Image Hard Drive Windows 10

A Windows 10 system image is an exact copy of the operating system, boot sectors, settings, programs, registry, and essential files on the C drive (generally speaking). It ensures you the computer protection and revives your Windows 10 installation quickly and easily. In this article, we take a look using the built-in System Image and Easeus Todo Backup to clone your drive to a larger or faster hard drive. Migrate your Windows 10 Installation to a New Hard Disk.

When you create a system image, you can restore the entire OS back to the same hard drive or a new one and it will include all your installed programs, settings, etc. Even though Windows 10 is a nice improvement over Windows 7, it still uses the same image creation option from Windows 7!

I was trying to replace a hard drive in my Dell XPS 8500. The original hard drive was failing, but still working intermittently. It was running Windows 10, free upgraded from Windows 8.1, for which I never made the installation/recovery disk. So after a lot of research I figured out I could download the Windows 10 ISO. I did so, downloading it to a USB drive. I also installed a new internal hard drive, leaving the old hard drive in place. I used Windows 10 disk management, leaving it as one single partition, and assigned drive letter D. I then used the Windows 10 ISO on the USB drive to install Windows 10 to the new drive. I set the boot sequence to boot from the new drive.
I left things running overnight to get my massive dropbox synced to the new drive.
All seemed fine until this morning when I looked and saw a DOS-type screen again saying there was no boot device. I was able to reboot and I guess things seem OK for the moment, but there's no reason that I can think of that there should have been a boot failure from the new drive. So my question: Is it possible the old drive is still engaged in some way that would cause the whole system to fail? There's no 'disable' option in the device manager for this drive, making me think it's still necessary even though I intended to render it unnecessary by installing to the new drive. I guess I could go back into the computer and unplug the old drive and see what happens, but asking first seemed the prudent thing to do.
One other point, not sure if it's relevant: Even though I assigned the new drive letter D, the new drive is now (after Windows installation) showing up as drive letter C. But 'C' is definitely the new drive, based on drive size numbers.
I've spent three days getting to this point. I'm not a computer guy. Any insights appreciated.
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Reinstall Windows 10 To New Hard Drive

One thing that's noticeably missing from the new Windows 10 Settings menu is the system image backup utility. A system image backup is basically an exact copy ('image') of a drive -- in other words, you can use a system image to completely restore your computer, settings and all, in the event of a PC disaster. Quickie wheelchair serial number lookup.

Image Windows 10 To Another Hard Drive

Microsoft introduced the system image utility in Windows 7, and then tried to hide it in Windows 8 and Windows 8.1. It's still hidden in the Windows 10 Technical Preview, but the Recovery section of the Update & recovery tab does mention system images (under 'Advanced startup'), so I hope that the system image utility will remain a backup option when Windows 10 officially launches.

At the moment, this is how you can create a system image in Windows 10:

Image Hard Drive Windows 10 64 Bit

1. Open Control Panel and go to File History.


2. At the bottom of the left pane, you should see a link to System Image Backup, under 'See also.' Click this link.

Drive

3. The System Image Backup utility will open. Pick a place to save your system image backup (on a hard disk, on one or more DVDs, or on a network location), and click Next. Confirm your settings and click Start backup.

To use your system image to restore your PC, open up the new Windows 10 Settings menu and go to Update & recovery. Under Recovery, find the Advanced startup section, and click Restart now. When your PC restarts, go to Troubleshoot, Advanced Options, and then choose System image recovery.