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xraydoc

Contributor
Original poster
Oct 9, 2005
10,816
5,283
192.168.1.1
So I know on MacOS that it's very easy to create a bootable backup drive with Carbon Copy Cloner (other apps as well). Almost a one-click solution. Should the original drive fail, just replace it with the clone and back in business.

Any simple way to do the same on Windows? App recommendations?

I just bought myself a game-capable desktop PC (haven't had one in well over 10 years), so I want to make sure I can keep easy system images.
(And just for the curious, it's a i7-9700K, RTX 2070 Super, 16GB RAM, 512GB NVMe, plus some additional SATA storage)
 
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keeper

macrumors 6502a
Apr 23, 2008
515
303
Have a look at Macrium
 
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maflynn

macrumors Haswell
May 3, 2009
73,572
43,556
I have Acronis True Image (thanks to it being included in my SSD), while the boot process starts with the external drive windows, it enters the recovery process as it cannot finish for some reason
 
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xraydoc

Contributor
Original poster
Oct 9, 2005
10,816
5,283
192.168.1.1
I have Acronis True Image (thanks to it being included in my SSD), while the boot process starts with the external drive windows, it enters the recovery process as it cannot finish for some reason
Hmm. I suppose I'd be ok with an application that cloned the internal boot drive to an external then was able to restore that image back to an internal boot drive. Clone doesn't necessarily have to be bootable itself....

Just looking to clone my PC's NVMe boot device and restore it to a new one if necessary.
 

1146331

macrumors 6502
Sep 22, 2018
258
551
I would just use the built-in Windows System Image tool.

Install all your updates, etc, but don't copy your files. Create a system image once your setup is perfect so you have a clean version with all your software. Then copy your files to a different backup destination that you DON"T keep connected all the time [in the day and age of crypto-ransomware and wiper software].

I would also add large non-ssd drive for "file history". You can configure file history to take backups every X amount of time and retain them for X amount of time or indefinitely until space is needed, if you ever accidentally delete or edit a file, you right click the file, click properties, click the file history tab, and you can restore the file to a specific point in time or just view the previous version.
 
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xraydoc

Contributor
Original poster
Oct 9, 2005
10,816
5,283
192.168.1.1
I would just use the built-in Windows System Image tool.

Install all your updates, etc, but don't copy your files. Create a system image once your setup is perfect so you have a clean version with all your software. Then copy your files to a different backup destination that you DON"T keep connected all the time [in the day and age of crypto-ransomware and wiper software].

I would also add large non-ssd drive for "file history". You can configure file history to take backups every X amount of time and retain them for X amount of time or indefinitely until space is needed, if you ever accidentally delete or edit a file, you right click the file, click properties, click the file history tab, and you can restore the file to a specific point in time or just view the previous version.
File History I've already set up to a networked drive.

I thought the Windows backup tool was depreciated, however, so I haven't thought to use it.
 

Queen6

macrumors G4
Hmm. I suppose I'd be ok with an application that cloned the internal boot drive to an external then was able to restore that image back to an internal boot drive. Clone doesn't necessarily have to be bootable itself....

Just looking to clone my PC's NVMe boot device and restore it to a new one if necessary.

If that s the case don't waste your $$$ as it already built into Window; Settings - Update & Security - Backup, opt for the Windows 7 Backup and Restore.

You can create and reload system images as you will, I opt for a fast external SSD, takes a matter of minutes and has never failed to work. The back up drive can contain other data as Windows creates a specialised folder for the system image, so no need to have a dedicated drive for that sole task.

Q-6
 
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xraydoc

Contributor
Original poster
Oct 9, 2005
10,816
5,283
192.168.1.1
If that s the case don't waste your $$$ as it already built into Window; Settings - Update & Security - Backup, opt for the Windows 7 Backup and Restore.

You can create and reload system images as you will, I opt for a fast external SSD, takes a matter of minutes and has never failed to work. The back up drive can contain other data as Windows creates a specialised folder for the system image, so no need to have a dedicated drive for that sole task.

Q-6
I thought this utility was deprecated and not to be used any longer in current versions of Windows 10?
 

Queen6

macrumors G4
I thought this utility was deprecated and not to be used any longer in current versions of Windows 10?

No works perfectly - W10 Pro 1909
1584118319169.png

Backup and Restore, simple, easy and effective...

Q-6
 

BigMcGuire

Cancelled
Jan 10, 2012
9,832
14,027
Another user of Acronis True Image. I've used this to upgrade nvme drives via an external Thunderbolt nvme enclosure.
 
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