Well, you don't even need to go so far as to image your secondary drive, since it's not the drive you're running Windows from. You don't need to uninstall anything, just make a complete copy of the disk to another disk, and voila. When, or perhaps if, the Velociraptor goes south, before you retire the computer, just replace it with the disk that has the copy of it's contents, making sure the drive letters are the same, so installed software is found in the correct location.
If you want software to use that is akin to the often recommended Norton Ghost, my personal favorite is SelfImage. It's freeware, fully featured, and easy to use, even for a beginner. Essentially, it allows you to make a bit-for-bit copy of a hard drive, even if Windows hasn't assigned a drive letter to it, such as with unrecognized format types. The catch is, when you copy one drive to another, it will appear identical, so any drive you copy your Velociraptor to, will appear to be the same capacity. If for example, you copied a 1 TB hard drive to a 2 TB hard drive, your 2 TB hard drive would appear to be 1 TB in size. So, when copying a hard drive to a drive of a different capacity, you may need to resize the drive image after you copy it, which is done with another utility.
SelfImage can be found here:
http://www.majorgeeks.com/files/details/selfimage.html
For managing the size of partitions on disks after you copy them, I use GParted, which is also free:
http://gparted.org/