Norton Ghost question

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Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics (More info?)

I've almost finished installing XP on a new computer with 4 logical drives.
Can I create a Ghost image capable of restoring my system on one of the
logical drives (not the system drive)? I know this is useless if the hard
drive fails, but I'm thinking more about XP failures.
 
Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics (More info?)

Yes you can create an image of one partition and save it to another
partition.

--

Harry Ohrn MS-MVP [Shell/User]
www.webtree.ca/windowsxp


"Cooter" <cooter@msn.com> wrote in message
news:z50Xc.1338$LH6.136950@twister.southeast.rr.com...
> I've almost finished installing XP on a new computer with 4 logical
> drives. Can I create a Ghost image capable of restoring my system on one
> of the logical drives (not the system drive)? I know this is useless if
> the hard drive fails, but I'm thinking more about XP failures.
>
>
 
Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics (More info?)

As Harry said you can image your XP partition to another partition but like
you mentioned it's useless if the drive fails. I would recommend a 2nd hard
drive. Disks are really cheap, many under $.50 a gb on sale, and then you
could image all your partitions and be protected in case of a disk failure.

"Cooter" <cooter@msn.com> wrote in message
news:z50Xc.1338$LH6.136950@twister.southeast.rr.com...
I've almost finished installing XP on a new computer with 4 logical drives.
Can I create a Ghost image capable of restoring my system on one of the
logical drives (not the system drive)? I know this is useless if the hard
drive fails, but I'm thinking more about XP failures.
 
Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics (More info?)

The partition holding the backup must be FAT so you can
read it when restoring.

Base partition can still be NTFS.

I do exactly that, although I clone the backup to a
network drive. Has some issue's if I need to restore,
but it works.

I'll agree with the second HD also, look for something
cheap. Probably 50 bucks will get you a reasonably sized
drive. and eliminates the issue if the primary crashes.


>-----Original Message-----
>As Harry said you can image your XP partition to another
partition but like
>you mentioned it's useless if the drive fails. I would
recommend a 2nd hard
>drive. Disks are really cheap, many under $.50 a gb on
sale, and then you
>could image all your partitions and be protected in case
of a disk failure.
>
>"Cooter" <cooter@msn.com> wrote in message
>news:z50Xc.1338$LH6.136950@twister.southeast.rr.com...
>I've almost finished installing XP on a new computer
with 4 logical drives.
>Can I create a Ghost image capable of restoring my
system on one of the
>logical drives (not the system drive)? I know this is
useless if the hard
>drive fails, but I'm thinking more about XP failures.
>
>
>
>.
>
 
Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics (More info?)

FYI - Since Ghost 2k2 (the version with NSW 2002) and higher, the
destination can be FAT32 or NTFS - as least I've been using NTFS since then.

--

Star Fleet Admiral Q @ your service

*************************************************

"KevinK" <anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:001901c48aca$e95c3e60$a301280a@phx.gbl...
> The partition holding the backup must be FAT so you can
> read it when restoring.
>
> Base partition can still be NTFS.
>
> I do exactly that, although I clone the backup to a
> network drive. Has some issue's if I need to restore,
> but it works.
>
> I'll agree with the second HD also, look for something
> cheap. Probably 50 bucks will get you a reasonably sized
> drive. and eliminates the issue if the primary crashes.
>
>
>>-----Original Message-----
>>As Harry said you can image your XP partition to another
> partition but like
>>you mentioned it's useless if the drive fails. I would
> recommend a 2nd hard
>>drive. Disks are really cheap, many under $.50 a gb on
> sale, and then you
>>could image all your partitions and be protected in case
> of a disk failure.
>>
>>"Cooter" <cooter@msn.com> wrote in message
>>news:z50Xc.1338$LH6.136950@twister.southeast.rr.com...
>>I've almost finished installing XP on a new computer
> with 4 logical drives.
>>Can I create a Ghost image capable of restoring my
> system on one of the
>>logical drives (not the system drive)? I know this is
> useless if the hard
>>drive fails, but I'm thinking more about XP failures.
>>
>>
>>
>>.
>>
 
Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics (More info?)

That is not true for Ghost 2003, you can create and restore images on NTFS
partitions even though you are booting with pcdos or msdos.
"KevinK" <anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:001901c48aca$e95c3e60$a301280a@phx.gbl...
The partition holding the backup must be FAT so you can
read it when restoring.

Base partition can still be NTFS.

I do exactly that, although I clone the backup to a
network drive. Has some issue's if I need to restore,
but it works.

I'll agree with the second HD also, look for something
cheap. Probably 50 bucks will get you a reasonably sized
drive. and eliminates the issue if the primary crashes.


>-----Original Message-----
>As Harry said you can image your XP partition to another
partition but like
>you mentioned it's useless if the drive fails. I would
recommend a 2nd hard
>drive. Disks are really cheap, many under $.50 a gb on
sale, and then you
>could image all your partitions and be protected in case
of a disk failure.
>
>"Cooter" <cooter@msn.com> wrote in message
>news:z50Xc.1338$LH6.136950@twister.southeast.rr.com...
>I've almost finished installing XP on a new computer
with 4 logical drives.
>Can I create a Ghost image capable of restoring my
system on one of the
>logical drives (not the system drive)? I know this is
useless if the hard
>drive fails, but I'm thinking more about XP failures.
>
>
>
>.
>
 
Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics (More info?)

With the latest versions of Ghost, it doesn't necessarily need to be FAT.
Ghost can now read/write NTFS, some USB devices, CDRW, etc.
I have heard rumors that some versions of Ghost can even back up your system
drive without rebooting to DOS - I'm not sure if I believe this, but it may be
true.
Ghost can be put on a bootable CD as well as floppies, and some USB devices
like hard drives can be made bootable, and hold the Ghost program as well as
the images.

In article <001901c48aca$e95c3e60$a301280a@phx.gbl>, "KevinK"
<anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
|The partition holding the backup must be FAT so you can
|read it when restoring.
|
|Base partition can still be NTFS.
|
|I do exactly that, although I clone the backup to a
|network drive. Has some issue's if I need to restore,
|but it works.
|
|I'll agree with the second HD also, look for something
|cheap. Probably 50 bucks will get you a reasonably sized
|drive. and eliminates the issue if the primary crashes.
|
|
|>-----Original Message-----
|>As Harry said you can image your XP partition to another
|partition but like
|>you mentioned it's useless if the drive fails. I would
|recommend a 2nd hard
|>drive. Disks are really cheap, many under $.50 a gb on
|sale, and then you
|>could image all your partitions and be protected in case
|of a disk failure.
|>
|>"Cooter" <cooter@msn.com> wrote in message
|>news:z50Xc.1338$LH6.136950@twister.southeast.rr.com...
|>I've almost finished installing XP on a new computer
|with 4 logical drives.
|>Can I create a Ghost image capable of restoring my
|system on one of the
|>logical drives (not the system drive)? I know this is
|useless if the hard
|>drive fails, but I'm thinking more about XP failures.
|>
|>
|>
|>.
|>