macrium backup destination

nichos

New Member
Hi,

I tried the backup & end up with 52 or 31 GB file to store, which is too large for CD/DVD or partitions on my HD.

As an OAP external drive is expensive.

Is this backup only for Companies?

thanx ......nick
 

My Computer

My advice would be to get a USB 2.0 docking station. You can plug in relatively cheap external drives to use for backup. My first USB external was a Seagate 500 GB. I think I got it on sale for around $120(this was a couple of years ago.) The docking station will cost you about $30 to $40 and you can buy internal Sata drives to plug into it for around $60 to $100 ea. depending on capacity. I'm using a couple of WD Caviar Black 750 GB internals.

It may seem like a bit of cash initially, but it's so much nicer to just start the backup and go watch TV for 20 minutes(well I run my system drive lean and keep stuff on my Seagate to keep the backups small and the defrags fast.) With the size you are talking it might take 45 minutes. But it's hands free. Go make a coffee and a sandwich.

Plus I found my WD HDTV player set top box supports USB 2.0 docking stations. I get double duty from these drives. I have a partition for backup images, and another for video. I can swap them between PC and player without unplugging any cables. It works out very well.

If you want faster throughput USB 3.0 stuff is coming out now. But you'd have to put in a card if you have a slot free. Just for doing backups though, USB 2.0 is plenty fast enough. Way better than burning discs.

The main thing with any image backup.. boot the restore/rescue CD and see if it recognizes your HD in the restore program. If it doesn't, save yourself some heartache and get another that does. I use Macrium myself and like it quite a bit.

If you don't want to go with the docking stations then I'd recommend watching for USB externals to go on sale. With USB 3.0 coming out I imagine they should start discounting the USB 2.0 externals soon.



smiley-computer001.gif
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    HP Pavilion m9515y
    CPU
    Phenom X4 9850
    Memory
    8 GB
    Graphics Card(s)
    Some Radeon Cheapie with 512 MB Ram
    Monitor(s) Displays
    CRT
    Screen Resolution
    1280x1024
    Hard Drives
    750 GB SATA 3G
    2 SIIG Superspeed docks w/WD Caviar Black Sata II or III
Thanx,

managed to do the Barte one but was very complecated for me.

I thought the Linux would not do on XP installations. Will try it on my spare HD. .........nick
 

My Computer

I can understand the confusion about Linux. I think the reason many softwares use it for emergency boot is because it has had versions that can run right off a CD for years. Even with the old 1.44 MB floppy disks it used a compressed kernel(core of the OS) and made a ram disk to expand the necessary programs into memory. You could boot it and use utilities to fix your HD if it would not boot or even boot right into the Linux on the HD from a floppy. As long as it supports your hardware it doesn't matter what operating systems are actually on the HD.
 

My Computer

System One

  • Manufacturer/Model
    HP Pavilion m9515y
    CPU
    Phenom X4 9850
    Memory
    8 GB
    Graphics Card(s)
    Some Radeon Cheapie with 512 MB Ram
    Monitor(s) Displays
    CRT
    Screen Resolution
    1280x1024
    Hard Drives
    750 GB SATA 3G
    2 SIIG Superspeed docks w/WD Caviar Black Sata II or III
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