Thermaltake BlacX eSATA/USB 2.0 3.5/2.5 HD dock
Cooling
Zalman NC-2000 notebook cooling pad
Keyboard
laptop
Mouse
Logitech VX Revolution
Other Info
Backup Unit: Lenovo T61p
I use Win7 backup imaging on seven home computers here.

I make a primary formatted partition on each computer to store the image first, then copy it to an external in case of HD failure.

If an OS fails, I boot into the Win7 DVD or Repair CD and select "Recover Using An Image" which will autodetect the image in a primary formatted drive, or if placed in the root and kept by the same exact name WindowsImageBackup in the external. I keep them in folders for each computer in the external otherwise.

So far it has worked perfectly, except for once when my external had a bad block, but since the CD had also detected the image I stored in a primary on the same HD as the bollixed beta, it reimaged it from the same drive.
 
Last edited:

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self built custom
OS
64-bit Windows 11 Pro for Workstations
CPU
Intel i7-8700K OC'd to 5 GHz
Motherboard
ASUS ROG Maximus XI Formula Z390
Memory
64 GB (4x16GB) G.SKILL TridentZ RGB DDR4 3600 MHz
Graphics Card(s)
ASUS ROG-STRIX-GTX1080TI-O11G-GAMING
Sound Card
Integrated
Monitor(s) Displays
2 x Samsung Odyssey G7 27"
Screen Resolution
2560x1440
Hard Drives
1TB Samsung 990 PRO M.2,
4TB Samsung 990 PRO PRO M.2,
TerraMaster F8 SSD Plus NAS
PSU
Seasonic Prime Titanium 850W
Case
Thermaltake Core P3
Cooling
Corsair Hydro H115i
Keyboard
Logitech wireless K800
Mouse
Logitech MX Master 4
Internet Speed
2 Gb/s Download and 100 Mb/s Upload
Antivirus
Malwarebyte Anti-Malware Premium
Browser
Google Chrome
Other Info
Logitech Z625 speaker system,
Logitech BRIO 4K Pro webcam,
HP Color LaserJet Pro MFP M477fdn,
APC SMART-UPS RT 1000 XL - SURT1000XLI,
Galaxy S23 Plus phone
I don't know the answer to the first part of your question but just wanted to point out that the problem with storing your back up image on a different partition of the same hard drive your system is on is that in the event that hard drive fails, you lose everything including your backup. So that is not a good practice, imo, unless you also have backup images on external media.

I am aware of the potential of HDD failure but the reason I like having on the same drive, and have been doing it for at least 7- 8 years, is that when I try a new program or modify or suspect that there is something wrong I just restore the image - which because with both my desktops ,win 2000 and XP , which way less than 3Gb C drives and therefore can be done in a matter of minutes which means I do not spend hours or days trying to rectify a problem.

What I am finding is that win 7 is very large and I would really like to get it down by more than half - currently is taking up 14GB.
 

My Computer

OS
windows 7
What I am finding is that win 7 is very large and I would really like to get it down by more than half - currently is taking up 14GB.

LOL - you really call this big? The footprint of my Vista images is around 60GBs. If you want smaller images, try free Macrium. Your system should image in 6GBs.

Image your system with free Macrium - Vista Forums
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
OS
Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
CPU
from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
Monitor(s) Displays
2x HP w2207
Hard Drives
5x HDD, 7x SSD, 12x Externals
Keyboard
with trackball - no mices
Mouse
Trackball mice
Internet Speed
DSL 6000
What I am finding is that win 7 is very large and I would really like to get it down by more than half - currently is taking up 14GB.

LOL - you really call this big? The footprint of my Vista images is around 60GBs. If you want smaller images, try free Macrium. Your system should image in 6GBs.

Image your system with free Macrium - Vista Forums

Thanks for the tut. I have wanted to try Macium since SIW2 recommends it.

So does it compress that much?

My sys images are between 15g and 72g.
 
So does it compress that much?

Well, I can only tell you what I see. I use Macrium on Win7 right now. My Win7 has a footprint of 15.8GBs (I have a seperate data partition) and the Macrium image is 6.8GBs. If I compare that to my Ghost images on Vista, I think it is pretty good. Plus it wrote the last image in 3.42 minutes (from the SSD to an internal HDD) - about 10 minutes to an external disk.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
OS
Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
CPU
from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
Monitor(s) Displays
2x HP w2207
Hard Drives
5x HDD, 7x SSD, 12x Externals
Keyboard
with trackball - no mices
Mouse
Trackball mice
Internet Speed
DSL 6000
So does it compress that much?

Well, I can only tell you what I see. I use Macrium on Win7 right now. My Win7 has a footprint of 15.8GBs (I have a seperate data partition) and the Macrium image is 6.8GBs. If I compare that to my Ghost images on Vista, I think it is pretty good. Plus it wrote the last image in 3.42 minutes (from the SSD to an internal HDD) - about 10 minutes to an external disk.

Damn I love it when freeware beats the complexicated paid programs.

SIW2 (my teacher) recommends it so I should have already tried it by now. And several posts today warned about Win7 backup failures.

Will try it on one of seven machines here soon. Thanks again! :cool:
 
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