New
#510
Answers inline. :)
You will be able to tell by opening the WindowsImageBackup folder and the "computer name" folder in it. The Backup...... folder contains the system image with the date and time created in the name of the Backup...... folder. If you only have one Backup folder, then you only have one image. See the blue NOTE box at the top of the tutorial for more on this though.
If you rename the WindowsImageBackup folder, then a new one will be created the next time you create a system image. This way you will be able to keep all images created in both or more folders. The only catch is that you must rename the folder that you want to restore a image from back to the default WindowsImageBackup name after renaming the current one first before windows will see the image.
The incremental Backup Files YYYY-MM-DD HHMMSS folders in the Backup Set YYYY-MM-DD HHMMSS folder contains ZIP folders each under 200MB in size. These ZIP folders contain the actual backed up files for the date and time of the Backup Set folder. If a file that you included to be backed up is larger 200MB then it will be automatically broken up into several pieces each under 200 MB to fit into the multiple ZIP files in the Backup Files folders. This would be why you had more than one Backup Set folder in the Backup Files folder.
If you like, the tutorial below for how to manually extract files from a Windows Backup can help show you more about the structure of Windows Backups.
Backup - Manually Extract Files from in Vista & Windows 7Permissions is really a different subject that should be discussed in a new thread, but it depends on what files/folders you are referring to and where they are located. Permissions are something that should be handled with care so as not to deny yourself access by mistake.