Mirroring a HD?

BassBomb

Diamond Member
Nov 25, 2005
8,390
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I have got a 500gb installed in my computer along with my 250gb for main use

I normally use it for Music/Movies/TV and Games

I have an external hd (USB2.0) using the exact same hd 500gb. I would like to be able to automatically "sync" or mirror my 500gb internal hd AND another partition from the 250 onto the 500gb external

Is there any way I can do this either with Windows or with a program
 

BlueWeasel

Lifer
Jun 2, 2000
15,943
475
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Sure, it's fairly easy and straightforward.

Both Synctoy and Syncback have free versions that can do exactly what you want.
 

BassBomb

Diamond Member
Nov 25, 2005
8,390
1
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Originally posted by: BlueWeasel
Sure, it's fairly easy and straightforward.

Both Synctoy and Syncback have free versions that can do exactly what you want.

Thanks alot!

Synctoy worked PERFECTLY. It was exactly what I was looking for!
 

ag703

Junior Member
Jul 1, 2008
4
0
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Would that work for mirroring an entire HD, OS and all? I want to replace my laptop HD but would rather not boot from an external
 

BassBomb

Diamond Member
Nov 25, 2005
8,390
1
81
Originally posted by: ag703
Would that work for mirroring an entire HD, OS and all? I want to replace my laptop HD but would rather not boot from an external

Yes actually

I mirrored my partition to a folder on the Backup
The rest were mirrored folder to folder
 

Modelworks

Lifer
Feb 22, 2007
16,240
7
76
Also if your motherboard supports it you might want to look at a Raid1 setup.
It will automatically keep a copy of everything onto a second hard drive.
 

Navid

Diamond Member
Jul 26, 2004
5,053
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RAID 1 or mirroring a partition is good. If your hard drive dies (hardware), you can get your files back from the second drive or from the mirror.

But, if you mistakenly delete a file, it will be deleted from both hard drives in RAID 1. I suppose it will be deleted from both drives in a mirror as well. Then, you will only be able to get the file back if you have a real backup.

RAID 1 is good for what it is meant to be, which is not backup.