Best drive image software

AmdEmAll

Diamond Member
Aug 27, 2000
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Built a computer with new parts except for an old slow hard drive.. fail mistake.

Its got windows 7 ultimate on it. I have a much newer 500gb 7200rpm drive I will be putting in and I want to make a complete image of the old drive onto the new one.

Whats the best way of doing this so that I can just pull the old drive and the new will boot up like normal with all my programs.
 

Chiefcrowe

Diamond Member
Sep 15, 2008
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My favorite is Macrium Reflect, and they also have a free version which will do what you want, but not have some advanced features.
 

AmdEmAll

Diamond Member
Aug 27, 2000
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Looks like some nice software. Cloning the drive right now. Thanks for the quick response!

My favorite is Macrium Reflect, and they also have a free version which will do what you want, but not have some advanced features.
 

sm625

Diamond Member
May 6, 2011
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What brand is the new drive? If it is a WD then just download the WD drive cloning tool from the WD site. Other companies have similar products. The old drive does not need to be the same brand for it to work.
 

jhansman

Platinum Member
Feb 5, 2004
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Normally I would have recommended Acronis True Image Home, but it failed to create a usable rescue boot disk in two attempts. So, I now use the free version of Ghost that came with my Samsung SSD. Works perfectly.
 

MoInSTL

Senior member
Jan 2, 2012
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I left Ghost because at the time it could not be used for RAID. Bought Acronis and I personally found it clunky and not reliable. Tried Macrium and have used it ever since. It's intuitive and fast.

OP, go ahead and burn the Macrium rescue CD just in case you need it.

jhansman, Ghost came with my Samsung SSD too. Does it still run a lot of services or have they slimmed it down from being a resource hog?
 

WilliamM2

Platinum Member
Jun 14, 2012
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I left Ghost because at the time it could not be used for RAID.

When was that? I have been using Ghost with RAID drives since version 2002, without any issues.

Although since Win 7 came out I've just used the free built in image utility, seems to work very well.
 

MontyAC

Diamond Member
Feb 28, 2004
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Another vote for Macrium Reflect. Easy to setup and images are relatively small. Easy double click xml file to restore.
 

Carson Dyle

Diamond Member
Jul 2, 2012
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I've never used imaging software, but I'm considering it to backup a new system with a 128 GB SSD system drive. How long would it typically take to backup a drive with, say, 64 GB of data?

What I'm getting at is whether or not drive imaging is practical for doing full nightly backups?

What I'd prefer is to schedule nightly backups of my PC to a network file server, keeping one to two weeks worth of backups. Are programs like Ghost and Reflect capable of doing this?

Are any of them capable of restoring individual files or folders from an image file, or can they only do full system restores by restoring the entire image?
 

Chiefcrowe

Diamond Member
Sep 15, 2008
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Yes Macrium Reflect can do nightly backups on a file server as far as I know.

And it can also mount the backup image if you need to restore individual files/folders



I've never used imaging software, but I'm considering it to backup a new system with a 128 GB SSD system drive. How long would it typically take to backup a drive with, say, 64 GB of data?

What I'm getting at is whether or not drive imaging is practical for doing full nightly backups?

What I'd prefer is to schedule nightly backups of my PC to a network file server, keeping one to two weeks worth of backups. Are programs like Ghost and Reflect capable of doing this?

Are any of them capable of restoring individual files or folders from an image file, or can they only do full system restores by restoring the entire image?
 

Carson Dyle

Diamond Member
Jul 2, 2012
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Thanks. Is the paid version of Macrium Reflect worth $45 vs the free version? I haven't yet figured out the difference other than support being unavailable for the free version.

Also, I was just looking at some review site where they indicate that Reflect doesn't have online updates available. That may have been a review of an older version, though. I assume that point updates are available for free in some form.
 

Chiefcrowe

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Sep 15, 2008
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The paid version lets you encrypt the backups for one, I think that is important. So I think it is worth it, for that and the other features as detailed on this site:
http://www.macrium.com/reflectfree.aspx

There are updates available, you can check from within the program and then it prompts you to download them.
 

stevech

Senior member
Jul 18, 2010
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The paid version lets you encrypt the backups for one, I think that is important. So I think it is worth it, for that and the other features as detailed on this site:
http://www.macrium.com/reflectfree.aspx

There are updates available, you can check from within the program and then it prompts you to download them.
EaseUS. Non-commercial is free. Equivalent to a simplified Acronis Truimage Home. Option for paid version.
 

Dessert Tears

Golden Member
Feb 27, 2005
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A question for you Macrium Reflect users: how is the utility (not rescue/restore) boot disk that comes in the paid version? Can I roll something similar using WinPE? I want to make clean images of fresh installs, and I've been resorting to hooking the drives into my desktop and using Reflect from there.
 

Chiefcrowe

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Sep 15, 2008
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I use the winPE disc that I created with the full version to do backups and restores after booting to the cd.
You can also backup from within windows, which I haven't had any issues with.
 

Carson Dyle

Diamond Member
Jul 2, 2012
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Do these disk imaging programs always do a reboot to take an image? Like I said, I've never used one before and I was completely surprised when I launched an imaging process of the boot drive in Macrium Reflect and the system rebooted itself moments later. :eek:

I couldn't get it to successfully take an image, though. One thing I have my XP Pro system do is to automatically log me into Windows and launch three or four programs (email, browser, etc.) using the Startup folder. Does it require complete hands off while the image is being taken?
 
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Chiefcrowe

Diamond Member
Sep 15, 2008
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Not in my experience. I have been able to image windows xp and 7 from within windows, after closing all programs. Did you try it again, maybe it's some kind of bug?
I think it's best to close everything before starting.


Do these disk imaging programs always do a reboot to take an image? Like I said, I've never used one before and I was completely surprised when I launched an imaging process of the boot drive in Macrium Reflect and the system rebooted itself moments later. :eek:

I couldn't get it to successfully take an image, though. One thing I have my XP Pro system do is to automatically log me into Windows and launch three or four programs (email, browser, etc.) using the Startup folder. Does it require complete hands off while the image is being taken?
 

Carson Dyle

Diamond Member
Jul 2, 2012
8,174
524
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Not in my experience. I have been able to image windows xp and 7 from within windows, after closing all programs. Did you try it again, maybe it's some kind of bug?
I think it's best to close everything before starting.

It's not? Yikes. :eek:

Tried it twice.