Question Method of Backing up

Jan 27, 2025
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I am currently performing a scan on my main storage disk data using Disk Drill and since it covers only around 200Mb per day I can see that this is going to take many months. To avoid the problems in future, I plan to back up my dozen or so main folders each on their own partition on my HDD, and keep folders that have been corrupted / might be prone to corruption in various separate partitions. Can anyone advise me as to any drawbacks with this? I have one in mind, but perhaps it's rather minor: what happens when Windows runs out of letters of the alphabet for drive letters?
 
I am currently performing a scan on my main storage disk data using Disk Drill and since it covers only around 200Mb per day I can see that this is going to take many months. To avoid the problems in future, I plan to back up my dozen or so main folders each on their own partition on my HDD, and keep folders that have been corrupted / might be prone to corruption in various separate partitions. Can anyone advise me as to any drawbacks with this? I have one in mind, but perhaps it's rather minor: what happens when Windows runs out of letters of the alphabet for drive letters?
Full drive images, off to some other physical device.

With your plan, if/when the drive dies, you will lose the data AND the backups.
Also, trying to backup individual 'folders', invariably, you will forget one.
Lastly, doing this manually, you will forget.

The basic backup concept is 3-2-1.
3 copies, on at least 2 different media, at least 1 offsite or otherwise inaccessible.

There are many automated tools for backing up your data.
I use Macrium Reflect.

Automated Incremental images every night, off to a folder tree in my NAS.
6 physical drives, full drive Images, each in their own subfolder.
 
Full drive images, off to some other physical device.

With your plan, if/when the drive dies, you will lose the data AND the backups.
Also, trying to backup individual 'folders', invariably, you will forget one.
Lastly, doing this manually, you will forget.

The basic backup concept is 3-2-1.
3 copies, on at least 2 different media, at least 1 offsite or otherwise inaccessible.

There are many automated tools for backing up your data.
I use Macrium Reflect.

Automated Incremental images every night, off to a folder tree in my NAS.
6 physical drives, full drive Images, each in their own subfolder.
Yes I was going to have several different drives with all the data on. I intend to do this with AOMEI, as long as I can clone the HDD onto a flash drive and it is just as accessible. As long as there is nothing wrong with it in principle, I'll go ahead with it. The fact that there is no indication of what happens when there are no more drive letters left (i.e. there are not enough letters in the alphabet) made me think that my method is so non-standard as to be in some way not good hardware- or software-wise.
 
Yes I was going to have several different drives with all the data on. I intend to do this with AOMEI, as long as I can clone the HDD onto a flash drive and it is just as accessible. As long as there is nothing wrong with it in principle, I'll go ahead with it. The fact that there is no indication of what happens when there are no more drive letters left (i.e. there are not enough letters in the alphabet) made me think that my method is so non-standard as to be in some way not good hardware- or software-wise.
Running out of drive letters (the alphabet) indicates you're doing it wrong.

My backups...5 different systems, a dozen physical drives...are accessed under a single "drive letter".

And "clones" are not what you want to do. AOMEI or something else.
Clones are for changing drives, right now. Old HDD to new SSD, for example.
Images are for backing up for potential future use.