Re: OT: Norton GhostPE 2001 problem



On Tue, 19 Jun 2007 03:09:42 GMT, Robert Baer
<robertbaer@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

D from BC wrote:
On Mon, 18 Jun 2007 04:36:41 GMT, Robert Baer
<robertbaer@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:


D from BC wrote:


On Sun, 17 Jun 2007 04:44:24 GMT, Robert Baer
<robertbaer@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:



D from BC wrote:



On Sat, 16 Jun 2007 21:16:26 GMT, Robert Baer
<robertbaer@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:




D from BC wrote:



On Sat, 16 Jun 2007 03:30:19 GMT, Robert Baer
<robertbaer@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:





My HD has 4 partitions, three OSes, and 5 logical drives; part #1= C:
bootable Win98SE, part #2=D: and E: exended DOS, part #3=F: bootable
DOS, part #4=G: bootable Win2K.
I have used GhostPE to copy this working drive to a backup HD for
quite a while with rare problems.
But now, every time i do this, i get the message "NTFS Error: Could
not read used MFT REcord - run CHKDSK" right before it does the copy.
I have carefully run Defrag and (Win2K's) CHKDSK on all drives and
then tried the copy; same crap.

How the &&#$ can this be fixed?


Dunno..I use Acronis True Image.
D from BC

Can you tell it how many sectors to use for each partition (like one
can do in GhostPE)?


I just set Acronis to clone and compress any complete partition I
chose.
D from BC

Compress?
Does that mean the resulting HD cannot be used as a replacement when
the sh** hits the fan?


When a drive craps out, the drive is replaced and a boot CD is used to
transfer the disk image to the new hard drive.
The disk image can be from DVD,CD,another hard drive etc..

D from BC

Right...that means some OS is needed - which is implied by the words
"boot CD".
So in this case "image" is useless; one cannot *directly* take a HD
with an "image" on it and use it as if it were the original.
I am lazy and do not want to futz around when my HD goes bad; i can
switch HDs in 15 seconds and be booted up in a chosed OS as fast as if
it were the original.

Seems that Acronis will not do what i want.


** See comments like this below..
I imaged my single drive with OS, apps and all files to a spare hard
disk.
** Time wasting step #1:
I then booted up with the Acronis boot CD and transferred that image
to a 2 disk raid 0.
** lots of wasted time, step 2:
After a lengthy transfer, I rebooted and everything is back but on a
speedy raid 0 setup.
Sure beats reinstalling winxp, all my apps and files. + settings..
** When i use GhostPE or Drive image, those steps do not exist; the
resulting HD looks and acts like the original.

I'm aware of it but haven't done it yet and that is Raid 1 mirroring.
IIRC this is a live running copy of a drive.
Smash 1 drive with a hammer and the other drive takes over... No
noticeable change.
D from BC
So, it seems you are confirming that Acronis is useless for my purposes.
Any other suggestions?
Any fixes for that MFT "problem"?

True..I don't recall Acronis automatically resizing partitions so it's
generated image file can fit perfectly. A partition has to be defined
first by a partitioning app.

I only know raid 1 mirroring and disk imaging apps (Ghost, Acronis
Drive Image) for "photocopying" drives or partitions.

I know little about MFT..
Maybe try Norton tools???
In the past I've used disk checking programs from Maxtor.
Hard drive company's might be putting out their own diagnostic
utilities.

D from BC
.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Dual Boot Instructions
    ... the PHYSICAL DISK number, ... Partition and Boot Volume as well as other things. ... You should, at any one time, see ONE System Partition and ONE Boot Volume - ... for the typical two floppy drives and assigning Drive C: ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices)
  • Re: Boot Problem
    ... Right mouse click the dest disk> Advanced> Edit ... but it should eventually boot to Windows. ... I see a lot of posts in here about the ability of Acronis to clone drives. ... I have managed to successfully copy by DELETING partition, ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware)
  • Re: Dual Boot Instructions
    ... OS on a separate partition. ... the PHYSICAL DISK number, ... You should, at any one time, see ONE System Partition and ONE Boot ... The name stuck when we added hard disk drives, ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices)
  • Re: A Dual-boot question; I thought C was always the partition with the running OS
    ... The Server 2003 will then call its partion "C:" Local Disk. ... When Server 2003 starts up, it will call itself "C:" and it will call the WinXP partition "E:", but again, who cares? ... The OS then assigns drive letters to the first primary partition recognized on each successive hard disk. ... Because they're on separate hard drives, ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.setup_deployment)
  • Re: Dual Boot Instructions
    ... If "drive" means a single partition or logical drive, then the negatives you've heard are very true. ... But if "drive" means a physical hard disk drive, then I'm in big trouble because I have SIX versions of Windows installed on my 1 TB Disk 1, my second HDD! ... The name stuck when we added hard disk drives, ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices)