Welcome to Vista Banter. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to ask questions and reply to others posts, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support. |
|
Hardware and Windows Vista Hardware issues in relation to Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices) |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
Replace Hard Disk
Hi. I am using Vista Home Premium, so I do not have the CompletePC Backup
feature, sadly. I just finished reinstalling VISTA and a ton of programs, only to realize stupidly that I am running out of hard disk space because of all the downloading I am doing. It would be pure hell to have to reinstall everything again. I want to replace my hard drive with one with double the capacity. Can I copy / backup / whatever the entire c drive on to an external drive, then copy the entire contents back on to the new disk drive? Apparently, I have to purchase a product such as Acronis True Image Family. Will this do the job? Please give me some advice, and step by step in easy English. Thank you very much. |
|
|||
Replace Hard Disk
On Mon, 6 Jul 2009 21:44:01 -0700, Rebecca
wrote: Hi. I am using Vista Home Premium, so I do not have the CompletePC Backup feature, sadly. I just finished reinstalling VISTA and a ton of programs, only to realize stupidly that I am running out of hard disk space because of all the downloading I am doing. It would be pure hell to have to reinstall everything again. I want to replace my hard drive with one with double the capacity. Can I copy / backup / whatever the entire c drive on to an external drive, then copy the entire contents back on to the new disk drive? Apparently, I have to purchase a product such as Acronis True Image Family. Will this do the job? Please give me some advice, and step by step in easy English. Thank you very much. Some HD's come with a program to do what you want. Try looking at their web sites and they may say something about it. |
|
|||
Replace Hard Disk
Acronis have a free fully functioning time limited trial on their site -
assuming you have the space to download it You ether install the new hd in your pc or connect it via an external case, then commence the clone process. Immediately shut down the PC on completion, replace old drive with the new & reboot "Rebecca" wrote in message ... Hi. I am using Vista Home Premium, so I do not have the CompletePC Backup feature, sadly. I just finished reinstalling VISTA and a ton of programs, only to realize stupidly that I am running out of hard disk space because of all the downloading I am doing. It would be pure hell to have to reinstall everything again. I want to replace my hard drive with one with double the capacity. Can I copy / backup / whatever the entire c drive on to an external drive, then copy the entire contents back on to the new disk drive? Apparently, I have to purchase a product such as Acronis True Image Family. Will this do the job? Please give me some advice, and step by step in easy English. Thank you very much. |
|
|||
Replace Hard Disk
"Rebecca" wrote in message ... Hi. I am using Vista Home Premium, so I do not have the CompletePC Backup feature, sadly. I just finished reinstalling VISTA and a ton of programs, only to realize stupidly that I am running out of hard disk space because of all the downloading I am doing. It would be pure hell to have to reinstall everything again. I want to replace my hard drive with one with double the capacity. Can I copy / backup / whatever the entire c drive on to an external drive, then copy the entire contents back on to the new disk drive? Apparently, I have to purchase a product such as Acronis True Image Family. Will this do the job? Please give me some advice, and step by step in easy English. Thank you very much. Rebecca: It really would be best if you would provide some details about the system you're working with (or intend to work with) along the following lines... 1. Is this a desktop or laptop/notebook PC? 2. If it's an OEM, e.g., Dell, Gateway, Compaq, etc., what's the make/model of the machine? 3. What's the disk sizes of the HDDs involved? Are they PATA or SATA disks? 4. Can we assume the "external drive" you mention is a USB device which you already have? Is it a "one-piece" commercial product or is it a USB enclosure in which you previously installed a HDD? 5. Presumably after you "clone" the contents (see below) of your present internally-connected HDD to your USB external HDD, you're planning to remove that present internally-connected HDD from your PC and then install the new larger HDD? Then you would plan to clone the contents residing on that USB external HDD to the new HDD installed in your system? Do I have all this right? Or do you have some other plan in mind? Can we assume you have sufficient experience to do this? 6. And, just to verify...the *only* reason for replacing your present HDD is to gain additional disk size - there's no problem affecting your present drive, right? It boots without incident and the system functions without any problems? As you've indicated, and as you've heard from at least one other responder to your query, you could use the Acronis program to "clone" the contents of your present HDD to the new one. Acronis does have a fully-featured trial version available and you could use that program to effect the disk-cloning operation. While the Acronis program is a fine program and highly recommended by many users, the disk-cloning program we greatly prefer is the Casper 5 program. For a variety of reasons (some of which I'll cover in this post) we prefer it over the Acronis and other disk-cloning/disk-imaging programs for the great majority of PC users. 1. So basically what you'll be doing after installing the disk-cloning program on your present HDD is connect your USB external HDD to the system & boot up. 2. You access the disk-cloning program and clone the entire contents of your internal HDD to the USB external HDD. The process is relatively simple - particularly so with the Casper 5 program as I will explain. 3. So at this point the "destination" drive, your USBEHD, is (for all practical purposes) a precise duplicate of your present internally-connected HDD, your "source" drive. It contains the OS, all your programs & applications, all your personal data - in short, everything that's on the source HDD. 4. After removing the "old" HDD and installing the "new" HDD in your system you will repeat the disk-to-disk cloning process, this time the source HDD is your USBEHD and your destination HDD is your new HDD. (There is no need to partition/format the newly-installed HDD - the disk-cloning process will take care of that. But rather than my going into details re using the Casper 5 program (although it's simple enough) in this post and explaining in more detail why we prefer that program, let me end right here. If I've correctly understood your objective you're interested in pursuing this general course of action as I've outlined above and desire more info I'll be glad to provide it including another option (more-or-less along the same lines) that may be a more practical approach of meeting your objective. Anna |
|
|||
Replace Hard Disk
"Anna" wrote:
While the Acronis program is a fine program and highly recommended by many users, the disk-cloning program we greatly prefer is the Casper 5 program. For a variety of reasons (some of which I'll cover in this post) we prefer it over the Acronis and other disk-cloning/disk-imaging programs for the great majority of PC users. "Anna" and "we" seem to be synonymous... she has yet to explain who "we" refers to. As for Casper being the best for "the great majority of PC users", I have only ONE question: why then is she practically the ONLY person who recommends it for that group? I lied... I have another question: why is she and maybe only a half dozen others (including myself) in these groups the only people even using that program? Fact: "the great majority of PC users" who use a cloning/imaging program use Acronis True Image. I use both, but if I had to choose only ONE, Acronis True Image would win every time. |