- Oct 23, 2000
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This could be an operating system problem since it's an error with the files/partitions on the drive instead of the drive itself, but I figured I'd start here to see if anyone has any ideas how to resolve it.
I am trying to clone a 1TB Toshiba mechanical drive in a Dell Inspiron 15-7548 laptop to a new 256GB Samsung EVO 850. The Toshiba drive only has about 110GB total used including all special and recovery partitions, so the size shouldn't be a problem, and I'm using a Norton Ghost USB boot drive for the cloning so it automatically resizes the primary data partition and leaves the other smaller partitions intact. This _should_ work, and did work on another almost identical machine last week. I've also done it on many dozens of machines at work (although those got 850 Pro drives instead of EVOs) and never had a problem.
However, when I try to clone this drive I keep getting errors when the cloning process tries write to the recovery partition at the end of the disk. The error message is "Unable to allocate enough contiguous free space to load run. Increase the destination partition size or run Ghost with -NTEXACT switch." I've tried doing this on the laptop with an external USB to SATA adapter and also with both the Toshiba 1TB and EVO 256GB in a desktop machine and get the same error either way. I checked the drives using GPARTED and it shows that all of the partitions on both drives have exactly the same amount of used data except the RCV partition which has about 6GB used on the original drive but only 56MB used on the SSD, so it's definitely not writing all of the data.
Normally I wouldn't worry about it since the RCV partition is for the original Windows 7 Home that came with the laptop, and the computer is running Windows 10 now, but the SSD won't boot in this condition and gives a very unhelpful "Error: Windows failed to start" and doesn't even give the option to try the startup repair. I could probably just delete the RCV partition from the original drive so Ghost doesn't even try/fail to clone it, but the inability to boot from the SSD makes me wonder if there are some important system boot files on that partition.
I have tried cloning with other software including Macrium Reflect, Clonezilla, and Samsung's own cloning software that came with the SSD, but they all complain that they can't clone the drive because the destination is smaller than the source even though the actual data will fit on the SSD.
I ran a full CHKDSK /f /r on the source drive to check for file system corruption but it said there were no errors at all, and both HDTUNE and SPINRITE report zero bad sectors on the drive.
I can't think of anything else to try at this point. Any ideas?
I am trying to clone a 1TB Toshiba mechanical drive in a Dell Inspiron 15-7548 laptop to a new 256GB Samsung EVO 850. The Toshiba drive only has about 110GB total used including all special and recovery partitions, so the size shouldn't be a problem, and I'm using a Norton Ghost USB boot drive for the cloning so it automatically resizes the primary data partition and leaves the other smaller partitions intact. This _should_ work, and did work on another almost identical machine last week. I've also done it on many dozens of machines at work (although those got 850 Pro drives instead of EVOs) and never had a problem.
However, when I try to clone this drive I keep getting errors when the cloning process tries write to the recovery partition at the end of the disk. The error message is "Unable to allocate enough contiguous free space to load run. Increase the destination partition size or run Ghost with -NTEXACT switch." I've tried doing this on the laptop with an external USB to SATA adapter and also with both the Toshiba 1TB and EVO 256GB in a desktop machine and get the same error either way. I checked the drives using GPARTED and it shows that all of the partitions on both drives have exactly the same amount of used data except the RCV partition which has about 6GB used on the original drive but only 56MB used on the SSD, so it's definitely not writing all of the data.
Normally I wouldn't worry about it since the RCV partition is for the original Windows 7 Home that came with the laptop, and the computer is running Windows 10 now, but the SSD won't boot in this condition and gives a very unhelpful "Error: Windows failed to start" and doesn't even give the option to try the startup repair. I could probably just delete the RCV partition from the original drive so Ghost doesn't even try/fail to clone it, but the inability to boot from the SSD makes me wonder if there are some important system boot files on that partition.
I have tried cloning with other software including Macrium Reflect, Clonezilla, and Samsung's own cloning software that came with the SSD, but they all complain that they can't clone the drive because the destination is smaller than the source even though the actual data will fit on the SSD.
I ran a full CHKDSK /f /r on the source drive to check for file system corruption but it said there were no errors at all, and both HDTUNE and SPINRITE report zero bad sectors on the drive.
I can't think of anything else to try at this point. Any ideas?